493 results on '"Austin, Marie-Paule"'
Search Results
152. Plumbing the depths: Some problems in quantifying depression severity
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Parker, Gordon, primary, Roussos, Julie, additional, Hadzi-Pavlovic, Dusan, additional, Wilhelm, Kay, additional, Mitchell, Philip, additional, and Austin, Marie-Paule, additional
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- 1997
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153. Defining the Personality Disorders: Description of an Australian Database
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Parker, Gordon, primary, Hadzi-Pavlovic, Dusan, additional, Wilhelm, Kay, additional, Austin, Marie-Paule, additional, Mason, Catherine, additional, Samuels, Anthony, additional, Mitchell, Philip, additional, and Eyers, Kerrie, additional
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- 1996
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154. The anatomy of melancholia: does frontal-subcortical pathophysiology underpin its psychomotor and cognitive manifestations?
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Austin, Marie-Paule, primary and Mitchell, Philip, additional
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- 1995
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155. A Clinical Perspective on SPECT
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Parker, Gordon, primary and Austin, Marie-Paule, additional
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- 1995
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156. Subcortical hyperintensities on magnetic resonance imaging: Clinical correlates and prognostic significance in patients with severe depression
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Hickie, Ian, primary, Scott, Elizabeth, additional, Mitchell, Philip, additional, Wilhelm, Kay, additional, Austin, Marie-Paule, additional, and Bennett, Barbara, additional
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- 1995
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157. Treatment Resistant Depression in an Australian Context I: The Utility of the Term and Approaches to Management
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Wilhelm, Kay, primary, Mitchell, Philip, additional, Hickie, Ian, additional, Brodaty, Henry, additional, Austin, Marie-Paule, additional, Parker, Gordon, additional, and Boyce, Philip, additional
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- 1994
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158. Data preparation techniques for a perinatal psychiatric study based on linked data.
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Fenglian Xu, Lisa Hilder, Austin, Marie-Paule, and Sullivan, Elizabeth A.
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PREPARATION of data in electronic data processing ,LINKED data (Semantic Web) ,MENTAL illness ,MENTAL health - Abstract
Background: In recent years there has been an increase in the use of population-based linked data. However, there is little literature that describes the method of linked data preparation. This paper describes the method for merging data, calculating the statistical variable (SV), recoding psychiatric diagnoses and summarizing hospital admissions for a perinatal psychiatric study. Methods: The data preparation techniques described in this paper are based on linked birth data from the New South Wales (NSW) Midwives Data Collection (MDC), the Register of Congenital Conditions (RCC), the Admitted Patient Data Collection (APDC) and the Pharmaceutical Drugs of Addiction System (PHDAS). Results: The master dataset is the meaningfully linked data which include all or major study data collections. The master dataset can be used to improve the data quality, calculate the SV and can be tailored for different analyses. To identify hospital admissions in the periods before pregnancy, during pregnancy and after birth, a statistical variable of time interval (SVTI) needs to be calculated. The methods and SPSS syntax for building a master dataset, calculating the SVTI, recoding the principal diagnoses of mental illness and summarizing hospital admissions are described. Conclusion: Linked data preparation, including building the master dataset and calculating the SV, can improve data quality and enhance data function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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159. Maternal prenatal anxiety, postnatal caregiving and infants' cortisol responses to the still-face procedure.
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Grant, Kerry-Ann, McMahon, Catherine, Austin, Marie-Paule, Reilly, Nicole, Leader, Leo, and Ali, Sinan
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This study prospectively examined the separate and combined influences of maternal prenatal anxiety disorder and postnatal caregiving sensitivity on infants' salivary cortisol responses to the still-face procedure. Effects were assessed by measuring infant salivary cortisol upon arrival at the laboratory, and at 15-, 25-, and 40-min following the still-face procedure. Maternal symptoms of anxiety during the last 6 months of pregnancy were assessed using clinical diagnostic interview. Data analyses using linear mixed models were based on 88 women and their 7-month-old infants. Prenatal anxiety and maternal sensitivity emerged as independent, additive moderators of infant cortisol reactivity, F (3, 180) = 3.29, p = .02, F (3, 179) = 2.68, p = .05 respectively. Results were independent of maternal prenatal depression symptoms, and postnatal symptoms of anxiety and depression. Infants' stress-induced cortisol secretion patterns appear to relate not only to exposure to maternal prenatal anxiety, but also to maternal caregiving sensitivity, irrespective of prenatal psychological state. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 51: 625–637, 2009 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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160. Short-term outcomes of mothers and newborn infants with comorbid psychiatric disorders and drug dependency.
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Ju Lee Oei, Abdel-Latif, Mohamed E., Craig, Fiona, Kee, Aivy, Austin, Marie-Paule, and Kei Lui
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WOMEN'S mental health ,NEWBORN infant care ,COMORBIDITY ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHIATRY ,DRUG addiction ,PSYCHIATRIC drugs - Abstract
Objectives: The aim of the present study was to determine the characteristics and short-term outcomes of mother-infant pairs with comorbid drug dependency and psychiatric disorders. Methods: A population-based retrospective chart review was carried out of 879 drug-dependent mother and infant pairs in New South Wales (NSW) and the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) who delivered between 1 January and 31 December 2004. Results: Psychiatric comorbidity (dual diagnosis, DD) was identified in 396 (45%) of the 879 drug-dependent women. DSM-IV depression (79%), followed by anxiety (20%), was most prevalent. DD women were more likely to use amphetamines (29% vs 18%, p < 0.05), less likely to use opiates (42% vs 51%, p < 0.05) and to have had no antenatal care (24% vs 8%, p < 0.05). They also had more previous pregnancies (4, range = 2-5 vs 3, range = 2-5, p < 0.05) and domestic violence (29% vs 14%, p < 0.05) was more common. DD infants were less likely to be admitted to a nursery (47% vs 55%, p < 0.05). Withdrawal scores were similar (maximum median Finnegan scores = 4 (interquartile range = 3-8) vs 10 (interquartile range = 7-12, p = 0.30) but fewer needed withdrawal medication (19% vs 27%, p < 0.05). Maternal psychotropic agents did not worsen the severity of neonatal withdrawal. Conclusions: Psychiatric comorbidity, especially depression, is common and affects almost half of drug-using mothers. Antenatal care, drug use and social outcomes are worse for DD mothers and their infants. It is recommended that all drug-using women be assessed antenatally for psychosocial disorders so that timely mental health intervention can be offered, if required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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161. Implications of Childhood Trauma for Depressed Women: An Analysis of Pathways From Childhood Sexual Abuse to Deliberate Self-Harm and Revictimization.
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Gladstone, Gemma L., Parker, Gordon B., Mitchell, Philip B., Maihi, Gin S., Wilhelm, Kay, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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SEX crimes ,REGRESSION analysis ,PANIC disorders ,ANXIETY ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PANIC attacks - Abstract
Objective: Data from depressed women with and without a history of childhood sexual abuse were used to characterize clinical features that distinguished the two groups and to examine relationships of childhood sexual abuse to lifetime deliberate self-harm and recent interpersonal violence. Method: One hundred twenty-five women with depressive disorders were interviewed and completed self-report questionnaires. Path analysis was used to examine relationships of several childhood and personality variables with deliberate self-harm in adulthood and recent inter- personal violence. Results: Women with a childhood sexual abuse history reported more childhood physical abuse, childhood emotional abuse, and parental conflict in the home, compared to women without a childhood sexual abuse history. The two groups were similar in severity of depression, but the women with a childhood sexual abuse history were more likely to have attempted suicide and/or engaged in deliberate self- harm. The women with a history of childhood sexual abuse also became depressed earlier in life, were more likely to have panic disorder, and were more likely to re- port a recent assault. Path analysis confirmed the contributory role of childhood sexual abuse to deliberate self-harm and the significance of childhood physical abuse for recent interpersonal violence. Conclusions: Childhood sexual abuse is an important risk factor to identify in women with depression. Depressed women with a childhood sexual abuse history constitute a subgroup of patients who may require tailored interventions to combat both depression recurrence and harmful and self-defeating coping strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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162. Antenatal screening and early intervention for “perinatal” distress, depression and anxiety: where to from here?
