| Literature DB >> 30193572 |
Maria Noonan1, Owen Doody2, Julie Jomeen3, Andrew O'Regan4, Rose Galvin5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Responding to and caring for women who experience mental health problems during the perinatal period, from pregnancy up to one year after birth, is complex and requires a multidisciplinary response. Family physicians are ideally placed to provide an effective response as it is recognised that they are responsible for organising care and supports for women and their families. This paper reports an integrative review undertaken to examine family physicians' perceived role in perinatal mental health care and concludes with recommendations for health policy, research and practice.Entities:
Keywords: Family physician; General practitioner; Integrated services; Integrative review; Perinatal mental health; Postpartum depression; Referral pathways; Screening
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30193572 PMCID: PMC6128990 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-018-0843-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Search Terms
| Search Terms | |
|---|---|
| “family practi*” OR “family physician” OR “family practice” OR “physicians, family” OR “primary health care” OR “physicians, primary care” OR “family doctor” OR “general practi*” AND “mental disorder” OR “adjustment disorder” OR “affective disorder” OR “dysthymic disorder” OR “mood disorder” OR psychiat* OR “behaviour control” OR “psychological phenomena” OR depression OR “mental health” OR “stress disorder” OR “anxiety disorder” OR “maternal welfare” OR “maternal health” OR “mental hygiene” OR bipolar OR “obsessive compulsive disorder” OR psychosis OR “psychological distress” OR “somatic disorder” OR “somatoform disorder” OR “mental illness” OR “emotional distress” OR “emotional care” OR “maternal distress” OR “psychosocial wellbeing” OR PTSD OR OCD AND antenatal OR antepartum OR prenatal OR pregnancy OR perinatal OR postnatal OR postpartum OR puerperal. |
Fig. 1Prisma Flow Diagram
Descriptive characteristics of studies included in the review
| Title, Author, publication year and country | Study aim | Design | Sample strategy and sample size | Data collection method | Analytical approach | Strengths and /Limitations | Key findings reported by authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recognition and management of perinatal depression in general practice. | To identify ways to improve detection and access to treatment. | A cross- sectional survey. | A random sample of 1075 general practitioners (GPs). | Questionnaire (10 multi-choice questions) and vignette. | Descriptive and inferential statistics (Analysis of Variance). | Random sample of general practitioners (GPs). Low response rate of 22.9% but consistent with other GP study response rates. Reliability and validity of the questionnaire and vignette not reported. | GPs preferences for antidepressant medication (antenatally 77% and postnatally 97%) contrasted strongly to women’s preferences for antidepressant medication (antenatally 22% and postnatally 54%). |
| Are family physicians appropriately screening for postpartum depression?. | To determine how frequently Washington state FPs screen for PPD, what methods they use to screen and what influences their screening frequency. | Cross-sectional survey. | A Random sample of 594 FPs. | A 25-item questionnaire developed for the study. | Frequencies | Random sample of FPs. Good response rate of 60.9%. Respondents were recruited from the Washington Academy of Family practice, a professional society, where members may be more likely to be aware of and follow recommendations for screening. Questionnaire tested for face validity only. Women and younger physicians responded disproportionately to the survey which may have led to an over estimation of screening rates. | 71% of FPs were always or often screening for postpartum depression (PPD) at routine postpartum gynaecologic visits and 46% at well child visits, with 30.6% using a validated screening tool and of those, 82% used a standardised clinical interview. |
| Health professional’s knowledge and awareness of perinatal depression: Results of a national survey. | To evaluate the extent to which perinatal mood disturbances are recognised. | A cross- sectional survey. | A random sample of 1075 GPs. | A 10-item knowledge questionnaire based on work of Watts and Pope (1998) and a depression vignette based on work of Jorm et al. (2000). | Descriptive and inferential statistics (ANOVA, t-tests). | Random sample of GPs. Low response rate of 22.9%. Reliability and validity of the questionnaire and vignette not reported. | GPs had similar positive awareness scores for perinatal depression compared to both midwives and maternal child health nurses. Depression more likely to be considered postnatally. |
