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Home > Health Information > E-Newsletters > Women's Health 

Postpartum Depression - Beyond Just the "Baby Blues"

Many new mothers struggle with sadness, anxiety, even crying spells just after giving birth. For most, these feelings will disappear in a few days.

However, for about a half a million American women every year, the feelings do not go away and will probably get worse.

Those are the 13 percent of new mothers who suffer from postpartum depression, says an article in a recent issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

Bringing Awareness to the Problem

"We wrote this article to make people aware that this is a major health problem," says lead author Dr. Katherine Wisner, a professor of psychiatry, pediatrics, obstetrics, and gynecology at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

"Women don't need to suffer with this illness. Treatment is available and effective," says Wisner, who worked at the University of Louisville School of Medicine when the article was written.

A Need to Educate Expectant Mothers

Wisner and her colleagues recommend physicians make patients aware of the symptoms of depression during and after pregnancy, and that they screen the women for depression using a 10-question test.

The following are the most common symptoms of postpartum depression. However, each individual will experience symptoms differently. Symptoms may include:

  • sadness

  • hopelessness

  • fatigue or exhaustion

  • poor concentration

  • confusion

  • mood swings characterized by exaggerated highs and/or lows

  • diminished libido (sex drive)

  • feelings of guilt

  • low self-esteem

  • uncontrolled crying and with no known cause

  • over concern/over attentiveness for the newborn and/or a lack of interest for the newborn

  • appetite changes

  • sleep disturbances

  • resentment

  • memory loss

  • feelings of isolation

If depression is diagnosed, Wisner says, there are several treatment options. One is psychotherapy. Another is medication. Wisner says many of the newer antidepressants, such as Zoloft and Paxil, can even be used by breastfeeding women.

Postpartum Depression and the "Baby Blues" Are Different

Dr. Boris Petrikovsky, chairman of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Nassau University Medical Center in East Meadow, N.Y., says postpartum depression can go undiagnosed because it is difficult to distinguish from the more common "baby blues."

Between 40 percent and 85 percent of all women experience the "baby blues," which usually lift quickly without intervention, says Ana Rivas-Vazquez, a psychologist with Baptist Health South Florida in Miami. They cause feelings of sadness, irritability, confusion, and anxiety, and peak around the fourth day after delivery.

"If it's not gone by day 10 postpartum, it's not the blues, it's depression," Wisner says.

In rare cases, postpartum psychosis becomes evident—a very serious illness that needs immediate treatment. If a new mother shows signs of hostility toward her baby or has thoughts of harming the baby, Petrikovsky says he immediately refers her to a psychiatrist. Postpartum psychosis affects approximately one to two women out of every 1,000 who give birth.

Be on the Look Out For Signs of Trouble

Petrikovsky says it is important for physicians to get to know their patients, so they can be on the lookout for signs of trouble. He also feels it would be wise for physicians to have a nurse call patients two weeks or so after delivery to see how they are feeling.

Those most at risk for postpartum depression are women who have had previous episodes of depression and those with poor or abusive relationships with their spouse, says Rivas-Vazquez.

The most important thing for women to know is that having postpartum depression does not mean they are not good mothers, says Rivas-Vazquez. She says that women often do not seek treatment because they feel guilty about their depression.

"Postpartum depression is a frequent condition that is very treatable, and it shouldn't have any negative connotations," Rivas-Vazquez says.

Always consult your physician for more information.

August 2002

Bringing Awareness to the Problem

A Need to Educate Expectant Mothers

Postpartum Depression and the "Baby Blues" Are Different

Be on the Look Out For Signs of Trouble

Online Resources



Lingering Fatigue Now a Warning Sign for Postpartum Depression

Fatigue that lingers too long after childbirth could be an early sign of postpartum depression.

In research presented recently at the Scientific Session of the Eastern Nursing Research Society, in University Park, Pa., investigators offered new evidence that fatigue could, in fact, act as an important marker for identifying new mothers who are at risk for such depression before any classic symptoms appear.

"All women feel fatigue after childbirth and for several weeks afterwards. But in most women, we see a curve—the fatigue gradually lessens over time," says study author Elizabeth Corwin, an assistant professor at the Penn State School of Nursing.

In women who are prone to postpartum depression, however, Corwin says that does not happen.

"These women feel as tired on day 14 as they felt on day 7, indicating the fatigue isn't letting up," says Corwin. And it is that persistence, she adds, that could indicate which women may go on to develop postpartum depression.

Reproductive psychiatrist Dr. Shari Lusskin agrees that fatigue is an important risk factor, but she says the study finding is not exactly new.

"We have long known that fatigue and depression go hand-in-hand. Therefore, I think if these women were given a standard depression test on day 14, their risk of postpartum depression may have been revealed as well, and possibly with more accuracy," says Lusskin, an associate professor of psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine.

Corwin disagrees: "We found that at the two-week mark, most of the women who expressed extreme fatigue had no classic signs of depression, so they may have been overlooked by a classic diagnostic test," she says.

"I think the key finding here is that fatigue which either does not begin to lift within two weeks after childbirth, or increases and actually grows worse over time, is a good indicator that a woman is heading for postpartum depression—and it's important that intervention take place as soon as possible," says Corwin.

Although sometimes the "six-week postpartum blues" can progress to full-blown postpartum depression, women who suffer postpartum depression do not transgress to postpartum psychosis. This, says Corwin, is a completely different disorder.

To help ascertain further risk factors for postpartum depression, the study also looked at breastfeeding vs. bottle-feeding, the presence of other children in the family, whether the women had partners, and previous bouts of postpartum depression. The researchers report none of these factors appeared to make a difference or affect the findings.

Always consult your physician for more information.


Online Resources

American Academy of Pediatrics

American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology

American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists

American Medical Association

American Psychological Association

New England Journal of Medicine 

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