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Austin, Marie-Paule
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PRENATAL diagnosis , *PERINATOLOGY , *POSTPARTUM depression , *ANXIETY , *PREGNANCY complications - Abstract
Summary Recent developments in the study of mental health issues surrounding childbirth, have brought about a shift from the narrow concept of “postnatal depression” (PND) to a consideration of the spectrum of depressive and anxiety disorders arising in the “perinatal” period – which in the mental health context is defined as encompassing pregnancy and the first year postpartum. This shift has been associated with a growing recognition of the potential for prevention and early intervention in the perinatal period. In this article, the difficulties of antenatal screening with the aim of predicting PND are highlighted and contrasted with the potential benefits of antenatal screening aimed at identifying psychological morbidity – whether pre-existing risk factors and/or current symptoms – which may have bearing across the entire perinatal period. The literature on randomized controlled trials of “targeted” antenatal interventions to reduce PND and “indicated” interventions in postnatally depressed women are also reviewed. Future clinical and research directions in the field of early intervention for perinatal mood and anxiety disorders are identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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163. Perinatal Mental Health Perinatal mental health: opportunities and challenges for psychiatry.
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Austin, Marie-Paule
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MENTAL health policy , *PREGNANCY , *INFANTS , *PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
Developments in public mental health policy in Australia and a renewed focus on the preventative importance of the early postnatal years have recently brought perinatal mental health to the fore. The present paper aims to explore the meaning of ‘perinatal mental health’ and its relevance to psychiatry, and to examine the opportunities and challenges currently facing Australian psychiatrists in the provision of services in the perinatal period. The definition of ‘perinatal mental health’ is discussed and the impact of maternal mental illness arising in the ‘perinatal’ period on offspring outcomes and early intervention endeavours are reviewed. Recent Australian developments in public health policy are outlined. The use of the term ‘ perinatal’ highlights the importance of considering the mental health needs of both parents and infants from conception and through the developmentally critical first 2 years of life. The relevance of a perinatal approach is supported by a literature demonstrating that maternal mental illness arising at this time can adversely affect offspring mental health outcomes. Early intervention programmes targeted at well-defined ‘high risk’ families in the perinatal period may be of value in terms of reducing this morbidity but remain to be replicated. Although the 2nd National Mental Health Plan and other recent Australian health policy initiatives support the belief that good mental health care in the perinatal period is critical to the mental health of future generations, such care provision remains fragmented and often difficult to access. Innovative developments in public health policy and models of service provision are beginning to address these shortcomings. An understanding of the conceptual and empirical underpinnings of ‘perinatal mental health’ is essential if there is to be a shift towards an integrated approach to mental health service provision and better access for vulnerable families at this time. As psychiatrists, we have much to contribute to early identification and intervention strategies and the integration of these services with those provided by primary health-care professionals in the perinatal period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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164. Hospital Admissions for Alcohol Use Disorders Before, During, and After Pregnancy: A Study Based on Linked Population Data in New South Wales, Australia
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Xu, Fenglian, Bonello, Michelle, Burns, Lucy, Austin, Marie‐Paule, Li, Zhuoyang, and Sullivan, Elizabeth
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- 2013
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165. The need to evaluate public health reforms: Australian perinatal mental health initiatives
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Austin, Marie‐Paule, Reilly, Nicole, and Sullivan, Elizabeth
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Objective:To describe the Australian perinatal mental health reforms and explore ways of improving surveillance of maternal mental health morbidity and mortality in this context.
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- 2012
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166. What interventions may reduce postpartum depression
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Lumley, Judith and Austin, Marie-Paule
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Postnatal depression is a major public health problem affecting about one in seven women after childbirth. Depression is also common during pregnancy and throughout the perinatal period it is associated with symptoms of anxiety. Apart from the adverse consequences for women themselves becoming depressed when they are going through demanding physical and social changes, there are additional concerns. There is the possible negative impact of maternal depression on the relationship between mother and child and on the child's emotional, behavioural and cognitive development. Primary prevention and early interventionsecondary prevention strategies are potentially important in view of the frequent contact pregnant women, new mothers and infants have with health services, but the effectiveness of these strategies needs to be tested. In the past year there have been five new studies of antenatal screening for postnatal depression. These studies are consistent with nine earlier studies in showing that there is no evidence to support routine antenatal screening for postnatal depression. Seven new primary preventionearly intervention trials add evidence on a wide range of interventions ranging from practical support to individual interpersonal therapy, but without identifying significant differences in depression as an outcome. Two new trials of secondary prevention, one involving interpersonal therapy and the other including partners in a series of psychoeducational visits, show promise but neither is large enough to form a basis for practice change. Novel interventions, or promising findings, with a strong basis in theory need to be tested in trials which are appropriately sized and which comply with internationally accepted design and reporting guidelines.
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- 2001
167. Attitudes and Engagement of Pregnant and Postnatal Women With a Web-Based Emotional Health Tool (Mummatters): Cross-sectional Study.
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Reilly, Nicole and Austin, Marie-Paule
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MENTAL health ,MATERNAL health ,PREGNANT women ,MEDICAL personnel ,HELP-seeking behavior ,PERINATAL period - Abstract
Background: Mummatters is a web-based health tool that allows women to self-assess the symptoms of depression and the presence of psychosocial risk factors throughout pregnancy and the postnatal period. It aims to increase women's awareness of their own symptoms or risk factors and their knowledge of the available support options, to encourage engagement with these support options (as appropriate), and to facilitate communication about emotional health issues between women and their health care providers.Objective: The aim of this study is to report the uptake of mummatters; the sociodemographic and psychosocial risk profiles of a subsample of users; and the acceptability, credibility, perceived effect, and motivational appeal of the tool. The help-seeking behaviors of the subsample of users and barriers to help seeking were also examined.Methods: Mummatters was launched in November 2016. Women who completed the mummatters baseline assessment were invited to complete a web-based follow-up survey 1 month later.Results: A total of 2817 women downloaded and used mummatters between November 13, 2016, and May 22, 2018, and 140 women participated in the follow-up study. Approximately half of these women (51%; 72/140) were Whooley positive (possible depression), and 43% (60/140) had an elevated psychosocial risk score on the Antenatal Risk Questionnaire. Mummatters was rated favorably by pregnant and postnatal women in terms of its acceptability (94%-99%), credibility (93%-97%), appeal (78%-91%), and potential to affect a range of health behaviors specific to supporting emotional wellness during the perinatal period (78%-93%). Whooley-positive women were more likely to speak with their families than with a health care provider about their emotional health. Normalizing symptoms and stigma were key barriers to seeking help.Conclusions: Although mummatters was rated positively by consumers, only 53% (19/36) to 61% (22/36) of women with possible depression reported speaking to their health care providers about their emotional health. There was a trend for more prominent barriers to seeking help among postnatal women than among pregnant women. Future studies that investigate whether social barriers to seeking help are greater once a woman has an infant are warranted. Such barriers potentially place these women at greater risk of remaining untreated, as the demands on them are greater. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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168. Treatment resistant depression in an Australian context l: the utility of the term and approaches to management
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Wilhelm, Kay, Mitchell, Philip, Boyce, Philip, Hickie, Ian, Brodaty, Henry, Austin, Marie-Paule, and Parker, Gordon
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The concept of "treatment resistant depression" (TRD) has generally been defined in terms of failure to respond to a standard course of somatic therapy with little reference to diagnostic sub-types or relevant psychosocial factors. In this paper we examine problems with the use of the term "treatment resistant depression" and then outline an approach to TRD employed in an Australian mood disorders unit. After discussing the need for a biopsychosocial assessment, multimodal management strategies for melancholic and non-melancholic TRD patients are described.
