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February 15, 2008

Mother Reach Receives Grant to Help Mothers with Postpartum Depression

The Mother Reach London and Middlesex Coalition in Ontario, Canada, received a provincial grant this week that will help it continue to educate, support and care for those experiencing, or at risk for developing, postpartum depression.

With new mothers and young families on hand, Denis Gadwa from the Ontario Trillium Foundation announced a $55,000 grant that will allow the coalition to carry on its weekly drop-in services for the next two years.

The local coalition was formed in an effort to create a caring community where women at risk for, or dealing with, postpartum depression could access resources and treatment to help them manage the illness effectively.

"Because of the generous financial support from the Ontario Trillium Foundation, the drop-in centre will be able to continue its vital services in our community," said Laura Dueck, public health nurse and co-chair of the Mother Reach London and Middlesex coalition. "Women receive the support they need to achieve optimal health for themselves, their children and their family. Ultimately, this benefits our whole community."

The Mother Reach London and Middlesex Coalition is made up of representatives from more than 20 local health and social service agencies and organizations, as well as members from the community.

The coalition operates free, two-hour drop-in sessions each week, where knowledgeable staff and volunteers provide helpful information and access to resources for mothers who are currently experiencing symptoms or those who may be at risk.

Drop-in sessions take place at the MAC Youth Centre, 366 Oxford St. E., Suite 201 London, Thursdays between 1 and 3 p.m. Free childcare is also provided on-site during the drop-in sessions.

February 11, 2008

AMA Newspaper Focuses on Barriers to Caring for PPD Moms

American Medical News, the newspaper of the American Medical Association has just published a great story on postpartum mood disorders called "Beyond the Baby Blues: A Spectrum of Postdelivery Conditions."  It features myself and a host of fabulous doctors, including Dr. Marlene Freeman, Dr. Shoshanna Bennett and Dr. Katherine Wisner among others.  It covers barriers to care by physicians, which is extremely important given that we're trying to get a bill passed in the Senate asking for more education and training of doctors, among other things.  Here is my favorite quote from the article:

"This is a disease that lives between specialties [obstetrics/gynecology, psychiatry, pediatrics]," Dr. Wisner added. "Patients are running around in circles."

Exactly.

January 19, 2008

Family of Young Mother in SC Believes Daughter Charged With Murder Has PPD

Here is a link to a story from NBC-affiliate WYFF in South Carolina about a young mother accused of killing her child.  Her family believes she was suffering from PPD.

Let me say something about these suicide/infanticide stories I share with you:

1)  These stories aren't meant to scare you, but they are reality though thankfully rare.  From the beginning, I made a commitment that this blog would never gloss over the true experiences of people with postpartum mood disorders -- I try to be as up front and honest as can be, because so many of you say they wish they had been told everything before they went through it.  Rather than freak you out, such stories should encourage those out there who haven't sought treatment to do so for your own health and the health of your families.

2)  Also, when I share these stories, it doesn't mean I am confirming that the cause was postpartum depression.  As I'm sure you well know, some people use the postpartum depression defense who don't deserve to use it.  I have no idea whether the person in this particular story was or was not in fact suffering from PPD. 

January 17, 2008

Dr. Bennett Appears on ABC in California

Thanks to Jess Banas over at the Online PPD Support Group for letting me know that Dr. Shoshanna Bennett appeared on a local ABC affiliate in Northern California -- here's a link to her appearance.  Dr. Shosh is author of "Postpartum Depression for Dummies" which is a very good and VERY comprehensive book. 

November 27, 2007

PPD In the News

Here's a link to a story about postpartum depression in the Santa Cruz Sentinel.

November 17, 2007

News Roundup on PPD

Story from Bismarck, North Dakota's KFYR-TV on postpartum depression - click here

Story from the National Catholic Reporter on the postpartum experience of Sylvia Lasalandra, author of "A Daughter's Touch" - click here

Another story from the National Catholic Reporter on a new postpartum depression education program for clergy, religious and lay leaders lead by the Archbishop of Newark, NJ - click here

November 02, 2007

ABC News: "Depression Hits When You Least Need It"

Here's a link to recent story on depression on ABC News that includes a brief discussion of PPD:  http://www.abcnews.go.com/Health/Depression/story?id=3747576&page=1

October 22, 2007

Watch The Morning Show with Mike & Juliet on Tuesday am!!

