| Literature DB >> 35061103 |
Harish Kalra1,2,3, Thach Tran4, Lorena Romero5, Prabha Chandra6, Jane Fisher4.
Abstract
Peripartum severe mental disorders (PSMDs) encompass schizophrenia, affective psychosis, and psychotic and non-psychotic forms of bipolar disorders. PSMDs are well documented in high-income countries. However, much less is known about the prevalence of PSMDs in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The aim was to review the available literature systematically and estimate the prevalence of PSMDs among women in LMICs. We searched the Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL and Maternity and Infant Care databases systematically from the date of inception to Dec 31, 2020, for English-language publications with data on the prevalence of PSMDs among women in World Bank-defined LMICs. Selection of studies, extraction of data and assessment of study quality were each undertaken independently by at least two of the investigators. A total of five studies (completed in three countries spanning two continents) met the inclusion criteria. Five studies reported cumulative incidence of postpartum psychosis (ranging from 1.1 to 16.7 per 1000 births). We found no studies on the prevalence of severe mental disorder during pregnancy in these settings. Marked heterogeneity in methodology precluded meta-analysis. These findings indicate that PSMDs occur at a similar prevalence in low- and middle-income to high-income countries. However overall, there is a paucity of high-quality evidence from these settings. There is a need for rigorous studies with standardized methods to increase knowledge of the nature, prevalence, and determinants of PSMDs among women in resource-constrained LMICs to inform policies, service development, program planning and health professional training.Entities:
Keywords: Low- and middle-income countries; Peripartum; Psychosis; Severe mental disorders
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35061103 PMCID: PMC8921056 DOI: 10.1007/s00737-021-01201-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Womens Ment Health ISSN: 1434-1816 Impact factor: 3.633
Fig. 1Flowchart showing the selection of studies for the systematic review of the prevalence of severe maternal peripartum mental disorders in LMICs
Characteristics of the studies identified in the systematic review of the prevalence of severe maternal peripartum mental disorders in LMICs
| Postpartum | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shehu and Yunusa, | Oyewole et al. | Adefuye et al. | Bang et al. | Ndosi and Mtawali | |
| Country | Nigeria | Nigeria | Nigeria | India | Tanzania |
| Study setting | Tertiary hospital | Tertiary hospital | Tertiary hospital | Community | Tertiary hospital |
| Study type | Retrospective | Prospective | Retrospective | Prospective | Prospective |
| Perinatal period | Unclear | 3 months | Unclear | 4 weeks | 6 weeks |
| Postpartum | Postpartum only | Postpartum | postpartum | postpartum | |
| Population and participants | Women diagnosed with postpartum psychosis after giving birth at the hospital in a 10-year period (2002–2011) Prevalence calculated as a fraction of all births at the hospital in the same period | Women diagnosed with postpartum psychosis after giving birth at the hospital in a 3-month period in 2003 Prevalence calculated as a fraction of women available for an initial interview within 48 h of the birth in the same period | Women diagnosed with postpartum psychosis after giving birth at the hospital in a 20-year period (1982–2007) Prevalence calculated as a fraction of all births at the hospital in the same period | Women who developed postpartum psychosis in a 12-month period (April 1995–March 1996) Prevalence calculated as a fraction of all women who delivered in 39 study villages in the same period | Women who developed postpartum psychosis after giving birth at the hospital in a 3-year period (1996–1998) Prevalence calculated as a fraction of all births at the hospital in the same period |
| Outcome | Postpartum psychosis | Psychiatric morbidity in the puerperium Prevalence calculated with postpartum psychosis data only | Postpartum psychosis | Maternal morbidity during labour and the puerperium Prevalence calculated with postpartum psychosis data only | Postpartum psychosis |
| Outcome measures | Medical records audit with ICD-10-based diagnosis | SCID-I GHQ-30 | Medical records audit with the clinical diagnosis of postpartum psychosis | Unspecified | Research and diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia and affective disorders by Endicott and Spitzer ICD-10-based criteria |
| Validity/reliability of outcome indicators | Not reported | GHQ validity and cut-off reference provided | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Data collection procedure | Case notes of patients diagnosed with postpartum psychosis (ICD-10) in a 10-year period (Jan 2002 to Dec 2011) were retrieved manually by unspecified researchers from the health records Data relating to age, parity, presentation, risk factors, maternal and foetal morbidity/mortality were extracted and analysed for women with postpartum psychosis only | Initial psychiatric interview (within 48 h of birth) involved administration of sociodemographic questionnaire and GHQ-30 Follow-up interview (8 weeks postpartum) was conducted in postnatal/immunization clinic or during home visits GHQ-30 was administered on all follow up interviews (88.7%) Women scoring > 4 on the GHQ were further assessed with SCID-I to determine specific psychiatric disorders along with clinical interviews for the assessment of psychosocial factors | Case notes of patients diagnosed clinically with postpartum mental disorders in a 20-year period were extracted and analysed | Women were seen during 7th, 8th and 9th month of pregnancy by trained village health workers followed by 7 visits in the postpartum period (up to 28th day postpartum) to collect information by inquiry and/or observation for physical morbidity and abnormal speech or behaviour Quality of data collected was checked by a physician who also collected parallel forms independently on 119 consecutive mothers and neonates during his fortnightly visits to every village and therein, every house with a delivery Information on 18 variables related to maternal morbidities was compared to estimate the agreement between village health workers and the physician (95% agreement) | Clinical notes and additional information from the attending doctors Formal psychiatric interview was completed along with corroborative information from ‘relevant’ sources for a working psychiatric diagnosis |
| Number of cases/Sample size or | 29/ | 3/180 | 23/ | 2/ | 110/ |
| Prevalence | 1.1 per 1000 births | 16.7 per 1000 births | 2.5 per 1000 births | 3 per 1000 births | 3.2 per 1000 births |
| Study quality | 0.62 | 0.62 | 0.52 | 0.76 | 0.62 |
CIDI Composite International Diagnostic Inventory, ICD International Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders, SCID-I Structured Clinical Interview for DSM- IV Axis I disorders, GHQ General Hospital Questionnaire