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- 1994
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169. Neonatal seizures from in utero venlafaxine exposure.
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Pakalapati, Ravi K., Bolisetty, Srinivas, Austin, Marie-Paule, and Oei, Julee
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FEBRILE seizures ,DEPRESSION in infants ,VENLAFAXINE ,MONOAMINE oxidase ,NEONATAL intensive care ,RESUSCITATION ,TOXICITY testing ,NEONATOLOGY - Abstract
Venlafaxine (Efexor), a selective noradrenergic reuptake inhibitor, is an important therapeutic option in the treatment of perinatal depression, but its effects on the newborn are uncertain. We present a report of two infants with neonatal seizures attributed to maternal use of venlafaxine. The first infant was hypotonic and required resuscitation at birth. The second was born in a good condition but developed clinically apparent seizures after the second day of life. Both infants responded rapidly to treatment with phenobarbitone that was weaned uneventfully by the first and second week of life. Both remain well at 1 year of age. Other causes of neonatal seizures were excluded and neurological investigations on these two infants were unremarkable. We suggest that all infants exposed to maternal venlafaxine, no matter their condition at birth, be monitored in hospital for at least 3 to 4 days in order to pre-empt and treat adverse neurological events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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170. New developments in perinatal mental health.
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Austin, Marie‐Paule and Priest, Susan
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DEVELOPMENTAL psychobiology , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness , *PSYCHIATRY , *PSYCHOLOGY , *CHILD psychology - Abstract
Comments on the latest breakthroughs in perinatal mental health. Indications of the broadening frames of reference; Recognition of the impact of disorders; Strategies for screening, prevention, early intervention and treatment.
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- 2004
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171. Assessing the relationship between psychosocial risk and pregnancy outcomes using the perinatal integrated psychosocial assessment (PIPA) tool.
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O'Connor, Anne, Shand, Antonia W., Schneuer, Francisco J., Nassar, Natasha, and Austin, Marie‐Paule
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PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *MENTAL illness risk factors , *MATERNAL health services , *SOCIAL support , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *NEONATAL intensive care , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *PREGNANT women , *TERTIARY care , *NEONATAL intensive care units , *PATIENTS , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *MENTAL status examination , *RISK assessment , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *PREGNANCY complications , *MEDICAL referrals , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MENTAL depression , *CHI-squared test , *ODDS ratio , *CESAREAN section , *ANXIETY , *DATA analysis software , *MENTAL illness , *LONGITUDINAL method , *DISEASE risk factors , *PREGNANCY - Abstract
Background: The Perinatal Integrated Psychosocial Assessment (PIPA) tool screens for anxiety, depression, and psychosocial factors in pregnancy. We aimed to assess the association between PIPA‐determined psychosocial risk and obstetric and neonatal outcomes. Methods: Cohort study of all pregnant women who gave birth at ≥20 weeks of gestation in 2017‐2019 at a tertiary maternity hospital in, Sydney, Australia. Women completed PIPA at their first antenatal visit and were assigned a PIPA risk category. At‐risk women were reviewed and referred for support. The association between PIPA risk category and obstetric and neonatal outcomes was evaluated using multivariable logistic regression adjusting for sociodemographic and pregnancy factors. Results: In all, 5969 women completed PIPA; 71.4% were assessed no/low risk, 17.5% medium risk, and 11.1% medium‐high/high risk. Compared with no/low‐risk women, medium‐high/high‐risk women were more likely to remain in hospital for >72 hours (aOR 1.47 [95% CI 1.33‐1.64]); to not be breastfeeding at discharge (aOR 1.77 [95% CI 1.20‐2.61]); to have their infants experience birth complications (aOR 1.24 [95% CI 1.03‐1.50]); and to be admitted to the NICU (aOR 1.63 [95% CI 1.26‐2.11]). There was a modest increase in odds of cesarean birth (aOR 1.12 [95% CI 1.00‐1.27]), and no association with preterm birth or low birthweight. The risk of adverse outcomes disappeared for medium‐high/high‐risk women referred for support. Conclusions: The PIPA tool identified one in 10 women at high psychosocial risk with increased risk of adverse obstetric and neonatal outcomes. Adverse outcomes were attenuated for high‐risk women who were referred for extra support, suggesting that psychosocial review and referral for high‐risk women may reduce the risk of adverse obstetric and neonatal outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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172. Stress in pregnancy and infant HPA axis function: Conceptual and methodological issues relating to the use of salivary cortisol as an outcome measure
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Egliston, Kerry-Ann, McMahon, Catherine, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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ANXIETY , *INFANTS , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *CRITICAL periods (Biology) - Abstract
Summary: Problems regulating behaviour and emotions in infancy may be a risk factor for the development of psychopathology later in life. Compelling evidence from animal models suggests that one potential pathway to early dysregulation is fetal programming of the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis. According to this model, prenatal maternal stress and anxiety during sensitive periods of development can lead to enduring changes in fetal and offspring neurodevelopment and behaviour. While there is emerging evidence from human studies to suggest a link between maternal negative mood states in pregnancy and various cognitive, behavioural, and emotional disturbances in offspring, it is not yet clear whether the programming mechanism demonstrated in animal studies also applies to humans. Few studies have directly assessed HPA axis function in the infants of prenatally stressed women. Research in this area has been constrained by a number of measurement challenges unique to the assessment of cortisol in infants. This paper discusses these challenges with a view to stimulating further research in the area. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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173. The antenatal risk questionnaire-revised: Development, use and test-retest reliability in a community sample of pregnant women in Australia.
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Reilly, Nicole, Loxton, Deborah, Black, Emma, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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STATISTICAL reliability , *PREGNANT women , *MENTAL health services , *MATERNAL health services , *MATERNAL age - Abstract
Background: Routine psychosocial assessment during pregnancy and the first postnatal year is a public health strategy that prioritises early identification of known risk factors for poor perinatal mental health. We aimed to report on the development and use of the Antenatal Risk Questionnaire-Revised (ANRQ-R), contribute normative data for a community sample of pregnant women and examine its test-retest reliability.Methods: The ANRQ-R was developed in consultation with an expert advisory group. Women completed the ANRQ-R with their midwife at their first antenatal appointment. Test-retest analysis was restricted to women who consented to follow-up and completed a repeat ANRQ-R within four weeks.Results: 7183 women completed the ANRQ-R (total score M = 12.05, Mdn=10; range =5-49). There were some statistically significant differences in total score across maternal age group (χ2=69.75, p<.001), country of birth (χ2=144.01, p<.001) and socioeconomic quintiles (χ2=20.13, p<.001), however the effect sizes of all differences were either small or not clinically significant. Test-retest reliability for the ANRQ-R total score was good (N = 1670; ICC=0.77). Item-level test-retest reliabilities were moderate to good (ICC range=0.65-0.80; kappa coefficient range=0.31-0.74).Limitations: The study was conducted at a single site. Although there was significant diversity in terms of maternal age and country of birth, the majority of participants were partnered and resided in socio-economically advantaged areas, limiting the generalisability of results.Conclusions: This study contributes significant normative data for the ANRQ-R and offers valuable insights for clinicians and researchers working with particular sub-groups of the perinatal population. Additional psychometric examination of the ANRQ-R, including its concurrent and predictive validity, is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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174. The relationship between emotion dysregulation and postnatal attachment in women admitted to a mother baby unit.