I'm in the airport right now headed to NY to do a segment tomorrow on "The Morning Show with Mike & Juliet" on FOX.  (It's on your local FOX affiliate and airs from 9-10am EST.)   I'll be appearing with Dr. Shari Lusskin from NYU and appearing via satellite will be Katie Corcoran's husband to talk about her disappearance.  Hope you can tune in!  Pray for me that the right words come out of my mouth to let women know they are not alone.  And that the segment doesn't get bumped because of breaking news! 

September 26, 2007

Missing Rhode Island Mother Was Being Treated For PPD

According to an article this past Monday written by Timothy Barmann in the Providence Journal, Katie Corcoran of Lincoln, Rhode Island has been missing since September 5th after leaving a hospital where she was receiving treatment for postpartum depression.  To read the full story, click here.  Below are some highlights:

"Katherine N. 'Katie' Corcoran, 35, of Great Road in Lincoln, was reported missing 19 days ago. On Sept. 5, the married mother of two boys, a 4 year-old and an 8-month-old, left Butler Hospital, where she was receiving treatment for postpartum depression.

The Lincoln police said she took a cab to the Crossroads shelter on Broad Street in Providence, but never went inside. A woman believed to be Katie was sighted in several locations in Newport more than a week ago. But since the last sighting, last Monday, there haven’t been any new leads ...

Asked whether he had any idea why Katie would leave, [Katie's husband] said, 'I don’t think she’s running. She’s suffering from a mental illness. We believe it’s postpartum related.'

He said that she had been seeking treatment for postpartum depression for the past five months. The couple had made plans to go to California to seek additional treatment, he said ...

There are two theories about where Katie might be ... One is that she is still delusional and wandering around somewhere. The other is that she doesn’t want to take her medication and that she’s trying to recover through prayer ...

Corcoran family and friends are offering a $50,000 reward for information that leads to Katie’s return home. Anyone who sees her should not approach her. Rather, they should contact the police. The 24-hour tip line is (401) 439-7988; the Lincoln Police can be contacted at (401) 333-1111."

August 27, 2007

Great Piece on FOX About PPD Among New Dads

Click here to see Dr. Shari Lusskin from NYU doing a segment with Dr. Manny on FOX about postpartum depression among new fathers.  Scroll down and click on the Postpartum Dads story in the Features section.  Great detailed segment!

June 06, 2007

Feisty PPD Segment on This Morning's FOX

I planned to tell you that a PPD segment was going to air this Friday on FOX so you could be ready to watch, but unfortunately it got moved up to this morning, so I missed it and you may have too.  Anyway, it appeared on the nationally syndicated "Morning Show with Mike and Juliet."

The interview featured Melissa Noga, a mom who experienced postpartum anxiety, Dr. Meg Spinelli, Peter Breggin and PSI President Susan Stone.  You can, and SHOULD, watch the whole thing here.  Melissa was great, Dr. Stone was great, Dr. Spinelli was great, and Peter Breggin was a real ass.  He made the whole thing an argument about the "needless use of medication" and said that there was no evidence that antidepressants were related to hormones. 

I'M EVIDENCE, SIR. 

I and thousands of other women like me are evidence that, when in postpartum crisis, antidepressants can save lives and restore families.  May I point out that no one in the PPD arena has ever said that:

1.  Every woman who suffers a postpartum mood disorder should take medication; or

2.  Every woman who takes medication should remain on it forever.

I don't know where these people come up with this stuff.  Most PPMD advocates, myself included, support whatever works, be it exercise, supplements, medication, therapy or a combination of all of the above.  What they do say is that women need to get themselves out of the crisis, and if it's meds that do that, then fine.  I used meds, and yes it took me several to find the one that worked for me, but once it did it was GREAT.  I'm proud of the choices I made.  I wouldn't change them for a second.  How dare he or anyone else question me, and try to make me feel ashamed of my choice.

Ladies, please listen to people like Meg Spinelli and Susan Stone and Shoshanna Bennett and others who have specifically treated hundreds and hundreds of women with postpartum mood disorders and know the latest information in the field, rather than old men like Peter Breggin, who has been in practice for many decades and seems not to have advanced his understanding of these disorders since the 1950s.

