new YORK (Reuters Health) – in a new study, the
women with postpartum depression were more likely than the rest
to have a violent, while mothers relationship
new victims of abuse were also more prone to
develop postpartum depression.
“intuitively and clinically, this overlap of the
“”
depression and domestic violence is not surprising”, said the
Dr. Linda Chaudron, Professor of Psychiatry at the Center
Doctor of the University of Rochester, who did not participate in the
study.
Even so, these results are a guide for doctors to
control women with signs of depression postpartum or one
violet relationship.
“the message we want to send is: If pediatricians
“
they began to detect one of these two signs and identify one,
“
should control the other”, believed the doctor Barry Solomon,
Professor of Paediatrics of Centre for children of John ' s Hopkins and
the study’s main author.
In recent years, pediatricians adopted the routine of
control depression postpartum and domestic violence in the
women who consult with their babies.
“there is growing evidence that depression maternal o
“”
domestic violence negatively affect children”, said
Solomon.
One in 14 women
The team of Solomon took advantage of frequent consultations of
first-time mothers to pediatricians to determine what
frequency agreed domestic violence and depression.
In February 2008, the authors began to control to the
mothers of infants less than six months that contesting to the
clinic for routine controls.
The majority of women were African-American; a third of
of them were teenagers.
As they revealed the survey respondents, one of each
four mothers had signs of depression postpartum and one of 14
had a violent relationship.
More than 50 percent of the participants with a relationship
violent couple I had depression postpartum, compared with 22
percent of women without a violent relationship.
And women with postpartum depression were four times more
prone to achieve positive results in the evaluation of the
signs of domestic violence.
The 4 percent of women without depression and 16 by
cent of women with depression had relationships
violent.
The team could not determine whether one caused the other. For
Chaudron, the Association could go in both directions.
The study, published in the Journal of Pediatrics, also
revealed that women with postpartum depression were prone to
bring their babies to an emergency department with
frequency. For Chaudron, these mothers would be felt more anxiety
than the rest.
The challenge with these women who need help is to achieve
that most pediatricians monitor signs of postpartum depression and
domestic violence.
Source: Journal of Pediatrics, online March 8, 2012