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Brake, Elloise, Berle, David, Reilly, Nicole M., and Austin, Marie‐Paule
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MOTHERS , *POSTPARTUM depression , *EMOTIONS , *SECURITY (Psychology) , *WOMEN'S mental health , *PUERPERIUM , *REMINISCENCE - Abstract
Objective: Mothers with insecure attachment styles may have increased difficulty establishing secure attachment with their infant and may experience emotion regulation difficulties in the postpartum period. This study aimed to examine the mediating effect of emotion dysregulation (ED) on the relationship between maternal insecure attachment style and self‐reported attachment to infant in women admitted to a mother‐baby unit. Methods: At admission, women completed self‐report questionnaires measuring attachment style, ED, postnatal attachment and postnatal depression (PND) symptoms. Descriptive statistics, correlations, and mediation analyses (PROCESS macro) were conducted. Results: Insecure maternal attachment style was found to predict postnatal attachment through ED. When PND symptoms were accounted for, this model was no longer significant, and instead a serial mediation found that ED predicted PND, which was in turn associated with reduced postnatal attachment quality. Conclusions: This study provides preliminary support for continued research into maternal ED as a predictor of adverse maternal and infant outcomes postnatally. Individuals with attachment insecurity experiencing emotion regulation difficulties may be at an increased risk of developing PND and in turn experiencing adverse mother‐infant attachment outcomes. This has clinical implications for the screening, assessment and treatment of women experiencing mental health or attachment related concerns postnatally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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175. Adversity in childhood and depression in pregnancy.
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Wajid, Abdul, van Zanten, Sander Veldhuyzen, Mughal, Muhammad Kashif, Biringer, Anne, Austin, Marie-Paule, Vermeyden, Lydia, and Kingston, Dawn
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CONFIDENCE intervals , *MENTAL depression , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PRENATAL care , *WOMEN'S health , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SECONDARY analysis , *SOCIAL support , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio , *ADVERSE childhood experiences , *PREGNANCY - Abstract
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been found to be associated with various health conditions; however, there is dearth of evidence on the relationship between ACEs and prenatal depression. This study was conducted to determine the association between overall ACE score and prenatal depression symptoms, assess the moderating effect of social support and partner support on this relationship, and determine the association between individual ACE scores and prenatal depression. A secondary analysis was conducted of data from an RCT that assessed the feasibility of e-screening for maternal mental health among 636 pregnant women recruited from antenatal clinics. Two logistic regression models were built to reach our objectives. Over 80% of the participants were older than 25 years and had education beyond high school. Eighteen percent of the women had an ACE score of four or more. Univariable analysis found a 2.5-fold increase in the odds of prenatal depression for women with an ACEs score of ≥ 4. When examining the overall ACE score, lack of social support during pregnancy [AOR = 4.16; 95%CI (2.10–10.35)] and partner's relationship [AOR = 2.23; 95%CI (1.12–4.44)] were associated with prenatal depression while among the individual ACE scores, living with a person who went to prison was found to be associated with prenatal depression even when controlled for all variables. No moderating effect was found. These findings suggest for the improvement of partner's relationship and provision of social support before women conceive, in order to mitigate the effect of these adversities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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176. Trajectories of clinical and parenting outcomes following admission to an inpatient mother-baby unit.
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Reilly, Nicole, Brake, Elloise, Briggs, Nancy, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale , *LOW-income parents , *MATERNAL age , *ATTACHMENT behavior , *DISCHARGE planning - Abstract
Background: This study aimed to examine trajectories of clinical and parenting outcomes following admission to a mother-baby unit (MBU), and to explore factors associated with these trajectories. Methods: Women admitted to an MBU completed the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS-21), Karitane Parenting Confidence Scale (KPCS) and Maternal Postnatal Attachment Scale (MPAS) at admission, discharge and 3 months following discharge. Questions assessing psychosocial risk and adult attachment style were also completed at admission, and information relating to service engagement in the time since discharge was collected at follow-up. Additional clinical and demographic information was extracted from the patient medical record. Results: Seventy-five women participated in the study. Overall, significant improvements in mean scores on measures of anxiety and parenting confidence were maintained 3-months following discharge. However, the majority of women (93.3%) followed trajectories that were characterised by deterioration in self-reported mother-infant attachment following discharge. 62.9 and 34.6% of women followed trajectories of increased symptoms of depression and stress between discharge and follow-up, respectively. Across measures, the least optimal trajectories, or least optimal scores, at follow-up were associated with less secure maternal attachment style (associated with more anxiety symptoms, poorer parenting confidence and maternal-infant attachment), older maternal age (more depressive symptoms) and increased psychosocial risk (more anxiety symptoms). Conclusions: The findings of this study highlight the clinical implications of anxious attachment style for the mental health and parenting outcomes of women admitted to an MBU and the importance of incorporating mother-infant therapy as part of an ongoing management plan. Comprehensive discharge planning and transitional care to help ensure women discharged from an MBU are best supported in the longer term is recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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177. Policy Impacts of the Australian National Perinatal Depression Initiative: Psychiatric Admission in the First Postnatal Year.
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Lee, Wang-Sheng, Mihalopoulos, Cathrine, Chatterton, Mary Lou, Chambers, Georgina M., Highet, Nicole, Morgan, Vera A., Sullivan, Elizabeth A., and Austin, Marie-Paule
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PSYCHIATRIC hospitals , *MENTAL illness , *ADJUSTMENT disorders , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper helps to quantify the impact of the Australian National Perinatal Depression Initiative (NPDI) on postnatal inpatient psychiatric hospitalisation. Based on individual hospital admissions data from New South Wales and Western Australia, we found that the NPDI reduced inpatient psychiatric hospital admission by up to 50% [0.9% point reduction (95% CI 0.70–1.22)] in the first postnatal year. The greatest reduction was observed for adjustment disorders. The NPDI appears to be associated with fewer post-birth psychiatric disorders hospital admissions; this suggests earlier detection of psychiatric disorders resulting in early care of women at risk during their perinatal period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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178. A randomised controlled trial of 'MUMentum postnatal': Internet-delivered cognitive behavioural therapy for anxiety and depression in postpartum women.
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Loughnan, Siobhan A., Butler, Christine, Sie, Amanda A., Grierson, Ashlee B., Chen, Aileen Z., Hobbs, Megan J., Joubert, Amy E., Haskelberg, Hila, Mahoney, Alison, Holt, Christopher, Gemmill, Alan W., Milgrom, Jeannette, Austin, Marie-Paule, Andrews, Gavin, and Newby, Jill M.
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POSTPARTUM depression , *COGNITIVE therapy , *DEPRESSION in women , *ANXIETY in women , *ANXIETY , *CLIENT satisfaction - Abstract
Highlights • RCT of a brief unguided iCBT program for postpartum anxiety and depression. • Large between-group superiority of iCBT over TAU for anxiety, depression, distress and bonding. • Gains maintained at four-week follow-up in iCBT group. • Large improvements in parenting confidence and quality of life after treatment. • Participant credibility and satisfaction ratings were high with 75% program completion rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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179. 'Singing with your baby': an evaluation of group singing sessions for women admitted to a specialist mother-baby unit.
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Reilly, Nicole, Turner, Gemma, Taouk, Jamilie, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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POSTPARTUM depression , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *HOSPITAL wards , *MOTHER-infant relationship , *MUSIC therapy , *SELF-evaluation , *SINGING , *PILOT projects , *GROUP process , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
This paper reports on the acceptability, experience of participation and the immediate impact on maternal mood state of group singing sessions, introduced as a routine component of a mother-baby unit (MBU) treatment programme. Data was collected from 27 women who participated in the pilot programme. Results showed that implementation of a singing intervention in this setting is positively appraised by women and is associated with positive changes in self-reported mood state from pre- to post-session. Key facilitators and barriers to the success of the programme and directions for future research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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180. A randomized controlled trial of 'MUMentum Pregnancy': Internet-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy program for antenatal anxiety and depression.