Barnes to Appear on CBS Monday June 11

Wendy Davis of PSI gave me a heads up that PSI's past president Diana Lynn Barnes will be interviewed on the CBS Early show on June 11.  She will be discussing her new book, "The Journey to Parenthood: Myths, Reality and What Really Matters."  CBS has a good history of positively covering the issue of postpartum mood disorders and the need for more research and treatment.

June 04, 2007

New Study Says Docs Not Probing for Signs of PPD

From WRAL.com in North Carolina:

"A new study suggests a majority of doctors are not probing new mothers for signs of postpartum depression.

Of the 228 physicians responding to the survey who said they had seen women for postpartum visits in the previous three months, 79 percent said they were unlikely to formally screen the patients for depression ...

'We believe that it is very important that physicians work some type of depression screening into postpartum visits,' said Betsy Sleath, lead author of the study and a professor in UNC's School of Pharmacy. 'Perhaps even more important, women shouldn't be afraid or embarrassed to raise this issue with their doctor. We're expected by society to be happy when we have a child so sometimes it's hard to talk about the fact that women feel sad, or that it's hard being a new mother.'

Physicians and other health care professionals use a variety of tools such as a patient health questionnaire and the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale to determine a woman's risk of postpartum depression.

Dr. Bradley Gaynes, one of the study's co-authors and a psychiatrist with UNC Health Care, said checking for signs of depression can be as simple as asking a new mother two questions:

  • Has your interest in your usual activities changed?
  • Do you feel depressed or hopeless?

'We recognize that physicians must cope with many demands on their time,' Gaynes said. 'But depression is one of the most common postpartum complications, and a postpartum depression needs to be identified before it can be treated. We encourage clinicians to always check for signs of depression during postpartum visits. These questions represent the core symptoms of a major depressive disorder.'

An estimated 13 percent of new mothers are affected by postpartum depression. The study, conducted by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will be published June 6 in the North Carolina Medical Journal."

May 23, 2007

PPMD Deserves Attention No Matter Who Gets It

This is a link to a story from United Press International, from the annual meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists that was held earlier this month.  (Sorry it took me this long to get to it!)  Here's what I loved about it:

"'Unfortunately, it seems that pre-natal and post-natal depression only gets attention in tragedies or when celebrities are involved," said Stanley Zinberg, vice president for practice activities for the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

"We screen for many diseases that occur far less often than peri-partum depression," Sharon Phelan, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, told United Press International."

I noticed this recently with the hearings on Capitol Hill about the Mothers' Act and the Melanie Blocker Stokes Act.  News outlets from as far as away as the Middle East wrote about Brooke Shields testifying at the recent hearing.  Everyone wants to talk about it because Brooke Shields was there. No offense to Brooke, who I'm so pleased was willing to testify along with others, but why the frenzy over her appearance and not over the HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS of women and children who suffer yearly from postpartum mood disorders.  Why not a frenzy over the children who've been killed or the women who've committed suicide?   Can we really not get excited about doing something about this issue unless Brooke Shields shows up??! And I would bet Brooke would agree with me.  I would imagine she doesn't want this to be about her, but about helping women get better treatment.  Congress needs to do something, regardless of who shows up to tell their story.  There are countless stories, and every one of them is heartbreaking.

A Roundup of Major Stories & PPMD News

You should see my inbox these days!  I can't keep up!  There is a LOT going on.  First things first, below is a current list of support groups.  Please check it out if you're looking for one in your area.

Download ppd_support_groups_52207.doc

This is a link to a good article that just came out of the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association this week.  No real new news, but it's nice to see the recognition of perinatal mood disorders as a spectrum disorder, and the fact that onset can occur anytime throughout the first year postpartum. 

This is a link to a new book called "Crazy In America: The Hidden Tragedy of Our Criminalized Mentally Ill".  It sounds like it could be good, and similar to Pete Earley's book called "Crazy", which I absolutely loved. 

I've added another beautiful survivor mom to our Surviving & Thriving Mothers' Photo Album.  Thanks Shannon for sending me the picture. 

