| Literature DB >> 32343736 |
Abel Fekadu Dadi1,2, Temesgen Yihunie Akalu1, Adhanom Gebreegziabher Baraki1, Haileab Fekadu Wolde1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Postnatal depression (PND) is a major cause of negative health-related behaviors and outcomes during infancy, childhood and adolescent period. In Africa, the burden of postnatal depression is high. However, it is under-investigated hence under-treated. To fill this information gap and to advise further interventions, we aimed at analyzing its epidemiology in Africa.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32343736 PMCID: PMC7188237 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0231940
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram indicating the study selection for inclusion in the systematic review.
Characteristics of included studies: A systematic review and meta-analysis of postpartum depression in Africa.
| Author, P. year | Country | Study setting | Study design | Sample size | Screening time | Tool used | Prevalence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Ramchandani PG et al. 2008 | South Africa | Community | Cohort | 1035 | 24 weeks | PDQ | 16.40% |
| 2. | Stellenberg E et al. 2016 | South Africa | Community | Cross-sectional | 159 | 6 to 14 weeks | EPDS | 50.30% |
| 3. | Stewart RC et al. 2009 | Malawi | HI | Cross-sectional | 501 | 36 weeks | DSM-IV | 13.90% |
| 4. | Hassanein I et al. 2014 | Egypt | HI | Cross-sectional | 290 | 12 weeks | EPDS | 39% |
| 5. | Mohammed ES et al. 2014 | Egypt | Community | Cross-sectional | 200 | 56 weeks | EPDS | 49.50% |
| 6. | Khalifa DS et al. 2015 | Sudan | HI | Follow up | 300 | 12 weeks | EPDS | 9.20% |
| 7. | Shamu S et al. 2016 | Zimbabwe | HI | Cross-sectional | 842 | 6 weeks | CES-D | 21.40% |
| 8. | Ndokera R et al. 2008 | Zambia | Community | Cross-sectional | 278 | 8 to 48 weeks | SRQ-20 | 9.70% |
| 9. | Guo N et al 2013 | Cot devoir | HI | Cohort | 654 | 12 weeks | PHQ_9 | 11.80% |
| 10. | Weobong B et al. 2017 | Ghana | Community | Cohort | 16,560 | 4 to 12 weeks | DSM-IV | 3.50% |
| 11. | Weobong B et al. 2016 | Ghana | Community | Cohort | 13, 360 | 4 weeks | PHQ-9 | 3.80% |
| 12. | Guo N et al. 2013 | Ghana | HI | Cohort | 654 | 12 weeks | PHQ_9 | 8.90% |
| 13. | Wemakor A et al. 2018 | Ghana | Community | Cross-sectional | 200 | 6–23 months | CES-D | 33.50% |
| 14. | Anokiye R et al. 2018 | Ghana | HI | Cross-sectional | 257 | 0–48 weeks | PHQ-9 | 7.00% |
| 15. | Adamu AF et al. 2018 | Ethiopia | HI | Cross sectional | 618 | 0–6 weeks | EPDS | 23.30% |
| 16. | Azale A et al.2018 | Ethiopia | Community | Cross-sectional | 3147 | 1-12months | PHQ-9 | 12.23% |
| 17. | Azale A et al. 2016 | Ethiopia | Community | Cross-sectional | 385 | 24 weeks | PHQ_9 | 12.13% |
| 18. | Mahenge B et al. 2018 | Tanzania | HI | Cross-sectional | 500 | 4–36 weeks | PHQ-9 | 13.60% |
| 19 | Rogathi JJ et al. 2017 | Tanzania | HI | Cohort | 1013 | 40 days | EPDS | 12.00% |
HI: Health Institution, EPDS: Edinburgh Postnatal Depression scale SRQ: Self Reporting Questionnaire CESD-10: Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, PHQ: Patient Health Questionnaire, DSM-V: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental DisorderPDQ: Perceived Deficit Questionnaire.
Fig 2Postnatal depression prevalence in Africa, a meta-analysis, sub analyzed by geographical area (N = 19, random effect).
Fig 3Funnel plot with pseudo 95% confidence interval limits.
Fig 4Filled funnel plot with pseudo 95% confidence interval.
Sub-analysis of postnatal depression in Africa (N = 19).
| Variable for sub-analysis | Number of studies | Sample size (N) | Pooled prevalence (95%CI) random effect model |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sub-Saharan countries | 14 | 18,030 | 13.49(11.35,15.63) |
| Non-sub-Saharan countries | 2 | 490 | 44.05(33.77,54.33) |
| Ethiopia | 3 | 4,150 | 15.78(9.36,22.21) |
| Low-income | 10 | 4,149 | 19.94(15.36, 24.52) |
| Middle-income | 9 | 19,797 | 12.35 (10.13, 14.57) |
| Measured in the first 12 weeks | 9 | 19,782 | 11.82(10.08, 13.55) |
| Measured in the first 48 weeks | 8 | 3,764 | 17.22(14.33, 20.11) |
| Measured in the first 96 weeks | 2 | 400 | 41.46(25.78, 57.14) |
| Community based | 9 | 18,817 | 17.30 (14.45, 20.16) |
| Health institution based | 10 | 5129 | 15.71(11.59, 19.82) |
| Follow-up study | 7 | 20,216 | 9.00 (7.12, 10.87) |
| Cross-sectional study | 12 | 3,730 | 23.11 (17.75,28.47) |
| < = 384 | 7 | 1,684 | 28.03(15.49, 40.56) |
| >384 | 12 | 22,262 | 12.49(10.21, 14.79) |
| 2008–2010 | 3 | 1,814 | 13.52(9.77, 17.27) |
| 2011–2013 | 2 | 1,308 | 10.29(7.45, 13.13) |
| 2014–2016 | 7 | 2,176 | 26.07(14.97, 37.16) |
| 2017–2018 | 7 | 18,648 | 14.55(9.03, 20.08) |
| EPDS | 6 | 19,277 | 16.41(8.89, 23.94) |
| PHQ-9 | 7 | 5,490 | 22.83(15.76, 29.89) |
| DSM-IV | 2 | 1,291 | 11.31(9.25, 13.38) |
| Other(CES-D, SRQ-20, PDQ) | 4 | 1,535 | 15.25(5.96, 24.54) |
Fig 5Sensitivity analysis between postnatal depressions studies included in a meta-analysis.
Fig 6Factors affecting the occurrence of postnatal depression in Africa (N = 19; random effect).