1. Perinatal mental health and pregnancy-associated mortality: opportunities for change.
- Author
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Combellick, Joan L., Esmaeili, Aryan, Johnson, Amanda M., Haskell, Sally G., Phibbs, Ciaran S., Manzo, Laura, and Miller, Laura J.
- Subjects
DRUG overdose ,SEXUAL partners ,PATIENT education ,MEDICAL care of veterans ,MATERNAL health services ,RESEARCH funding ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,PUERPERIUM ,PERINATAL death ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PSYCHOLOGY of veterans ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RACE ,MEDICAL records ,ACQUISITION of data ,SUICIDE ,HOMICIDE ,PREGNANCY complications ,QUALITY assurance ,HEALTH equity ,PERINATAL period ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,PSYCHIATRIC drugs ,CUSTODY of children ,SOCIAL stigma ,HEALTH care teams - Abstract
Perinatal mental health conditions have been associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes, including maternal death. This quality improvement project analyzed pregnancy-associated death among veterans with mental health conditions in order to identify opportunities to improve healthcare and reduce maternal deaths. Pregnancy-associated deaths among veterans using Veterans Health Administration (VHA) maternity care benefits between fiscal year 2011 and 2020 were identified from national VHA databases. Deaths among individuals with active mental health conditions underwent individual chart review using a standardized abstraction template adapted from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Thirty-two pregnancy-associated deaths were identified among 39,720 paid deliveries with 81% (n = 26) occurring among individuals with an active perinatal mental health condition. In the perinatal mental health cohort, most deaths (n = 16, 62%) occurred in the late postpartum period and 42% (n = 11) were due to suicide, homicide, or overdose. Opportunities to improve care included addressing (1) racial disparities, (2) mental health effects of perinatal loss, (3) late postpartum vulnerability, (4) lack of psychotropic medication continuity, (5) mental health conditions in intimate partners, (6) child custody loss, (7) lack of patient education or stigmatizing patient education, and (8) missed opportunities for addressing reproductive health concerns in mental health contexts. Pregnancy-associated deaths related to active perinatal mental health conditions can be reduced. Mental healthcare clinicians, clinical teams, and healthcare systems have opportunities to improve care for individuals with perinatal mental health conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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