Many Pregnant Women Show Signs of Depression,

Many Pregnant Women Show Signs of Depression,
But Few Are Getting Treatment, U-M Study Finds
Symptoms may pose risk to fetus, raise chance
of post-partum depression
ANN ARBOR, MI - One in five pregnant women may be
experiencing symptoms of depression, but few are getting
help for it, a new University of Michigan study finds.
And those with a history of depression any time before their
pregnancy - about one in every four women - are about
twice as likely as other women to show signs of depression
while pregnant, the study results show.
The study of 3,472 pregnant women, conducted by
researchers from the U-M Depression Center in the waiting
rooms of 10 Michigan obstetrics clinics, is being published
May 22 in the Journal of Women’s Health.
The results reveal troubling under-diagnosis and undertreatment of depression in pregnancy. Twenty percent
of the women scored high on a standard survey of
depression symptoms, but of those, only 13.8 percent
were receiving any mental health counseling, drugs or
other treatment. Only about 24 percent of those who
had had depression in the last six months were receiving
treatment during pregnancy.
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Growing scientific evidence suggests that hormone
imbalances associated with depression can affect the fetus
or put a woman at higher risk of post-partum depression.
Population-based evidence has also shown that babies of
depressed mothers do worse at birth, and beyond, than
other infants.
Sheila Marcus, M.D.
“A woman’s childbearing years are also her highest-risk
time for depression. Doctors used to think of pregnancy
as a ‘honeymoon’ away from depression risk, but this is
turning out to be a myth,” says lead author Sheila Marcus,
M.D., a clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at the
U-M Medical School. “We now know that the hormones
and brain chemistry involved in depression are known
to be affected by changes in other hormones related to
pregnancy. And we know this may affect the fetus.”
Fortunately, Marcus notes, recent studies have shown that
some standard depression treatments - including some
antidepressant drugs - do not appear to increase the risk
of birth defects. A few longer-term studies suggest that
infants exposed to some antidepressants in pregnancy look
very similar to their siblings who are not exposed, both in
terms of IQ and learning problems, when compared at age
5. But she notes that more work is necessary in this area.
She and her colleagues hope their study will help raise
awareness among pregnant women, and their doctors
and midwives, about the need to recognize depression
symptoms and seek treatment.
Explains Marcus, “We need to educate women about the
signs of depression, and encourage them to be open about
how they’re feeling during pregnancy and after delivery,
rather than feeling guilty and embarrassed.”
The U-M Depression Center, the nation’s only
comprehensive center for depression treatment,
research and education, has launched a Web site
about depression designed specifically for women,
www.med.umich.edu/womensguide. The site recognizes
that one in four women will experience depression
sometime in her life, and that hormone-related life
transitions such as puberty, pregnancy and menopause
are strongly associated with an increased risk.
The team led by Marcus, who is also the clinical director
of the psychiatry division of the U-M Depression Center,
conducted the survey over a three-year period at a range
of clinics where pregnant women were awaiting their
prenatal doctor’s visits. Ninety percent of the women who
were approached agreed to complete the survey. Marcus
notes that the high participation and completion rate show
that screening for depression in the doctor’s office waiting
room may be feasible across the board. Such screening is
becoming standard at U-M obstetrics clinics.
The survey included a standardized validated questionnaire
of current distress and depressive feelings (CES-D), a
standardized validated questionnaire about alcohol
use (TWEAK), and questions about lifetime and recent
depression history and treatment, overall health, use of
prescription drugs and demographic information.
The women ranged in age from 18 to 46 years, with an
average age of 28.6 years, and were from diverse racial
and ethnic backgrounds with about 73 percent white. They
were, on average, about 25 weeks into their pregnancies,
but gestation ages ranged from 3 to 41 weeks.
The researchers used a cutoff score of 16 or above on the
CES-D scale to indicate current minor depression. They
also asked the women whether they had had a period
of two or more weeks in the last six months, or in their
lifetime, when they had consistently felt sad, blue or
depressed, or lost all interest in things such as work - an
indication of major depression.
Twenty-eight percent of the women reported a lifetime
history of major depression, and 42 percent of them
scored above 16 on the CES-D, indicating current minor
or major depression.