- Author
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Loughnan, Siobhan A., Sie, Amanda, Hobbs, Megan J., Joubert, Amy E., Smith, Jessica, Haskelberg, Hila, Mahoney, Alison E.J., Kladnitski, Natalie, Holt, Christopher J., Milgrom, Jeannette, Austin, Marie-Paule, Andrews, Gavin, and Newby, Jill M
- Subjects
- *
PREGNANCY & psychology , *ANXIETY , *MENTAL depression , *BEHAVIOR therapy , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *ANXIETY treatment , *MENTAL health , *QUALITY of life , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTERNET , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PRENATAL care , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SELF-evaluation , *EVALUATION research , *TREATMENT effectiveness ,TREATMENT of pregnancy complications - Abstract
Background: Anxiety and depression are common during pregnancy and associated with adverse outcomes for the mother and infant if left untreated. Despite the need to improve treatment accessibility and uptake in this population, no studies have investigated internet-delivered cognitive behavioural therapy (iCBT) for antenatal anxiety and depression. In a randomised controlled trial, we examined the efficacy and acceptability of a brief, unguided iCBT intervention - the MUMentum Pregnancy program - in pregnant women with anxiety and/or depression.Methods: Participants meeting clinical threshold on validated self-report measures of generalised anxiety and/or depression were recruited online and randomised to iCBT (n = 43) or a treatment as usual (TAU) control (n = 44). Outcomes were assessed at baseline, post-treatment and four-week follow-up; and included anxiety, depression, psychological distress, antenatal bonding, quality of life, and treatment acceptability.Results: Of the 36 women who started iCBT, 26 completed all three lessons of treatment (76% adherence rate). iCBT produced moderate to large effect size reductions for anxiety on the GAD-7 (Hedges' g = 0.76) and psychological distress on the Kessler-10 (g = 0.88) that were superior to TAU. Only small nonsignificant differences were found for depression outcomes (g = < 0.35). Participants reported that iCBT was an acceptable treatment for antenatal anxiety and/or depression.Limitations: Lack of an active control condition and long-term postpartum follow-up.Conclusions: This is the first study to evaluate brief unguided iCBT for antenatal anxiety and depression. While our findings are promising, particularly for anxiety reduction, additional RCTs are required to establish treatment efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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181. A comparison of the interviewer-administered phone and self-complete online versions of the computerized eMINI 6.0 in a sample of pregnant women.
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Reilly, Nicole, Talcevska, Kristina, Black, Emma, Matthey, Stephen, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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PREGNANT women , *MENTAL depression , *TELEPHONE interviewing , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *MENTAL health , *HUMAN services , *DIAGNOSIS of mental depression , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTERNET , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *PREGNANCY complications , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *ANXIETY disorders , *DISEASE prevalence , *DIAGNOSIS , *PSYCHOLOGY ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Background: This study compares the prevalence rates of depressive and anxiety disorders identified during pregnancy using an interviewer-administered phone version and a self-complete online version of the computerized eMINI 6.0.Methods: 888 pregnant women completed the computerized eMINI 6.0 (interviewer-administered phone, n = 253; self-complete online, n = 635).Results: There were no significant differences in the proportions of women meeting eMINI 6.0 criteria for current major depression, any current anxiety disorder, or lifetime panic or depressive disorder, by mode of administration. However, a greater proportion of women in the interviewer-administered phone group than in the self-complete online group met criteria for current minor depression (2.0% vs 0.2%, p = .008).Limitations: Study limitations include its non-randomized design, overall low prevalence of depressive and anxiety disorders in the sample and inclusion of only a select number of eMINI 6.0 modules.Conclusions: This study demonstrated few differences in the rates of DSM-IV depressive and anxiety disorders identified between the interviewer-administered and self-administered versions of the eMINI 6.0. Findings provide preliminary support the practical value of self-completed computerized interviews in large scale studies examining common mental disorders in pregnant women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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182. Continuity of midwifery carer moderates the effects of prenatal maternal stress on postnatal maternal wellbeing: the Queensland flood study.
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Kildea, Sue, Simcock, Gabrielle, Liu, Aihua, Elgbeili, Guillaume, Laplante, David P., Kahler, Adele, Austin, Marie-Paule, Tracy, Sally, Kruske, Sue, Tracy, Mark, O’Hara, Michael W., and King, Suzanne
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- *
ANXIETY , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MIDWIVES , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *NATURAL disasters , *POSTPARTUM depression , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *SELF-evaluation , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *MIDWIFERY , *DEPARTMENTS , *WELL-being - Abstract
Poor postnatal mental health is a major public health issue, and risk factors include experiencing adverse life events during pregnancy. We assessed whether midwifery group practice, compared to standard hospital care, would protect women from the negative impact of a sudden-onset flood on postnatal depression and anxiety. Women either received midwifery group practice care in pregnancy, in which they were allocated a primary midwife who provided continuity of care, or they received standard hospital care provided by various on-call and rostered medical staff. Women were pregnant when a sudden-onset flood severely affected Queensland, Australia, in January 2011. Women completed questionnaires on their flood-related hardship (objective stress), emotional reactions (subjective stress), and cognitive appraisal of the impact of the flood. Self-report assessments of the women’s depression and anxiety were obtained during pregnancy, at 6 weeks and 6 months postnatally. Controlling for all main effects, regression analyses at 6 weeks postpartum showed a significant interaction between maternity care type and objective flood-related hardship and subjective stress, such that depression scores increased with increasing objective and subjective stress with standard care, but not with midwifery group practice (continuity), indicating a buffering effect of continuity of midwifery carer. Similar results were found for anxiety scores at 6 weeks, but only with subjective stress. The benefits of midwifery continuity of carer in pregnancy extend beyond a more positive birth experience and better birthing and infant outcomes, to mitigating the effects of high levels of stress experienced by women in the context of a natural disaster on postnatal mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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183. Clinical profile and outcomes of women admitted to a psychiatric mother-baby unit.
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Christl, Bettina, Reilly, Nicole, Yin, Carolyn, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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MENTAL illness risk factors , *MENTAL illness treatment , *ATTACHMENT behavior , *CHI-squared test , *CHILD health services , *HEALTH care teams , *MENTAL health services , *PARENTING , *PROBABILITY theory , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *QUALITY of life , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SELF-evaluation , *STATISTICS , *T-test (Statistics) , *EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale , *EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
This study examines the clinical profile of women admitted to a psychiatric mother-baby unit as well as change in their clinical, parenting, attachment and quality of life outcomes. Data was collected from 191 mothers through self-report measures at admission and discharge. Change was analysed in terms of Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) score, parenting confidence, maternal attachment to the infant and overall functioning. Psychosocial factors impacting on symptom severity and recovery were examined. Most women (64.8 %) were admitted in the first 3 months after birth with an ICD-10 unipolar depressive episode (52.3 %) or anxiety disorder (25.7 %), and 47.6 % had comorbid diagnoses. Improvement from admission to discharge was seen with large effect sizes (≥one standard deviation, i.e. μ) in terms of clinical symptoms (EPDS, μ = 1.7), parenting confidence (Karitane Parenting Confidence Scale (KPCS), μ = 1.1) and attachment to their infant (Maternal Postpartum Attachment Scale (MPAS), μ = 0.9) as well as overall level of functioning (SF-14, μ = 1.9). The majority (73.3 %) recovered symptomatically, and this was associated with increasing maternal age (odds ratio (OR) = 1.129, p = 0.002) and lower levels of psychosocial risk at admission (OR = 0.963, p = 0.008). Improvement in parenting confidence was associated with increasing maternal age (OR = 1.17, p = 0.003). No predictive factors were found for improvement in maternal attachment after controlling for admission scores. In the short term, joint admission of mothers with their infants is highly beneficial in terms of clinical, functional and parenting outcomes, but follow up studies are needed to assess the longer term benefits for mother-infant dyads. The use of an observational tool to enhance our assessment of maternal-infant interaction and some measure of maternal emotional dysregulation-both important mediators of development of secure infant attachment-would also enhance our ability to tailor therapeutic interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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184. Disclosure during prenatal mental health screening.