Here's a link to a great editorial from Newsday by Sandra Wolkoff.   One highlight that reminds us we just don't get over this in a day:

"Frequently, women convince themselves that any slight improvement is a sign that recovery is around the corner. When the black clouds of despair return hours or days later, or another medication seems to prove ineffective, they feel like failures."

Here's a link to a recent story that appeared on the NBC affiliate in San Diego about the Michael Spangler, husband of Annie who committed suicide three years ago after suffering from postpartum depression.  I'm so sorry for his and his little boy's loss, especially when we all know these tragedies are completely unnecessary.

Here's a link to a story from last week in Chicago about Tonya Vasilev, who was found mentally insane for the killing of her two children.  She had suffered depression since childhood, and had been diagnosed with postpartum depression.  The judge said he felt comfortable finding her insane because of the expert medical testimony, thus Tonya will now receive lifelong commitment to a mental health facility rather than prison or the death penalty.  (Trust me, this doesn't mean I'm comfortable with those sweet children being killed.  I can think of nothing more awful and tragic.  But we need to work harder to treat and protect the mentally ill so that things like this don't happen.)

Margaret Trudeau, the ex-wife of the late prime minister of Canada Pierre Trudeau, spoke up about mental health recently and the importance of mental health check-ups to all Canadians.  Trudeau herself suffered from postpartum depression.  Here is a link to the story.

May 14, 2007

Illinois State Senate Passes Perinatal Mental Health Legislation

Postpartum Progress reader Mary Howorth has been keeping me up to date on the llegislative happenings in the state of Illinois, and she tells me that the Illinois Senate passed Senate Bill 15 - "The Perinatal Mental Health Disorders Treatment & Prevention Act" by a vote of 55-0 at the end of last week.  Congratulations!  I think that it now has to pass in the state's House and they'll be good to go in Illinois!

May 07, 2007

Parnham Receives Award for His Work

George Parnham, the lawyer who represented postpartum psychosis sufferer Andrea Yates, recently received the Jefferson Award from KPRC-TV in Houston.  The award, which is part of a national program of the American Institute for Public Service, honors unsung heroes and their personal contributions to public and community service.  Parnham was recognized for all the awareness he has brought to the issue of postpartum mood disorders and his work on behalf of the Yates Children Memorial Fund and other related organizations.

According to KPRC-TV, two bills sit before the Texas Legislature this year -- one seeking better insurance coverage for those with postpartum depression and another seeking a change to the insanity plea that would cover those with postpartum depression.

April 13, 2007

Orange County Registers Covers Impact of Perinatal Mood Disorders on New Fathers

This is an excellent story from the Orange County Register by Theresa Walker about how postpartum mood disorders impact new fathers.  It is sometimes easy to forget the toll these disorders take on our husbands, who are completely unprepared for the role they have to take on in caring for their new babies and their sick wives.  Here are some highlights:

" ... Left to deal with his wife's condition, the baby's care, his job and maintaining their household, Alex suffered, too. Only he didn't realize it until weeks later, when he found himself bouncing between his own bouts of tears, anger and emotional numbness ...

But Alex had to ask for and accept help, something men in his situation are typically reluctant to do.

'Alex is a good example of someone who could see he was in the middle of it as well, and that it was not just about Elisabeth,' says Vivianna Schilpp, a licensed clinical social worker with St. Joseph who provides individual and group therapy for the postpartum program.

'I would love to see more men do that – to participate, ask questions, be honest about how it affects them and admit that they don't know what to do when she falls apart.'

The dads can become depressed and angry over what's happened to their families. They can physically exhaust themselves.

The dads' first inclination is to fix it – a common male response. But they don't know how.

'They take on this tremendous role, especially initially,' Schilpp says. 'There is a lot of misinformation and misunderstanding about postpartum depression, and if he doesn't have a place to ask questions and talk about how it's affecting him, there often is a huge strain on a marriage.'"

April 12, 2007

San Diego Mother Gets Five Years Probation

Here's a link to an article from the San Diego Union-Tribune about a mother with postpartum depression who attempted infanticide but was (thankfully!) unsuccessful.  These types of stories are tough to read, but they help reinforce the importance of treatment.