| GPs’ and health visitors’ views on the diagnosis and management of postnatal depression: a qualitative study. Chew-Graham et al. (2008), UK [ | To explore the views of GPs and health visitors (HV) on the diagnosis and management of postnatal depression. | A qualitative study nested within a multicentre randomised controlled trial (RESPOND trial). (Underpinning methodological approach not identified). | Purposive sample. | In-depth, semi-structured interviews. | Thematic analysis (Strauss 1986). | Nineteen GPs participated in the study however data saturation, informed consent and relationship between researcher and participants were not addressed. | Psychosocial aetiology was attributed to the cause of PPD and ambivalence about the status of PPD as a separate condition was identified. GPs relied on instinct or clinical intuition to alert them to the possibility of PPD. |
| Primary Care Physicians’ Beliefs and Practices toward Maternal Depression. Leiferman et al. (2008), USA [ | To better understand and identify potential differences in attitudes, beliefs, efficacy, practices and current barriers (i.e. patient, physician and system) toward managing maternal depression across primary care specialities. | Cross-sectional survey. | A convenience sample of 971 primary care providers (PCPs). Response rate ( | 60-item questionnaire developed for the study (web or mail). | Descriptive and inferential statistics (Chi-square and one-way ANOVAs). | Convenience sample with response rate of 40.1% ( | Screening: 29.9% of family medicine physicians never/rarely assessed for maternal depression and 70.1% screened monthly/weekly/daily. The majority of family medicine physicians treat maternal depression by prescribing medication (92%) followed by referral to the mental health specialist off-site (82.8%) and 70.1% provide counselling in office and 37.9% refer to community support groups. |
| Disclosure of symptoms of postnatal depression, the perspectives of health professionals and women: a qualitative study. | To explore GPs, health visitor’s and women’s views on the disclosure of symptoms which may indicate postnatal depression in primary care. | A qualitative study nested within a multi-centre pragmatic randomised controlled trial (RESPOND trial). (Underpinning methodological approach not identified). | Purposive sample. | In-depth, semi-structured interviews. | Thematic analysis (Strauss 1986). | Nineteen GPs participated in the study however data saturation, informed consent and relationship between researcher and participants were not addressed. | GPs were reluctant to use the label PPD with women because of the stigma that they perceived women felt and the effect this would have on the consultation and because they felt women would recover without formal interventions. |
| Depression during pregnancy: views on antidepressant use and information sources of general practitioners and pharmacists. Ververs et al. (2009), The Netherlands [ | To investigate whether GPs and pharmacists in the Netherlands obtain information on the safety of gestational drug use and the pharmco-therapeutic approach when managing depression and anxiety during pregnancy. | Cross-sectional survey. | A random sample of 700 GPs and 700 pharmacists. Response rate GPs ( | 20 - item Questionnaire developed for the study. | Descriptive and inferential statistics (chi-squares tests). | Random sample of GPs. Low response rate of 19%. Reliability and validity of the questionnaire not reported. | GPs consulted a variety of sources for information on drugs during pregnancy. |
| Falling through the net- Black and minority ethnic women and perinatal mental healthcare: health professionals’ views. Edge (2010), UK [ | To investigate health professionals’ views about perinatal mental healthcare for Black and minority ethnic women. | Qualitative study (Underpinning methodological approach not identified). | Purposive sample of 42 healthcare professionals. Third sector (Focus group, | In-depth, semi-structured interviews. | Framework analysis (Ritchie et al. 1994). | Five GPs participated in this study. Data saturation, informed consent and relationship between researcher and participants were not addressed. Appropriate data verification strategies were identified. | Perinatal depression was not routinely screened for during antenatal and postnatal visits to the GP. |
