| Literature DB >> 34974537 |
Erin Kennedy1, Kristen Munyan2.
Abstract
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends screening mothers for Postpartum Depression (PPD) during the postpartum period. Research shows depression in parents is associated with impaired growth and development in their children. The National Perinatal Association (NPA) encourages screening fathers for depression at least twice during the first postpartum year, however a preferred screening tool has yet to be determined. To promote optimal outcomes for children, providers must assess the mental health of all new parents, regardless of gender. Therefore, the purpose of this integrative review is to examine previous scientific evidence regarding the sensitivity of screening measures for postpartum depression in fathers. Future research should be directed towards describing the psychometric properties of a tool to assess postpartum mood disorders in American fathers while analyzing appropriate screening intervals during the postpartum period.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34974537 PMCID: PMC8752439 DOI: 10.1038/s41372-021-01265-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Perinatol ISSN: 0743-8346 Impact factor: 2.521
Summary of literature.
| Author (date) | Study stated purpose | Subjects/setting | Scale analyzed | Methodology | Results | Clinical implications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carlberg et al. (2018) | Compare depression assessment and demographic factors of the EPDS and GMDS. | EPDS and GMDS items, the survey also contained questions covering possible risk factors related to the sociodemographic variables. | Cross-sectional design, surveys sent via letter with recruitment list being obtained through tax records. | Results suggest that neither scale alone is sufficient for depression screening in new fathers, and the decision of EPDS cutoff is extremely important. | Neither the EPDS or the GMDS may be adequate for screening. Clinician’s should be conservative in determining EPDS cut-offs when screening men for postnatal depression. | |
| Edmondson et al. (2010) | Establish a reliable cut point for the EPDS for UK fathers and to determine its reliability by comparing it to structured clinical interviews. | Couples recruited 7 weeks after birth. Questionnaire response of couples agreed to a home visit and SCI. | EPDS, SCID, demographic characteristics. | EPDS at 7 weeks after the birth of their child. SCI conducted to correlate positive screening to SCID findings. | Fathers with depression scored higher on the EPDS than non-depressed fathers. | The EPDS had acceptable sensitivity and specificity at a cut off score of over 10. EPDS may be useful for perinatal screening for depression in men. |
| Lai et al. (2010) | Compare the psychometric properties of the EPDS, BDI, and PHQ-9. | EPDS, BDI, and PHQ-9, validated against the SCID. | Collection of demographic data occurred immediately postnatal prior to discharge. Participants sent survey screenings at 8 weeks postpartum. Men with positive screenings invited to participate in SCID. | The EPDS was significantly more accurate at detecting postnatal depression in Chinese men than the BDI or PHQ-9. | The EPDS was recommended for postnatal depression with a cutoff score of over 10/11. | |
| Loscalzo et al. (2015) | Contribute to the validation of the EPDS on a sample of Italian fathers and conduct factorial analysis. | Two samples. First, | EPDS, the BID, and the CES-D. Demographic questions such as age, education level, and marital status. | Conducted explorative factor analysis and receiver operator characteristic analysis using samples with new fathers known to have depression. | EPDS did not appear sensitive to depression but rather to symptoms of depression and distress. | The EPDS is sensitive for screening for perinatal distress and identifying fathers in need of emotional support. |
| Matthey et al. (2001) | To validate the EPDS for use in fathers and to establish an acceptable cut off point. | EPDS, diagnostic interviewing. | EPDS scores were compared to caseness established with diagnostic interviewing. Item analysis was also conducted. | EPDS was valid and reliable for screening mood disorders in fathers, but item analysis revealed that fathers were significantly less likely to answer affirmatively to seven items than mothers. | Recommended a cutoff point of 5 to 6 for detection of mood disorder (anxiety or depression) in men. | |
| Massoudi et al. (2013) | Investigate the accuracy of the EPDS for detecting anxiety and depression in new fathers. Compare the factor structure in fathers versus mothers. Validate the Swedish version of the EPDS in relation to DSM-IV criteria for major and minor depression. | EPDS and the anxiety subscale of the HAD scale. Questions dealing with the participants’ age, current occupation, education, native language and number of children were also included in the questionnaire. | Screening survey and structured clinical interviews were used for data collection. | The EPDS yields high sensitivity and specificity, but low positive predictive value when screening for probable major depression at the optimal cut-off score of 12 or more. | The EPDS was more sensitive to distress than depression in postnatal fathers. EPDS may be useful in screening for major depression, but those with minor depression may be missed. Neither the EPDS or HAD-A scale was recommended for use in screening for anxiety. | |