March 02, 2007

E! Online Covers Britney's Possible PPD

E_logo Click here to see the story by E! Entertainment News about Britney Spears' potential postpartum depression.  Sandra Poulin (author of The Mother-to-Mother Postpartum Depression Support Book), Susan Dowd-Stone (president of Postpartum Support International) and myself were all interviewed for the story.

February 22, 2007

Laughing at Mental Illness - Britney Spears, Lisa Nowak & Anna Nicole Smith

There has been some discussion about whether Britney Spears is suffering from some form of postpartum depression.  It certainly doesn't seem out of the realm of possibility, given the number of stressors in her life (divorce, paparazzi, two children under the age of 2, growing up in public).  She is only 5 months postpartum.  I really feel for her and I hope she gets the support she needs and that people BACK OFF and stop making fun of her.  It's not funny when you're going through some sort of breakdown as we all know -- imagine how much worse it would be to have it drawn out in public. Here's a link to a piece from the Chicago Tribune websitehttp://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/features_julieshealthclub/2007/02/does_britney_ha.html

It amazes me how free people feel to laugh at mental illness.  There has been so much collective giggling about the female astronaut Lisa Nowak (who drove across the country in diapers to confront another woman), about Anna Nicole Smith (who seems to have relied on prescription drugs to get through her days), about Britney (who has just shaved her head) ... millions tune in gleefully to watch people who are clearly troubled get made fun of on "American Idol".  There's nothing funny about it.  Everyone has the potential to suffer from a bout of depression or some other illness, and some people fight against it their entire lives.  Most get help and live regular lives like the rest of us. 

Could we please stop having a laugh fest at the expense of people who are clearly suffering?  It's just. not. funny.

February 13, 2007

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation a Potential Treatment for PPD

My inbox is flooded, flooded, flooded with stories on PPD, including more and more stories on research and new discoveries, which is so exciting.  Today I'll share with you a story from KSDK-TV in St. Louis, Missouri.  But you have to PROMISE to keep in mind, there are no magic bullets yet to fix PPMDs, and there are no complete answers as to what causes it.  We can't say for sure whether the following treatment will really work for everyone, or what long-term side effects it may cause:

"Local doctors may be on the verge of a breakthrough for women who suffer from postpartum depression.

It's a treatment that doesn't even require new moms to take a pill. Doctors are using magnets to stimulate the brains of moms who are depressed after giving birth.

It's still in the testing phase, but it's helped Erin White so much, she wishes she had talked about her depression much sooner.

Every day for the past four weeks, she's had her brain stimulated by a magnet. The hope is the treatments will loosen the grip of her postpartum depression.

'I waited almost five months to say something and I kept thinking well maybe I'm just overwhelmed maybe I just need to get used to my new schedule,' said White.

The treatment is called transcranial magnetic stimulation. Discovered by accident, it actually changes the physiology of the brain and improves the mood.

So how does it work?

'The fact is, we don't know,' said Dr. Keith Garcia, a psychiatrist at Washington University School of Medicine.

But the preliminary findings of this research are promising. Magnetic stimulation of the brain does appear to be working in women with PPD.

'So far I think the findings are going to be pretty positive. In major depression it seems to be an effective treatment,' said Garcia.

Candidates for the study are carefully screened. Those selected get 40-minute treatments, five days a week for a month.

White said it's been time well spent and urges other new moms struggling with depression to reach out for help.

'Don't be embarrassed get help as soon as possible and that way you can enjoy your baby as much as you can!' said White.

Besides a tapping feeling, some women may also get a slight headache following treatment, but side effects are said to be minor.

Postpartum depression affects 15 percent of women who deliver babies. Symptoms include poor mood, lack of sleep, appetite, and concentration.

For more information, call Washington University's Volunteer for Health Office at 314-362-1000."

January 30, 2007

Indiana Launches PPD Awareness Campaign

From the Ft. Wayne (IN) News-Sentinel:

“Something’s Not right” is ... the theme of a statewide postpartum depression awareness campaign that starts Thursday [in Indiana] ... The phrase “Something’s Not Right” will be seen in Fort Wayne bus huts, on signs inside city buses, and on billboards, public service announcements, posters and printed literature, in English and Spanish.