| Primary care physician’s attitudes and practices regarding antidepressant use during pregnancy: a survey of two countries. | To explore primary care physician’s beliefs and practices toward perinatal depression by investigating the knowledge, attitudes and practices affecting a physician’s decision to continue or discontinue a woman’s antidepressant medication during this period. | A cross- sectional survey. | A convenience sample of 188 primary care physician from Australia (GPs (77)) and Canada (FPs (111)). | Questionnaire developed for the study. | Descriptive and inferential statistics (Chi-square test of association with Fisher’s exact test). | Different sampling strategies used for different populations. Convenience sample with response rate of 79.2% (Australian GPs) and 31.5% (Canadian FPs). Australian GPs were attending training workshops about identification, treatment and management of depression and were a self-selected sample. Reliability of questionnaire not determined. | Perceived levels of misinformation about the safety of antidepressant medication in pregnancy, belief that pregnant depressed women should be treated differently from non-pregnant depressed women, concerns over the legal liability and patient concerns influence prescribing practices for GPs and family physicians. |
| Antidepressants for mothers: What are we prescribing? Kean et al. (2011) Scotland [ | To investigate current prescribing practices among GPs of antidepressants to mothers presenting in first trimester of pregnancy and during breastfeeding. | A cross-sectional survey. | A convenience sample of 78 GPs. Response rate ( | Questionnaire (two vignettes) developed for the study. | Microsoft excel. | Convenience sample with response rate of 41% ( | One in four GPs ( |
| A qualitative study into how guidelines facilitate general practitioners to empower women to make decisions regarding antidepressant use in pregnancy. McCauley and Casson (2013), | To develop an in-depth understanding of GPs’ experience of using guidelines in the treatment of perinatal depression and if this enabled them to empower women to become involved in treatment decisions. | Qualitative study (Underpinning methodological approach not identified). | Purposive sample of GPs ( | In-depth, semi-structured interviews. | Colaizzi’ (1978) process of analysis. | Eight GPs participated in this study. Data saturation was not addressed. One data verification strategy (verification of themes between the chief investigator and researcher) was identified. | GPs reported low usage of guidelines. Treatment decisions involved balancing the impact of the severity of symptoms with the possibility of adverse effects of antidepressants on the fetus and timing of treatment. |
| Postpartum depression: the (in) experience of Brazilian primary healthcare professionals. Santos et al. (2013), Brazil [ | To describe primary healthcare physicians’ and nurses’ knowledge and experience in screening and treating women with postpartum depression. | Qualitative descriptive. | Purposeful sample. | In-depth, semi-structured interviews. | Inductive content analysis (Hsieh and Shannon 2005). | Seven physicians participated in this study and the researchers discussed data saturation. Observations of contacts between HCPs and postpartum women supported data findings. Appropriate data verification strategies identified. The relationship between researcher and participants was not addressed. | Physician’s reported limited knowledge, awareness and recognition of PPD and had limited direct clinical experience of caring for women who experience PPD. The focus of care was on physical wellbeing. |
| Primary Care Physicians’ Attitudes Toward Postpartum Depression: Is It Part of Their Job. Glasser et al. (2016) Israel [ | Israeli primary care physicians’ attitudes and practice regarding postpartum depression (PPD). | Cross sectional survey. | A convenience sample of 345. Response rate 65% ( | Questionnaire developed for study. | Descriptive and inferential statistics (Chi-square). | Convenience sample with response rate of 65% ( | Family practitioners identified the importance of being able to recognise the signs of PPD. |
Methodological quality of qualitative studies
| Authors | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | Total scores |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chew-Graham et al. (2008) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Uncleara | Unclear | Unclearb | Yes | Yes | Clear | 7/10 |
| Chew-Graham et al. (2009) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Uncleara | Unclear | Unclearb | Yes | Yes | Clear | 7/10 |
| Edge (2010) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Uncleara | Unclear | Unclearb | Yes | Yes | Clear | 7/10 |
| McCauley and Casson (2013) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Uncleara | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 9/10 |
| Santos et al. (2013) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 9/10 |
Keys:
