| Literature DB >> 33238480 |
Wenjie Gong1,2,3, Xin Jin1, Kar Keung Cheng2, Eric D Caine3, Richard Lehman2, Dong Roman Xu4.
Abstract
China recently issued a national plan on perinatal depression (PND) screening. Previous studies elsewhere suggested that uptake of referral after screening for PND is suboptimal, but little is known in China. In this cohort study including 1126 women in Hunan, we identified women at a high risk of PND using the Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale (EPDS) over multiple time points. We texted them and offered free consultations with a psychiatrist/psychologist. Among 248 screen-positive women, only three expressed interest and one attended the appointment. We surveyed the women about their reasons for declining referrals and preferred means of care. Of the 161 respondents, 128 (79.5%) indicated that they could cope with the condition without professional assistance and 142 (88.2%) chose their families as the preferred source of help. Only 15 (9.3%) chose professionals as their first option. Implementing a referral policy for screen-positive women would mean approximately one-third of women who gave birth in China would be eligible. Our result argues against referring all screen-positive women for professional services at this time. Interventions should instead build upon the tradition of family support in a more engaged response. These considerations are relevant for the implementation of national screening for PND in China.Entities:
Keywords: mental health; perinatal depression; preferences for care; referral; routine screening
Year: 2020 PMID: 33238480 PMCID: PMC7700456 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17228686
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow chart of the cohort study.
Participant profile (n = 1126).
| Variable | High Risk Women ( | Other Women in Cohort ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 0.905 | ||
| <25 | 37 (15.04%) | 120 (13.89%) | |
| 25–30 | 139 (56.50%) | 480 (55.56%) | |
| 30–35 | 51 (20.73%) | 188 (21.76%) | |
| >35 | 19 (7.72%) | 76 (8.80%) | |
| Average | 28.28 | 28.83 | |
| Missing | 2 | 14 | |
| Parity | 0.806 | ||
| Primiparas | 64 (25.91%) | 229 (26.97%) | |
| Multiparas | 183 (74.09%) | 620 (73.03%) | |
| Missing | 1 | 29 | |
| Education | 0.891 | ||
| Middle school graduate or less | 31 (12.60%) | 96 (11.03%) | |
| High school | 58 (23.58%) | 200 (22.99%) | |
| College degree | 136 (55.28%) | 501 (57.59%) | |
| Graduate or professional degree | 21 (8.54%) | 73 (8.39%) | |
| Missing | 2 | 8 | |
| Jobs | 0.900 | ||
| Government workers | 51 (21.07%) | 185 (21.46%) | |
| Enterprise managers | 43 (17.77%) | 151 (17.52%) | |
| Private business owner | 31 (12.81%) | 136 (15.78%) | |
| Workers/Farmers | 11 (4.55%) | 39 (4.52%) | |
| Unemployed (due to disease or other reasons) | 66 (27.27%) | 214 (24.83%) | |
| Others | 40 (16.53%) | 137 (15.89%) | |
| Missing | 6 | 16 | |
| Income per month | 0.471 | ||
| 0 | 69 (28.28%) | 236 (27.73%) | |
| ¥1–2000 | 12 (4.92%) | 53 (6.23%) | |
| ¥2001–5000 | 122 (50.00%) | 389 (45.71%) | |
| Over ¥5001 | 41 (16.80%) | 173 (20.33%) | |
| Missing | 4 | 27 | |
| Depression history | 0.005 ** | ||
| No | 164 (93.18%) | 609 (97.91%) | |
| Yes | 12 (6.82%) | 13 (2.09%) | |
| Missing | 72 | 256 | |
| Living Situation | 0.233 | ||
| Nuclear family | 87 (35.80%) | 375 (43.20%) | |
| Nuclear family and parents in law | 91 (37.45%) | 296 (34.10%) | |
| Nuclear family and parents | 40 (16.46%) | 107 (12.33%) | |
| Living alone | 20 (8.23%) | 71 (8.18%) | |
| Else | 5 (2.06%) | 19 (2.19%) | |
| Missing | 5 | 10 | |
| Relationship with spouse | <0.001 *** | ||
| Satisfied | 174 (71.90%) | 731 (84.12%) | |
| Somewhat satisfied | 65 (26.86%) | 136 (15.56%) | |
| Dissatisfied | 2 (1.24%) | 2 (0.23%) | |
| Missing | 7 | 9 | |
| Family’s wishes about child’s sex | 0.041 * | ||
| Boy | 44 (18.11%) | 106 (12.24%) | |
| Girl | 32 (13.17%) | 103 (11.89%) | |
| Does not matter | 167 (68.72%) | 657 (75.87%) | |
| Missing | 5 | 12 | |
| Willingness to do the month | 0.018 * | ||
| Yes | 207 (85.19%) | 786 (90.66%) | |
| No | 36 (14.81%) | 81 (9.34%) | |
| Missing | 5 | 11 |
* p ≤ 0.05; ** p ≤ 0.01; *** p ≤ 0.001.
Figure 2The responses of screen-positive women using ranking scores to indicate the importance of the items among our survey respondents.
Follow-up about depression of women in the cohort.
| EPDS Scores | High-Risk Women ( | Other Women in Cohort ( |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| >12.5 | 42 (34.43%) | 19 (5.85%) |
| <12.5 | 80 (65.57%) | 306 (94.15%) |
| missing | 126 (50.80%) | 553 (63.98%) |
|
| ||
| >12.5 | 26 (23.42%) | 11 (3.48%) |
| <12.5 | 85 (76.58%) | 305 (96.52%) |
| missing | 137 (55.24%) | 562 (64.00%) |