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Kingston, Dawn E., Biringer, Anne, Toosi, Amy, Heaman, Maureen I., Lasiuk, Gerri C., McDonald, Sheila W., Kingston, Joshua, Sword, Wendy, Jarema, Karly, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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MENTAL illness , *PREGNANT women , *MENTAL health screening , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background While women and healthcare providers have generally viewed perinatal mental health screening favorably, some qualitative studies suggest that some women intentionally decide not to reveal their symptoms during screening. Purpose The purpose of this study was to describe women's reported willingness to disclose mental health concerns during screening and factors associated with this. Methods This cross-sectional study included pregnant women who were >16 years of age and could speak/read English. Women were recruited from five maternity clinics and two community hospitals in Alberta, Canada (May–December, 2013). Eligible women completed the online Barriers and Facilitators of Mental Health Screening Questionnaire on recruitment. The primary outcome for this analysis was women's level of honesty about mental health concerns ( completely vs somewhat/not at all honest ) during screening. Analyses included descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regressions to identify factors associated with honesty. Results Participation rate was 92% (460/500). Seventy-nine percent of women indicated that they could be ‘completely honest’ during screening. Women who feared their provider would view them as bad mothers were less likely to be honest. We found a significant association between ‘less anonymous’ modes of screening and honesty. Limitations Over eighty percent of women in this study were well-educated, partnered, Caucasian women. As such, generalizability of the study findings may be limited. Conclusions Most women indicated they could be honest during screening. Stigma-related factors and screening mode influenced women's willingness to disclose. Strategies to reduce stigma during screening are warranted to enhance early detection of prenatal mental illness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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185. Identifying psychosocial risk among mothers in an Australian private maternity setting: A pilot study.
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Reilly, Nicole, Yin, Carolyn, Monterosso, Leanne, Bradshaw, Sue, Neale, Kizzi, Harrison, Beate, and Austin, Marie‐Paule
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PROPRIETARY hospitals , *MATERNAL health services , *MENTAL status examination , *MOTHERS , *PREGNANT women , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RISK assessment , *WOMEN , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background Psychosocial assessment and depression screening are recommended for all pregnant and postnatal women in Australia. However, women who give birth in private maternity settings remain less likely to participate in psychosocial assessment programs, making it difficult to comment on the potential resource implications. Aims To describe the psychosocial profile of a sample of women who had recently given birth in a private hospital and to examine the acceptability and feasibility of introducing psychosocial assessment as a routine component of maternity care. Materials and Methods Two hundred and twenty participants were recruited in a four-month period from a private tertiary hospital located in Murdoch, Western Australia. All participants completed the Edinburgh Depression Scale ( EDS) and a Antenatal Risk Questionnaire ( ANRQ) prior to discharge via an iPad. Results The mean total score for the EDS was 4.77 ( SD = 3.93), with 5% of women scoring above the recommended cut-off of 13 or more. The mean total score for the ANRQ was 17.73 ( SD = 10.72). 45.0% of all women endorsed no significant risk factors. The proportion of women scoring above the recommended ANRQ cut-off of 23 or more was 32.3%. Approximately 11% of women were referred for additional support or treatment. Acceptability of the ANRQ was high at 97.3%. Conclusions This study describes the psychosocial profile of a sample of women who recently gave birth in an Australian private maternity hospital and demonstrates that with additional resources, the implementation of psychosocial assessment as a routine component of maternity care was feasible and highly acceptable in this setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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186. Referral for Management of Emotional Health Issues During the Perinatal Period: Does Mental Health Assessment Make a Difference?
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Reilly, Nicole, Harris, Sheree, Loxton, Deborah, Chojenta, Catherine, Forder, Peta, Milgrom, Jeannette, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MATERNAL health services , *MEDICAL referrals , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL health services , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DATA analysis , *PREGNANCY , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background There exists little evidence that routine assessment of current or past mental health in the perinatal period positively impacts on rates of referral for emotional health issues. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of this early intervention approach on reported referrals for emotional health issues during pregnancy and the first postpartum year. Method A subsample of women ( N = 1,804) drawn from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health participated in the study. Results Multivariate analyses showed that predictors of being given a referral for emotional health issues during pregnancy and the postnatal period, respectively, included assessment of past mental health (Adjusted Odds Ratio [AOR] = 4.40, p < 0.001, and A OR = 5.69, p < 0.001), assessment of current mental health (A OR = 2.47, p < 0.001, and A OR = 2.72, p < 0.001), and reported experience of significant emotional distress (A OR = 2.58, p < 0.001, and A OR = 2.83, p < 0.001). The odds of receiving a referral were up to 16 times greater for women who were asked about both their past and current mental health than for women who did not receive any form of mental health assessment. Conclusions This study highlights that enquiry into risk factors such as past history (in addition to current mental health) enhances initiation of referrals. Importantly, results suggest that enquiry about current mental health is associated with appropriate rates of referral rather than a nonspecific inflation of referrals. In line with Australia's Clinical Practice Guidelines for Perinatal Mental Health, the value of a comprehensive approach to mental health assessment to aid decision making around referral for further assessment or care is particularly evident. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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187. The mental health of mothers of unsettled infants: is there value in routine psychosocial assessment in this context?
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Christl, Bettina, Reilly, Nicole, Smith, Michelle, Sims, Deborah, Chavasse, Fran, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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- *
PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis , *MENTAL illness risk factors , *GOODNESS-of-fit tests , *INFANT psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RISK assessment , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *SELF-evaluation , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This study aims to investigate the (1) pattern of psychosocial risk factors among mothers of unsettled infants, (2) the relationship between these risk factors and current mental health status and (3) acceptability of psychosocial risk assessment in the parentcraft setting. Women with unsettled infants aged up to 12 months were assessed using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, a diagnostic interview (Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI)) and a psychosocial assessment tool, the Postnatal Risk Questionnaire (PNRQ). Of the women, 27.5 % met the MINI diagnostic criteria for a current (predominantly) anxiety disorder, and 43.1 %, for a past psychiatric diagnosis. On the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, 29.9 % of women scored above 12 (mean 9.8; SD 5.1). The most common psychosocial risk factors were high trait anxiety (40.9 %), past mental health problems (40.7 %), perfectionistic traits (38.1 %) and 'abuse trauma' of any kind (31.6 %). The likelihood of meeting diagnostic criteria for a current mental illness was significantly increased for women who experienced emotional abuse during childhood (adj. odds ratio (OR) 3.386; p = 0.006), had high trait anxiety (adj. OR = 2.63, p = 0.003) or had a negative birth experience (adj. OR 2.78; p = 0.015). The majority of women (78 %) felt moderately to very comfortable completing the PNRQ. The results showed high rates of current anxiety disorders (almost twice that of the general postnatal population) and multiple significant psychosocial risk factors among mothers with unsettled infants. Identification of specific psychosocial risk factors in mothers of unsettled infants can help to address issues beyond infant settling difficulties such as mother-infant interaction, especially for mothers with unresolved issues around their own parenting or trauma history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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188. Parental care and control during childhood: associations with maternal perinatal mood disturbance and parenting stress.