1. Was there a clear statement of the aims of the research?
2. Is a qualitative methodology appropriate?
3. Was the research design appropriate to address the aims of the research?
4. Was the recruitment strategy appropriate to the aims of the research?
5. Was the data collected in a way that addressed the research issue?
6. Has the relationship between the researcher and participants been adequately considered?
7. Have ethical issues been taken into consideration?
8. Was the data analysis sufficiently rigorous?
9. Is there a clear statement of findings?
10. How valuable is the research?
Critical Appraisal Skills Programme [20]
aTheoretical saturation not discussed
bDid not explicitly discuss informed consent
Methodological quality of quantitative studies
| Study | 1a | 2a | 2b | 2c | 2d | 3a | 3b | 3c | 4a | 4b | 5a | 6a | 7a | 8a | Total score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buist et al. (2005) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 11/14 |
| Seehusen et al. (2005) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 13/14 |
| Buist et al. (2006) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 11/14 |
| Leiferman et al. (2008) [ | Yes | Yes | Noa | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 12/14 |
| Ververs et al. (2009) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 10/14 |
| Bilszta et al. (2011) [ | Yes | Yes | Noa | Yes | No | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 10/14 |
| Kean et al. 2011 [ | Yes | Unclear | Noa | No | No | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 8/14 |
| Glasser et al. (2016) [ | Yes | Yes | Noa | No | No | Yes | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Clear | 9/14 |
Keys:
A Are the results valid?
1. Objectives:
1a. Are the objectives of the study clearly stated?
2. Design:
2a. Is the study design suitable for the objectives?
2b. Did the subject represent the full spectrum of the population of interest?
2c. Has ethical approval been obtained?
2d. Were measures used to contact non-responders?
3. Measurement and observation
3a. Is it clear what was measured, how it was measured and what the outcomes were?
3b. Are the measurements valid?
3c. Are the measurements reliable?
B What are the results
Presentation of results
4a. Are the basic data adequately described?
4b. Are the results presented clearly, objectively and in sufficient detail to enable readers to make their own judgement?
Analysis
5a. Are the methods appropriate to the data?
C Will the results help locally?
6 Discussion
6a Are the results discussed in relation to existing knowledge on the subject and study objectives?
7 Interpretation
7a. Are the authors conclusions justified by the data?
8 Implementation
8a Can any necessary change be implemented in practice?
Rees et al. [21]
aconvenience samples
Fig. 2Themes and sub-themes
Excerpts from original studies
| Buist et al. (2005) [ | Knowledge and awareness | Mean knowledge score out of 100 was 66. General practitioners (GPs) had significantly higher positive awareness of perinatal depression (7.1, SD:2.7) and corresponding low negative awareness (− 0.2, SD: 2.3) compared with the postnatal women surveyed in this study (4.0, SD:3.5 and 1.1, SD: 1.7) ( |
| Seehusen et al. (2005) [ | Time of screening | The majority of family physicians (FPs) were screening at routine postpartum gynaecologic visits but not at well child visits. |
| Buist et al. (2006) [ | Awareness | GPs had similar awareness scores for perinatal depression compared to both midwives and maternal child health nurses. Depression more likely to be considered postnatally. |
| Chew-Graham et al. (2008) [ | Conceptualisation of postnatal depression | Psychosocial aetiology was attributed to the cause of postnatal depression (PND) and ambivalence about the status of PND as separate condition was identified. |
| Leiferman et al. (2008) [ | Responsibility | Family medicine physicians were most likely to feel responsible for and confident in treating maternal depression in comparison to obstetricians and paediatricians. |
| Chew-Graham et al. (2009) [ | Conceptualisation of PND | Psychosocial aetiology was attributed to the cause of postnatal depression and ambivalence about the status of postnatal depression as separate condition as compared with depressive illness at other times in a woman’s life was identified. |