This recurrence of depression during pregnancy, Marcus
feels, is a significant issue that deserves special attention.
Because of depression’s cyclical nature, women who have
had depression at any time in their lives may be symptomfree when they become pregnant. But the new data suggest
that they can start experiencing a return of their symptoms
during pregnancy - and their increased risk of post-partum
depression is already well known.
Women who reported being unemployed or without a
partner, using alcohol and tobacco during pregnancy, or
having lower levels of education were all more likely to score
above 16 on the CES-D scale of distress and depression.
The study also showed that the vast majority of currently
or previously depressed women - 86 percent of those
with current symptoms, 88 percent of those with lifetime
history of depression and 76 percent of those with
depression in the last six months - had not seen a counselor
or received other treatment in recent months. In fact,
about half of the women in the study who had been taking
medications for depression before they got pregnant
stopped once they conceived.
This under-treatment, and treatment stoppage, stem
from a misconception that antidepressants are unsafe for
pregnant women and fetuses, says Marcus.
Some drugs - such as lithium used to treat the bipolar form
of depression - are indeed associated with an increased risk
of birth defects.
But no increased risk is seen with other drugs. For instance,
a paper published in the March 2003 issue of the American
Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology showed that the rate
of birth defects and birth complications among the babies
of women who took antidepressants called SSRIs was the
same as for non-depressed women.
“There are two kinds of treatment that can be thought
about for pregnant women: interpersonal psychotherapy,
and the SSRI and tricyclic classes of medications,” says
Marcus. SSRIs include popular drugs such as Prozac, Paxil,
Zoloft and Celexa. And while it wouldn’t be feasible to do a
major randomized, controlled, prospective study of drugs in
pregnant women with depression, population studies
and the need to balance risk with benefit should help
ease concerns.
Medications and psychotherapy can regulate the stress
hormones and other brain chemistry involved in depression,
helping alleviate women’s symptoms, improve their
quality of life, and reduce their chances of debilitating
post-partum depression, self-harming acts and suicide.
But this moderating effect may also spare the fetus lasting
effects, Marcus suspects. Studies have shown that babies
born to depressed mothers have lower birth weights,
higher risk of premature birth and birth complications,
delayed cognitive and language development, and more
behavioral problems. Scientists are beginning to speculate
that these effects may be due in part to the unbalanced sea
of hormones and reduced blood flow that these fetuses are
exposed to in the womb. Even minor depression, Marcus
notes, may affect the fetus.
To explore this issue further, the U-M Depression Center
team has embarked on a major study involving pregnant
women before and after they deliver, and from their
newborn babies. Saliva from cheek swabs, and blood
samples from the mother and the newborn’s umbilical cord,
will be examined for levels of cortisol, a hormone that’s
associated with stress and depression. The researchers,
led by Delia M. Vazquez, M.D., an associate professor
of pediatrics and psychiatry at the U-M, will follow the
mothers and babies for more than a year after birth.
In the meantime, Marcus notes, the findings in the newly
published paper should help clinicians and women alike
understand the importance of recognizing and treating
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depression in pregnancy. “Women with a history of
depression should be targeted for more intensive
assessment during early pregnancy,” Marcus says. “And it
may be useful for clinicians to watch for depression in those
who are not working, are unmarried, have greater health
complaints, and those who use alcohol and cigarettes
during pregnancy.”
In addition to Marcus, the study’s authors include Heather
Flynn, Ph.D., a psychologist and member of the U-M
Depression Center Women’s Mood Disorders Program;
and Frederic C. Blow, Ph.D., and Kristen L. Barry, Ph.D.,
of the U-M Department of Psychiatry and the VA Ann
Arbor Healthcare Center. The research was funded by the
University of Michigan Health System.
Reference: Journal of Women’s Health, Vol. 12, No. 4, May, 2003
Special notes on this release
If you or someone you know is experiencing symptoms
of depression (same link as above) during pregnancy or
after delivering a baby, it’s important to tell a medical
professional such as your doctor or nurse midwife.
Treatment, including talk therapy and medications, can
help lessen symptoms for the mother and reduce the
impact on the baby. Go to A Women’s Guide to Depression
for a list of resources that might help.
Written by: Kara Gavin
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