A local coalition that includes Neighborhood Health, St. Joe Behavioral Health, the Postpartum Depression Support Group of Lutheran Hospital and Healthier Moms & Babies received a $7,000 grant to develop an awareness and education campaign from the Indiana Perinatal Network, a consortium working to improve the health of pregnant women. A 24/7 hotline will be available for moms and mothers-to-be – and concerned fathers – who want more information on postpartum depression or who recognize help is needed (425-3113).

January 09, 2007

NBC Comedy "Scrubs" Includes Storyline on PPD

Many thanks for the heads up from Genara about the PPD storyline on the NBC sitcom "Scrubs".

In the upcoming episode this Thursday, January 11 (9pm EST), Carla, one of the main characters (played by Judy Reyes), is struggling to admit that she may have postpartum depression and Turk (played by Donald Faison) encourages her to seek help.  Even though Scrubs is a hit comedy on NBC, I have been assured by NBC Entertainment Sr. Press Manager Tracy St. Pierre that the subject of postpartum depression is taken very seriously in the storyline.  Good for them for helping to provide more awareness on this issue!!!!  Be sure to tune in, Ladies!

January 03, 2007

PPD Sufferer Kidnaps Kids After Giving Them Up For Adoption

The Toronto Sun had a very interesting story on January 3rd about a woman who gave up her twin babies for adoption while suffering from postpartum depression, and has now attempted to kidnap them a year and a half later.

" ... [Allison] Quets was arrested Friday in Ottawa, accused of kidnapping 17-month-olds Tyler Lee and Holly Ann Needham. An FBI warrant had been issued after the children were not returned to their adoptive parents after a scheduled visit in Raleigh, N.C., Christmas Eve.

Quets gave them up for adoption in 2005 shortly after they were born. At the time, she was suffering from severe postpartum depression. She tried to reverse the adoption hours after signing the papers and has been fighting for custody since."

So she kidnaps them and takes them from North Carolina across the border to Canada.  I'm in a quandary about this one.  I hate that she was allowed by those around her to make such a grave decision as giving up her children for adoption when she wasn't in the right mind to make such decisions.  And I hate that the adoption wasn't reversed immediately before much harm could be done to anyone involved.  But now that they've been with their adoptive parents for so long it's hard for me to imagine them being given back, and she didn't help matters with the kidnapping although I can understand her desperation.  If I somehow didn't have my kids I would certainly go to great lengths to get them back.  This is such a sad story all the way around and another example of the havoc that PPD wreaks.

December 07, 2006

15% of New Moms Experience Mental Problems

I'm sure you've all heard by now and all I can say is "Hooray, Hooray, Hooray!!!!!!!!"  The new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association about postpartum mood disorders confirms what so many of us have believed for so long.  And just so you know, if 15% of new moms have PPD, that means that 600,000 women in the U.S. alone are experiencing these illnesses every single year.  This means there are millions and millions of women like us out there.

From the Associated Press:  New moms face increased risks for a variety of mental problems, not just postpartum depression, according to one of the largest studies of psychiatric illness after childbirth.

New dads aren't as vulnerable, probably because they don't experience the same physical and social changes associated with having a baby, the researchers and other experts said.

The study, based on medical records of 2.3 million people over a 30-year period in Denmark, found that the first three months after women have their first baby is riskiest, especially the first few weeks. That's when the tremendous responsibility of caring for a newborn hits home.

During the first 10 to 19 days, new mothers were seven times more likely to be hospitalized with some form of mental illness than women with older infants. Compared with women with no children, new mothers were four times more likely to be hospitalized with mental problems.

New mothers also were more likely than other women to get outpatient psychiatric treatment.

However, new fathers did not have a higher risk of mental problems when compared with fathers of older infants and men without children.

The prevalence of mental disorders was about 1 per 1,000 births for women and just .37 per 1,000 births for men.

The problems included postpartum depression, but also bipolar disorder, with altering periods of depression and mania; schizophrenia and similar disorders; and adjustment disorders, which can include debilitating anxiety.

The study underscores a need for psychiatric screening of all new mothers and treatment for those affected, according to an editorial accompanying the study in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association. [my emphasis]

"Mental health is crucial to a mother's capacity to function optimally, enjoy relationships, prepare for the infant's birth, and cope with the stresses and appreciate the joys of parenthood," the editorial says.

Two of the editorial's three authors reported financial ties to the psychiatric drug industry. The study researchers said they had no financial ties to the industry.