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Grant, Kerry-Ann, Bautovich, Alison, McMahon, Catherine, Reilly, Nicole, Leader, Leo, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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- *
MOTHERHOOD & psychology , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *ANALYSIS of variance , *APGAR score , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *MOTHER-child relationship , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *PARENTING , *PROBABILITY theory , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *SCALES (Weighing instruments) , *SELF-evaluation , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This study examined the associations between perceived parental care and control in childhood and maternal anxiety, depression and parenting stress during the transition to parenthood. Eighty-eight women completed the Parental Bonding Instrument, self-report measures of anxiety and depression and a structured diagnostic interview (Mini-plus International Neuropsychiatric Interview) during the third trimester of pregnancy. The MINI-Plus and anxiety and depression measures were re-administered at 7 months postpartum. The Parenting Stress Index was also administered at this time. Significant associations were found between maternal 'affectionless control' and prenatal and postnatal symptom measures of anxiety and depression, p values <0.005. Compared to women who reported optimal parenting, women who recalled maternal 'affectionless control' were also six times more likely to be diagnosed with an anxiety disorder during pregnancy (OR = 6.1, 95 % CI = 2.17-30.11) and seven times more likely to be diagnosed with postnatal major depression (OR = 6.8, 95 % CI = 1.80-25.37). Paternal 'affectionless control' was associated with significantly higher scores on symptom measures of prenatal and postnatal anxiety, p values <0.005. This study suggests that assessing a woman's own parenting history is important in identifying and managing the risk of prenatal and postnatal affective disorders and parenting stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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189. Maternal sensitivity moderates the impact of prenatal anxiety disorder on infant responses to the still-face procedure
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Grant, Kerry-Ann, McMahon, Catherine, Reilly, Nicole, and Austin, Marie-Paule
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- *
SENSITIVITY analysis , *ANXIETY disorders , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *DURATION of pregnancy , *POSTNATAL care , *CAREGIVERS - Abstract
Abstract: Animal studies have demonstrated the interactive effects of prenatal stress exposure and postnatal rearing style on offspring capacity to manage stress. However, little is known about how parenting quality impacts the association between maternal prenatal anxiety and stress reactivity in human infants. This prospective study examined the impact of prenatal anxiety disorder and maternal caregiving sensitivity on infants’ responses to a standardised interactive stressor (still-face procedure). Eighty-four women completed a clinical interview during pregnancy to assess anxiety symptoms meeting DSM-IV diagnostic criteria. At infant age 7 months, maternal sensitivity to infant distress and infant negative affect were observed and coded during the still-face procedure. Maternal postnatal (concurrent) anxiety and depression were also assessed at this time. Results indicated a negative association between maternal sensitivity to infant distress and infant negative affect responses to the still-face procedure. An unexpected finding was a positive association between parity and infant reactivity. The main effect for sensitivity was qualified by a significant interaction, p <.05, suggesting that the impact of sensitivity was particularly marked among infants of women who experienced an anxiety disorder during pregnancy. This finding is consistent with a cumulative risk model suggesting that maternal prenatal anxiety and quality of maternal care act in concert to shape infant outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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190. A Brief Measure of Worry Severity (BMWS): personality and clinical correlates of severe worriers
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Gladstone, Gemma L., Parker, Gordon B., Mitchell, Philip B., Malhi, Gin S., Wilhelm, Kay A., and Austin, Marie-Paule
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- *
ANXIETY , *PANIC disorders , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder - Abstract
Abstract: This report describes the development of a brief and valid self-report measure to assess severe and dysfunctional worry (the Brief Measure of Worry Severity or BMWS). Using three independent subject groups (clinical and non-clinical), the measure was used to examine the differential severity of worry in depression and anxiety and to examine the clinical and personality correlates of severe worriers. Preliminary psychometric evaluation revealed that the BMWS possesses good construct and clinical discriminant validity. Subjects reporting greater worry severity tended to be more “introverted” and “obsessional,” but less “agreeable” and “conscientious.” Subjects with depression only, reported less problems with worrying compared to those with co-morbid anxiety disorders. However, among the anxiety disorders, severe and dysfunctional worry was not exclusively experienced by subjects with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). This study suggests that pathological worry is not only relevant for patients with GAD, but may be an equally detrimental cognitive activity for patients with panic disorder and obsessive–compulsive disorder. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
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191. Great expectations: Factors influencing patient expectations and doctors recommendations at a Mood Disorders Unit
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Wilhelm, Kay, Wedgwood, Lucinda, Malhi, Gin, Mitchell, Philip, Austin, Marie-Paule, Kotze, Beth, Niven, Heather, and Parker, Gordon
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- *
MENTAL depression , *DEPRESSED persons , *PHYSICIANS , *PSYCHIATRISTS - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Literature about expectations and management of depression within community samples reflects attitudes of people who have generally not received treatment. We examined the factors influencing treatment expectations and psychiatrists'' treatment recommendations for patients referred to a mood disorders unit with identified episodes of major depression. Methods: Prior to attending a mood disorders unit, 182 men and women who met DSM-III-R or DSM-IV criteria for current major depression provided data on sociodemographic details, history of medical and psychiatric illness and expectations of treatment. Psychiatrists'' treatment recommendations to the referring clinician were assessed to determine whether the patients'' initial expectations were met. Results: Data analyses revealed three factors relating to patients'' expectations: ‘enhanced coping’, ‘providing fresh ideas for the referring doctor’ and ‘providing fresh ideas to self’. Patients'' expectations were influenced by sociodemographic and illness-related characteristics. In particular, young female patients typically expected to receive strategies to enhance coping, while those with lifetime anxiety expected less active involvement on their part. Some clinicians'' recommendations were dependent upon depression type and patient factors. Women and those with a history of anxiety disorders received more education and recommendations for relationship counselling and support groups. Limitations: The study design did not allow determination of the impact of patients'' expectations on the psychiatrists'' recommendations. Conclusions: Individual and illness characteristics are important predictors of treatment expectations prior to specialist care. It appears that doctors take these factors into account with implications for patients'' satisfaction with the type of care recommended. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
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192. Severity of stressful life events in first and subsequent episodes of depression: the relevance of depressive subtype
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Mitchell, Philip B., Parker, Gordon B., Gladstone, Gemma L., Wilhelm, Kay, and Austin, Marie-Paule V.
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MENTAL depression , *MELANCHOLY - Abstract
Background: Recent studies have reignited debate concerning the relationship between stressful life events and depressive subtypes, particularly in relation to first versus subsequent episodes. Aims: To investigate the relationship between stressful life events and variably defined melancholic/non-melancholic depressive subtypes, and the import of such life events to first compared with subsequent episodes across those subtypes. Method: Acute and chronic stressful life events were rated in 270 patients with DSM-IV Major Depressive episodes who were allocated to melancholic and non-melancholic groups separately as defined by DSM-III-R, DSM-IV, the Newcastle criteria and the CORE system. Results: Severe stressful life events (both acute and chronic)—as defined by DSM-III-R axis IV—were more likely to occur prior to first rather than subsequent episodes, particularly for those with non-melancholic depression. Limitations: Dependence or independence of life events was not assessed. Genetic vulnerability to depression was not determined. Life events in first and subsequent depressive episodes were compared cross-sectionally between groups, not prospectively in the same cohort of patients. There were no differences in the number of severe life events—as defined by clinician consensus—between the first and subsequent episodes. Conclusions: These findings are consistent with other studies in suggesting an enhanced sensitisation of depressed patients to subsequent episodes of depression, but suggest that any such phenomenon is specific to non-melancholic depression, in comparison to one key previous study. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
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193. Urinary 1 H NMR Metabolomic Analysis of Prenatal Maternal Stress Due to a Natural Disaster Reveals Metabolic Risk Factors for Non-Communicable Diseases: The QF2011 Queensland Flood Study.
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Heynen JP, McHugh RR, Boora NS, Simcock G, Kildea S, Austin MP, Laplante DP, King S, Montina T, and Metz GAS
- Abstract
Prenatal stress alters fetal programming, potentially predisposing the ensuing offspring to long-term adverse health outcomes. To gain insight into environmental influences on fetal development, this QF2011 study evaluated the urinary metabolomes of 4-year-old children ( n = 89) who were exposed to the 2011 Queensland flood in utero. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to analyze urinary metabolic fingerprints based on maternal levels of objective hardship and subjective distress resulting from the natural disaster. In both males and females, differences were observed between high and low levels of maternal objective hardship and maternal subjective distress groups. Greater prenatal stress exposure was associated with alterations in metabolites associated with protein synthesis, energy metabolism, and carbohydrate metabolism. These alterations suggest profound changes in oxidative and antioxidative pathways that may indicate a higher risk for chronic non-communicable diseases such obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes, as well as mental illnesses, including depression and schizophrenia. Thus, prenatal stress-associated metabolic biomarkers may provide early predictors of lifetime health trajectories, and potentially serve as prognostic markers for therapeutic strategies in mitigating adverse health outcomes.
