Both parents of neonatal intensive care unit patients are at risk of depression

Postpartum depression is a serious disorder that can be seen not only in mothers but also in fathers; therefore, it negatively affects the whole family. Hospitalization in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is a stress factor for the parents and contributes to depression. We aimed to detect the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Turkish journal of pediatrics 2014-03, Vol.56 (2), p.171-176
Hauptverfasser: Gönülal, Deniz, Yalaz, Mehmet, Altun-Köroğlu, Ozge, Kültürsay, Nilgün
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 171
container_title Turkish journal of pediatrics
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creator Gönülal, Deniz
Yalaz, Mehmet
Altun-Köroğlu, Ozge
Kültürsay, Nilgün
description Postpartum depression is a serious disorder that can be seen not only in mothers but also in fathers; therefore, it negatively affects the whole family. Hospitalization in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is a stress factor for the parents and contributes to depression. We aimed to detect the frequency of postpartum depression and the contributing risk factors in parents of NICU patients. The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale was used for mothers and the Beck Depression Inventory was performed for fathers in the 2nd and 6th weeks after delivery. At the 2nd week, maternal depression frequency was found as 38.3%, with a mean score [ms] of 10.97±6.93. At the 6th week, maternal depression frequency was 33.3% (ms: 9.57±5.78). Paternal depression was 11.7% (ms= 7.13±7.35) at the 2nd week and 10.0% (ms: 6.50±5.79) at the 6th week. The frequency of maternal depression remained stable, but mean maternal depression scores were decreased at the 6th week compared to the 2nd week (p=0.023). However, paternal depression scores were similar in both periods (p=0.428). The infants' disease severity at admission to the NICU, as shown by SNAPPE-II risk scores, was positively correlated with Edinburgh depression scores of the mothers at the postnatal 2nd week, but not at the 6th week. In conclusion, NICU stay of high-risk infants may cause depression in their mothers and fathers, even in the absence of any previous risk factor. Although at a lower rate than in mothers, fathers may also suffer from depression. Parental depression screening and whole family support during NICU hospitalization are strongly recommended.
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Hospitalization in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is a stress factor for the parents and contributes to depression. We aimed to detect the frequency of postpartum depression and the contributing risk factors in parents of NICU patients. The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale was used for mothers and the Beck Depression Inventory was performed for fathers in the 2nd and 6th weeks after delivery. At the 2nd week, maternal depression frequency was found as 38.3%, with a mean score [ms] of 10.97±6.93. At the 6th week, maternal depression frequency was 33.3% (ms: 9.57±5.78). Paternal depression was 11.7% (ms= 7.13±7.35) at the 2nd week and 10.0% (ms: 6.50±5.79) at the 6th week. The frequency of maternal depression remained stable, but mean maternal depression scores were decreased at the 6th week compared to the 2nd week (p=0.023). However, paternal depression scores were similar in both periods (p=0.428). The infants' disease severity at admission to the NICU, as shown by SNAPPE-II risk scores, was positively correlated with Edinburgh depression scores of the mothers at the postnatal 2nd week, but not at the 6th week. In conclusion, NICU stay of high-risk infants may cause depression in their mothers and fathers, even in the absence of any previous risk factor. Although at a lower rate than in mothers, fathers may also suffer from depression. 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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Adult
Depression - diagnosis
Depression - epidemiology
Depression - etiology
Female
Humans
Incidence
Infant, Newborn
Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
Male
Parents - psychology
Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
Risk Factors
Stress, Psychological - complications
Turkey - epidemiology
title Both parents of neonatal intensive care unit patients are at risk of depression
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