| Nishimura et al. (2010) | This study investigated risk factors of depression in Japanese fathers at 4 weeks post‐partum using a cross‐sectional design. | Responses were obtained from mothers and fathers. There were | The EPDS and the CES-D were used to assess depressive symptoms. | Mothers at the 1-month postnatal check were recruited at two general hospitals and two private clinics. The two surveys were sent to the mothers and fathers. | No association between paternal and maternal depression at 4 weeks post‐partum. Paternal depression was associated with employment status, a history of receiving psychiatric treatment, and unintended pregnancy. | Providers should independently screen for depression in fathers and mothers. Additional research is needed to clarify the specific risk factors for postnatal depression in fathers. |
| Psouni et al. (2017) | The study had multiple aims: Investigate depressive symptoms in new fathers postnatally. Test a modified EPDS scale using items from the GMDS for an increase or decrease in sensitivity. | Demographic and circumstantial variables such as stressful life events, age of the father and child, occupation, education level, income, number of children, and whether the father and/or partner had previously, and at the time of the study, received professional help for mental health problems, were all examined. | Fathers were surveyed online using the BDI and GMDS scale initially. Fathers were also surveyed using a modified EPDS that incorporated items from the GMDS. | The modified EPDS with GMDS items had greater sensitivity than the EPDS alone. | Existing scales may be insufficiently sensitive to detect postnatal depression among new fathers. Additional research is needed. | |
| Shaheen et al. (2019) | To determine the cutoff for use of EPDS for Saudi fathers and to estimate PPD prevalence. | EPDS and demographic data, SCID. | Cross-sectional study with a subsample participating in further diagnostic interviewing. | The authors found a cutoff score of 8/9 was optimal to achieve sensitivity of 77.8% and specificity of 81.3%. | Adjusted prevalence was 16.6%. Authors emphasized need to screen men during the postpartum period. | |
| Tran, et al. (2011) | To validate three existing scales for use in screening men in Vietnam for common mental health concerns in the perinatal period. | EPDS, Zung SAS, GHQ12, SCID, modules for depression, generalized anxiety, and panic disorder, Vietnamese translations and cultural verification were given. | Translations of EPDS, Zung SAS, and the GHQ-12 were validated against SCID. Post-hoc analyses, Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analyses, and Cronbach’s alpha were conducted on each scale. | While all measures had acceptable reliability, the sensitivity of the EPDS in men was significantly lower than in women. | The authors recommended that appropriately translated copies of each instrument be available to local primary care offices to conduct screenings with new fathers. |
Summary of psychometrics with cultural variations in findings/recommendations.
| Article/Author | Scale | Population | Cutoff points | Sensitivity (Se) and specificity (Sp) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carlberg et al. (2018) | EPDS GMDS | Swedish Fathers | EPDS 10/12 or more and/or 13 or more on the GMDS | Se or Sp not reported. Cronbach’s α measured internal reliability for EPDS (0.83) and GMDS (0.88). The intercorrelation between the EPDS and GMDS was assessed by Pearson’s test (0.76, |
| Edmondson et al. (2010) | EPDS | UK Fathers | EPDS ≥ 10 | EPDS: Se 89.5% and sp 78.2% Analysis rerun using expanded database with more participants scoring low on the EPDS, the ≥10 cut off yielded a Se of 77.3% and Sp of 92.9%. |
| Lai et al. (2010) | EPDS PHQ-9 | Chinese Fathers | EPDS 10/11 PHQ-9 3/4 BDI 5/6 | EPDS: Se 91% and Sp 97%, positive predictive value 57%, and negative predictive value 99%. PHQ-9: Se 85% and Sp 81%, positive predictive value 23%, and negative predictive value 98%. BDI: Se 100%, Sp 81%, positive predictive value 21%, and negative predictive value 100%. |
| Loscalzo et al. (2015) | EPDS BDI CES-D | Italian Fathers | EPDS 12/13 | EPDS: Se 90% and Sp 90% |
| Massoudi et al. (2013) | EPDS HAD-A | Swedish Fathers | EPDS major depression 12 or more, major or minor depression 9 or more HAD 4 HAD 8 | EPDS 12: Se 100% (CI 63–100%), Sp 94.9% (CI 90–99%) (both values weighted) and a positive predictive value of 20.0% EPDS 9: Se 66.0% (CI 52–74%), Sp 86.3% (CI 78–94%) and a positive predictive value of 23.8% HAD 4: Se 51% HAD 8: Se 23.3% |
| Matthey et al. (2001) | EPDS CES-D Diagnostic interviewing | Australian Fathers | EPDS 9/10 (anxiety 5/6) CES-D | EPDS 9.5: Se 71.4%, Sp 93.8%, positive predictive value of 29.4% |
| Nishimura et al. (2010) | EPDS CES-D | Japanese Fathers | EPDS 7/8 CES-D ≥ 16 | EPDS 7/8: Se 81.8%, Sp 94.1%, indicating ≥8. The optimal EPDS cut‐off score was determined at the maximum sum of Se and Sp. |
| Psouni et al. (2017) | EPDS GMDS EGDS BDI-II | Swedish Fathers | EGDS ≥ 14 BDI-II ≥ 14 cut-off for mild depression, 20 cut-off for moderate depression | EGDS: Se 90.5% and Sp 80.5% at cutoff point of 9 |
| Shaheen et al. (2019) | EPDS SCID | Saudi fathers | EPDS 8/9 (anxiety 4 or more) | EPDS: Se 77.8%, and Sp 81.3% |
| Tran et al. (2011) | EPDS Zung SAS GHQ12 | Vietnamese Fathers | EPDS 4/5 Zung SAS 35/36 GHQ-12 0/1 | EPDS:Se 68.3% and Sp 77.4% Zung SAS: Se 70.7% and Sp 79.0% GHQ-12: Se 75.6% and Sp 74.7% |
BDI Beck Depression Inventory-II, CES-D Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, EGDS Edinburgh Gotland Depression Scale, EPDS Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, GHQ12 General Health Questionnaire 12 items, GMDS Gotland Male Depression Scale, HAD Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, HAD-A Anxiety subscale of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, PHQ-9 Patient Health Questionnaire, SCID Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis II Personality Disorders, Zung SAS Zung’s Self-rated Anxiety Scale.