They examined national data on Danish residents from around 1973 to July 2005. About 1.1 million participants became parents during the study.

A total of 1,171 mothers and 658 fathers -- none in whom any previous mental health issues had been diagnosed -- were hospitalized with a mental disorder after childbirth.

Lead author Trine Munk-Olsen, a researcher at Denmark's University of Aarhus, said similar risks for psychiatric problems likely would affect new parents in other developed nations including the United States. However, differences in screening practices and access to health care might influence whether parents elsewhere are hospitalized, she said.

Physical changes after childbirth might partly explain why women are vulnerable, including fluctuating hormone levels, Munk-Olsen said. These, alone or combined with sleep deprivation and the demands of breast-feeding could trigger mental problems, she said.

Hard data on the number of women worldwide affected by postpartum mental illness are scant, but postpartum depression alone affects about 15 percent of U.S. women.

The condition made headlines last year when actress Brooke Shields acknowledged taking antidepressants after her first child was born -- and Tom Cruise publicly criticized her for it.

It also has been cited as a factor in shocking cases of mothers killing their children, including Andrea Yates' drowning of her five children in Texas in 2001.

Dr. Nada Stotland, a psychiatry professor at Rush Medical College in Chicago, said gender differences in postpartum mental illness are not surprising.

Mothers generally bear the brunt of sleep deprivation, and many new mothers are socially isolated or live far from relatives who could provide support, Stotland said.

She said the study likely will provoke mixed reactions.

"There may be people who say, 'My mother raised eight children and she never needed to have mental health care,' and others will say, 'Finally somebody has noticed just how stressful this is and what people go through,"' Stotland said.

December 04, 2006

Article in Parent Guide News, Twomey on CNN, & PPD Support Page on NBC

Lots of PPD in the news ...

Download postpartumrevised2.pdf

Above is a link to an article about PPD in Parent Guide News, the oldest and largest local parenting publication covering New York City, Long Island, Westchester and New Jersey. The article features myself, Susan Dowd Stone and Jane Honikman of PSI, Dr. Alexis Menken and Molly Padulo.

Teresa Twomey was interviewed for a piece on postpartum mood disorders on the Paula Zahn Now show Tuesday evening, 8pm EST.  Also, tommorow night (Tues. Dec. 5th) Jessica Banas of the PPD Support Page will be on NBC Nightly News.  Wow!  Good for them!!

November 30, 2006

Califnornia Mom's Thought on "Whining" Mary Jo Codey, "Questionable" Antidepressants & "Trumped Up Illnesses Like Postpartum Depression"

This article by a mom who clearly has absolutely no idea what she's talking about really annoys me.  Thank goodness I have her to tell me about an illness that she doesn't think exists since she's never experienced it.  Genius.  (I wonder if she believes in cancer or diabetes?)  Let me give you a few highlights:

" ... With the newfangled Brooke Shields-mental-health-prostitution, many new moms read her book and say, "That’s me!" And then the moms jump on the post-partum depression bandwagon themselves, along with the little pills that supposedly cure the depression ..."

" ... As trumped up illnesses such as post-partum depression continue to make women feel as though we’re victims, we will spend our time talking in support groups instead of fighting for our dwindling freedoms ..."

I share this, of course, because it's an example of the stigma and ignorance that exists about mental illnesses, and in this case perinatal mood disorders.  It makes me sad.  I have a hard time accepting the smugness of people who are convinced they have complete control over their mental state, or that a good walk will shake off a deep depression.   Perhaps Ms. Shore has a medical degree that we're not aware of??

I agree with the premise that every illness doesn't require medication.  But the truth is, no doctor or mental health industry or advertisement or any other such thing made me think or do anything.  I made the choices about being treated, working with my doctor, and I recovered.  I am neither weak nor uneducated. Ms. Shore, I'd be more than happy to compare my intelligence level and accomplishments in life with yours.  I think, despite my experience with postpartum depression, you'd be quite surprised.

Being concerned about the government's involvement with medical screenings is one thing, but making light of postpartum mood disorders?  Not very cool. 