| Ververs et al. (2009) [ | Guidelines | Only one GP had access to a local written policy on the treatment of depression and anxiety during pregnancy. Almost three quarters of GPs regularly consult pharmacists for information on drugs during pregnancy. The reference used most frequently by GPs is the “Pharmacotherapy Compass” The Dutch National Health Insurance System Formulary issued annually in the Netherlands. Guidelines on the treatment of depression (not specific to pregnancy) issued by the Dutch College of General Practitioners are used to a lesser extent. A quarter of GPs contact the manufacturer of a specific drug for information. 45% use the internet to look for information on scientific evidence or reports from consensus groups. GPs use different sources of information on antidepressant use in pregnancy. One in five answered yes to the question of whether the subject “treatment of depression and anxiety during pregnancy” has been covered during professional education courses. Referral: 29% of GPs in this study never refer a woman who is pregnant and on anti-depressants to a psychiatrist and 50% refer sometimes. 9% of GPs state that they sometimes advice terminating the pregnancy when a woman who uses antidepressants becomes pregnant. 55% of GPs never advised substituting psychotherapy for medication in order to prevent drug exposure to the child. The main reason for treating depression or anxiety during pregnancy was because the seriousness of maternal complaints outweighs possible risks for the child ( |
| Edge (2010) [ | Diagnosis | Acknowledgement that postnatal depression in women from black and minority communities was rarely diagnosed and may be missed. GPs privileged intuition over instrumentation did not routinely screen for PND, and appeared highly resistant to using validated psychiatric measures or screening tools such as the EPDS and PHQ-9. |
| Bilszta et al. (2011) [ | Factors influencing Prescribing practices | Perceived levels of misinformation about the safety of antidepressant medication in pregnancy, belief that pregnant depressed women should be treated differently from non-pregnant depressed women, concerns over the legal liability and patient concerns influence prescribing practices with GPs and family physicians reportedly feeling hesitant to prescribe, tapering dosages rather than discontinuing medication (continuation or discontinuation of use of antidepressants in pregnancy). |
| Kean et al. (2011) [ | Antidepressants | One in four GPs ( |
| McCauley and Casson 2013 [ | Lack of time | GPs reported low usage of guidelines in practice due to lack of time and the volume of available guidelines. GPs acknowledged that guidelines provide best practice advice, a professional reference point and can be used as a defence against litigation in case of adverse reactions however, guidelines were also identified as generic, lacked specific and clear direction on treatment in the perinatal period, were restrictive and may inhibit flexibility and knowledge resulting in patient need not being met. GPs relied on their own professional experience and knowledge of the individual woman to make complex risk-benefit treatment decisions. Individualised information provision communicated using lay language in both written and verbal formats encouraged women to be involved in the decision –making process. Lack of specific or accurate guidance was described as a barrier to information provision and led to under treatment of pregnant women in general practice. Professional experience was used to determine the level of involvement that women wanted in the decision-making process. Treatment decisions involved balancing the impact of the severity of symptoms with the possibility of adverse effects of antidepressants on the foetus and timing of treatment. Female GPs acknowledged that their personal experience of pregnancy affected decisions. Lack of consultation with GPs by women led to abrupt stopping of antidepressants. GPs acknowledged the support available from the local mental health team and voluntary organisations. However, a lack of available resources, specialists’ perinatal mental health services, delays in response due to lengthy appointment waiting lists and increasing workloads were identified as barriers to complicated treatment decisions. GPs view the involvement of women in treatment decisions as central to women’s empowerment but clinical complexities and the level to which women want to be involved in decisions about medications in pregnancy limit involvement. |
| Santos et al. (2013) [ | Knowledge and awareness | Family physician’s in a city in Brazil reported limited knowledge, awareness and recognition of PPD and had limited direct clinical experience of caring for women who experience PPD. They viewed PPD as an uncommon problem attributed to hormonal changes. The clinical practice protocols available to physicians did not recommend any particular approach to perinatal mood disorders. The focus of care was on physical wellbeing. PPD was seen as the responsibility of psychiatrists in relation to identification, diagnosis and treatment. A lack of training, skills, time and resources were identified as barriers to the provision of care to women with perinatal mood disorders. Two challenges identified were a lack of comfort in approaching women who could potentially be experiencing PPD and lack of physical space for women to be treated. |