More Sad News & Something You Can Do About It

More sad news to share.  But first, let me explain something.  I don't share this news with you to make you feel bad or scare you when it comes to your own situation.  If you're reading this blog, it means you're doing something to get yourself better.  You're reaching out to learn more, and hopefully you're getting treated.  At minimum, I'll be here for you if you need me.  I share sad news because it's extremely important that everyone be informed about the most dire consequences of our illness.  This is real life, and people need to be confronted with it so that they might be urged on to act, and act quickly. 

PLEASE write your senators and congressmen and women and tell them to pass the MOTHERS Act.  I know it seems futile - I myself had never done it until now.  But we've got to do something.  Click here and look on the left side of the screen where you can enter your zip code.  Feel free to print out my story from the other day and this one so that you have proof to share that more people could get harmed if something isn't done.

Here's the news, from yesterday's Fayetteville Observer (NC)

"By the time detectives got to the two-story brick home in northern Cumberland County on Tuesday, Faye Johnson Vick and her two children had likely been dead for several days.

Detectives found their bodies inside Faye Vick’s vehicle, which was parked in the two-car garage and had run out of gas.

On Wednesday, investigators said Faye Vick killed herself and her children, 2-year-old Jason Vick and 3-month-old Madison Vick. A state Medical Examiner’s Office report said the three died of carbon monoxide poisoning.

No one can be sure what went through Vick’s mind before she climbed inside the vehicle with her two children and turned on the engine.

Debbie Tanna, a spokeswoman for the Cumberland County Sheriff’s Office, said Faye Vick, who was 39, had a history of postpartum depression ..."

November 21, 2006

Murders & Attempted Murders in California, South Carolina and Connecticut Should Move Congress to Pass the MOTHERS Act

There are WAY too many cases in the past couple of months where children are getting injured or killed.  WAY too many.  Hello, Senators and Congressman???!!!!!!  Are you seeing this?  Are you beginning to understand the necessity for better treatment for and research into perinatal mood disorders?  Why are you still shuffling around?  What is the problem?

I am absolutely incensed.  Make a stand, Congress.  Pass the MOTHERS Act so we don't lose any more women or children!!!!!!!!!!! 

It's happening in Connecticut --

According to the Hartford Courant, "The young mother accused of stabbing her children early Saturday may have been suffering from postpartum psychosis, a respected Hartford psychiatrist speculated Sunday ... Dr. Harold I. Schwartz, psychiatrist-in-chief at Hartford Hospital's Institute of Living, said ... it is reasonable to assume that Carmela Ortiz, 22, was suffering from the rarest and most severe form of postpartum depression when, police say, she critically wounded her 2-year-old twins and 7-month-old baby ... Ortiz used a knife to stab her three sons in their apartment ... Police said the children were critically injured but are expected to survive ... Postpartum psychosis does not happen suddenly, so there is time to intervene before a new mother hurts herself or her children, Schwartz said. One impediment to care has been that after a baby is born, doctors rarely ask new mothers about their frame of mind ..."   

It's happening in South Carolina --

From the Associated Press:  "A mother accused of killing her twin sons has postpartum depression and should be released from jail to receive treatment, her attorney told a judge.  Lakeia White, 20, was being held Friday on two counts of homicide by child abuse ... Berkeley County sheriff's detectives said White admitted smothering her 9-month-old sons Devion and Trevon Wilson last month because they were crying and she didn't feel well."  From the Charleston Post & Courier:  "White already has been evaluated by a psychiatrist in Columbia and was subsequently admitted to the private facility Palmetto Lowcountry Behavioral Health in North Charleston for treatment. That was at Davis' behest, and he said doctors concluded that White had postpartum psychosis."

It's happening in California --

From the San Diego Union-Tribune: "Kristen Lawson, now 30, gave birth to her third child, a girl, five months ago. When news spread among Lawson's friends that she'd been arrested for trying to kill both daughters, everyone assumed, without being told, that she had been struck low by another postpartum episode. [She experienced postpartum depression with the birth of her first two children.] There was simply no other explanation for why Lawson – whom one friend calls 'the epitome of what a mom should be' – reportedly tried to drown the girls in a bathtub ... Even the police say postpartum depression – or some sort of mental collapse – appears to be the culprit for Lawson's behavior."  Thank God she didn't succeed, but now Ms. Lawson is forbidden from ever going near her children again.

Do something, Congress!