| Glasser et al. (2016) [ | Responsibility Recognition of signs | The majority of family practitioners identified the importance of being able to recognise the signs of PPD. 84.6% of family practitioners would become somewhat involved to include clarifying the situation, keeping attentive, consulting with colleagues and/or referring the mother to another professional. |
Screening tools identified within studies
| Study | Screening instrument | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Buist et al. (2005) [ | The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression scale (EPDS) | Postpartum. |
| Seehusen et al. (2005) [ | A standardised clinical interview (82%). | 31% of family physicians (FPs) always screened for postpartum depression (PPD) at routine postpartum gynaecologic visits. |
| Buist et al. (2006) [ | The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression scale (EPDS). | Postpartum. |
| Chew-Graham et al. (2008) [ | Instinct or clinical intuition to alert GPs to the possibility of PPD. | Intuitional use - “So I’m not saying I would actually look for it, but I am hoping my antennae would tell me if there was a problem” (GP, M5, P.171). |
| Leiferman et al. (2008) [ | Evidence of screening tool utilised by participants but screening tool not identified. | 70.1% screened monthly/weekly/daily. |
| Chew-Graham et al. (2009) [ | Instinct or clinical intuition to alert GPs to the possibility of PPD. | Intuitional use where a degree of suspicion is present. |
| Ververs et al. (2009) [ | None identified. | N/A |
| Edge (2010) [ | GPs privileged intuition over instrumentation and did not routinely screen for PPD and appeared highly resistant to using validated psychiatric measures or screening tools such as the EPDS and Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). | Infrequent based on intuition - “I am largely responsible for PHQ-9 being introduced…when it comes to my own type of practice, I very rarely get the PHQ-9 out and get people to tick boxes but I will take the questions from it and I will use those. So, umm, I would be lying if I said I used a formal structured questionnaire to get a clinical diagnosis, because I don’t” (GP1, P.19). |
| Bilszta et al. (2011) [ | None identified | N/A |
| Kean et al. (2011) [ | None identified | N/A |
| McCauley and Casson (2013) [ | None identified | N/A |
| Santos et al. (2013) [ | No evidence of screening tools used by primary healthcare professionals within the study region. | N/A |
| Glasser et al. (2016) [ | No screening tools identified within the study. However, 91.2% of family practitioners indicated they would be willing to use a brief questionnaire to identify the signs of PPD. | N/A |
Summary of synthesis
| Theme | Findings | Limitations of current evidence | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Identification of PMHPsa | A lack of consistent approach to screening for perinatal depression and anxiety evident. | None of the included studies specifically explored FPsb approach to identifying perinatal psychological distress in primary practice. | Universal screening for perinatal depression and anxiety using short validated screening tools to be considered for primary care. |
| 2. Management of PMHPsa in Primary care | Pharmacological management of PMHPsa was identified as the main treatment modality offered to women in primary care. | The review identified studies which predominantly focused on pharmacological management and made limited reference to non-pharmacological management of PMHPsa. | FPsb require support with perinatal pharmacological treatment decisions for women experiencing PMHPsa. |
| Barriers to service provision | |||
| 3a. Service user | A reluctance of women particularly from minority ethnic and diverse cultural backgrounds to ask for help because of the perceived stigma associated with PMHPsa. | Only one study explored FPsb encounters with Black and minority ethnic women experiencing PMHd care. | National campaigns are required to increase awareness of the spectrum of PMHPsa and encourage women and their families to seek support. |
| 3b. Physician level | A lack of knowledge and skills were reported as barriers to screening and treatment of PMHPs by FPsa. | Only one study evaluated the training and education needs of FPsa in relation to PMHd. | An exploration of FPsb training and education needs in relation to PMHd would ensure that education strategies and professional development opportunities are appropriately contextualised to the needs of FPsb. |
| 3c. System level | A lack of available and timely access to resources, clearly defined care pathways and specialist PMHd services. | Included studies did not examine the PMHd referral support needs of FPsb. | FPsb require timely access to a range of culturally sensitive and PMHd specific services. |
a PMHPs perinatal mental health problems
b FP Family Physician
c PPD Postpartum Depression
d PMH perinatal mental health