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- 2023
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194. Screening for anxiety disorders in third trimester pregnancy: a comparison of four brief measures.
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Austin MV, Mule V, Hadzi-Pavlovic D, and Reilly N
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- Female, Humans, Mass Screening, Patient Health Questionnaire, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Trimester, Third, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Anxiety Disorders diagnosis, Anxiety Disorders epidemiology, Depression, Postpartum diagnosis
- Abstract
Evidence regarding the accuracy of existing anxiety screeners used in pregnancy is limited. This study compares the psychometric characteristics of the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 2- and 7-item Scales (GAD-2 and GAD-7), the anxiety subscale of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS-3A) and the two anxiety items of the Antenatal Risk Questionnaire (ANRQ-2A). Nine hundred fifty-four women completed the screening measures and anxiety modules of a diagnostic reference standard (SAGE-SR) in the third trimester. Test performance characteristics of each measure was assessed using Receiver Operator Characteristic (ROC) analysis. We applied four previously recommended criteria to ascertain the value of each measure for widespread clinical use: area under the curve (AUC ≥ 0.8, Youden's index ≥ 0.5, negative predictive value (NPV) ≥ 0.8 and positive likelihood ratio (LR +) ≥ 4.0). Prevalence for any SAGE-SR anxiety disorder was 3%. All measures yielded an acceptable AUC of ≥ 0.8, Youden's index of ≥ 0.5 and NPV of ≥ 0.8. Only the EPDS-3A, at a cut-point ≥ 5, also achieved a LR + of ≥ 4.0 (4.35) but at this cut-point sensitivity was less than 0.75. The ANRQ-2A, at its optimal cut-point of ≥ 6, was the only measure to additionally attain both a sensitivity and specificity of ≥ .75. This study expands the evidence base for brief anxiety screening measures in the maternity setting and provides empirical support for the use of the EPDS-3A and ANRQ-2A in routine screening programmes. Studies assessing the performance of these measures in samples with higher disease prevalence and broader socio-economic status are warranted., (© 2021. Crown.)
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- 2022
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195. Patterns of psychiatric admission in Australian pregnant and childbearing women.
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Austin MP, Ambrosi TL, Reilly N, Croft M, Hutchinson J, Donnolley N, Mihalopoulos C, Chatterton ML, Chambers GM, Sullivan E, Knox C, Xu F, Highet N, and Morgan VA
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- Australia epidemiology, Cohort Studies, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Pregnancy, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders therapy, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: The early postnatal period is a time of increased risk for psychiatric admission. However, there is scope to further examine if this increase in risk extends to the entire perinatal period (pregnancy and first postnatal year), and how it compares to admission outside of the perinatal period., Methods: Data were linked across birth and hospital admission registers from July 2000 to December 2009. The study cohort, consisting of all pregnant and childbearing women with a psychiatric history, was divided into two groups: case women (at least one perinatal principal psychiatric admission in the study period) (38%) and comparison women (no perinatal principal psychiatric admissions) (62%). Outcomes were admission rate and length of stay adjusted for diagnosis, socio-demographic factors and timing of admission., Results: Antenatal and postnatal admissions rates were both higher than non-perinatal admission rates for case women for all diagnoses. There was little evidence that women with perinatal admissions were at an increased risk of admissions at other times. Socially disadvantaged women had significantly fewer and shorter admissions than their respective counterparts., Conclusions: The entire perinatal period is a time of increased risk for admission across the range of psychiatric disorders, compared to other times in a woman's childbearing years. Reduced admission rate and length of stay for socially disadvantaged women suggest lack of equity of access highlighting the importance of national perinatal mental health policy initiatives inclusive of disadvantaged groups., (© 2021. Crown.)
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- 2022
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196. The clinical performance and cost-effectiveness of two psychosocial assessment models in maternity care: The Perinatal Integrated Psychosocial Assessment study.
- Author
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Chambers GM, Botha W, Reilly N, Black E, Kingston D, and Austin MP
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Humans, Mass Screening, Pregnancy, Maternal Health Services, Pregnancy Complications diagnosis, Pregnancy Complications psychology
- Abstract
Problem: Although perinatal universal depression and psychosocial assessment is recommended in Australia, its clinical performance and cost-effectiveness remain uncertain., Aim: To compare the performance and cost-effectiveness of two models of psychosocial assessment: Usual-Care and Perinatal Integrated Psychosocial Assessment (PIPA)., Methods: Women attending their first antenatal visit were prospectively recruited to this cohort study. Endorsement of significant depressive symptoms or psychosocial risk generated an 'at-risk' flag identifying those needing referral to the Triage Committee. Based on its detailed algorithm, a higher threshold of risk was required to trigger the 'at-risk' flag for PIPA than for Usual-Care. Each model's performance was evaluated using the midwife's agreement with the 'at-risk' flag as the reference standard. Cost-effectiveness was limited to the identification of True Positive and False Positive cases. Staffing costs associated with administering each screening model were quantified using a bottom-up time-in-motion approach., Findings: Both models performed well at identifying 'at-risk' women (sensitivity: Usual-Care 0.82 versus PIPA 0.78). However, the PIPA model was more effective at eliminating False Positives and correctly identifying 'at-risk' women (Positive Predictive Value: PIPA 0.69 versus Usual Care 0.41). PIPA was associated with small incremental savings for both True Positives detected and False Positives averted., Discussion: Overall PIPA performed better than Usual-Care as a psychosocial screening model and was a cost-saving and relatively effective approach for detecting True Positives and averting False Positives. These initial findings warrant evaluation of longer-term costs and outcomes of women identified by the models as 'at-risk' and 'not at-risk' of perinatal psychosocial morbidity., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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197. Supporting routine psychosocial assessment in the perinatal period: The concurrent and predictive validity of the Antenatal Risk Questionnaire-Revised.
- Author
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Reilly N, Hadzi-Pavlovic D, Loxton D, Black E, Mule V, and Austin MP
- Subjects
- Australia, Female, Humans, Parturition, Pregnancy, Surveys and Questionnaires, Depression, Postpartum psychology, Maternal Health Services
- Abstract
Background: Australian clinical practice guidelines support comprehensive psychosocial assessment as a routine component of maternity care., Aim: To examine the concurrent and predictive validity of the Antenatal Risk Questionnaire-Revised (ANRQ-R) when used across the perinatal period., Methods: Women completed the ANRQ-R and a diagnostic reference standard (SAGE-SR) in the second and third trimesters and at 3-months postpartum. ANRQ-R test performance for cut-off scores at each time-point was assessed using Receiver Operator Characteristic (ROC) analysis., Findings: Overall sample sizes were N=1166 (second trimester), N=957 (third trimester) and N=796 (3-month postpartum). 6.5%, 5.6% and 6.2% of women met SAGE-SR criteria for any depressive or anxiety disorder at these time-points ('cases'), respectively. ROC analysis yielded acceptable areas under the curve (AUC) when the ANRQ-R was used to detect current (AUC=0.789-0.798) or predict future (AUC=0.705-0.789) depression or anxiety. Using an example cut-off score of 18 or more, the ANRQ-R correctly classified 72-76% of concurrent 'cases' and 'non-cases' (sensitivity=0.70-0.74, specificity=0.72-0.76) and correctly predicted 74-78% of postnatal 'cases' and 'non-cases' (sensitivity=0.52-0.72, specificity=0.75-0.79). Completion of the ANRQ-R earlier in pregnancy yielded greater positive likelihood ratios for predicting depression or anxiety at 3-months postpartum (cut-off ≥18: second trimester=3.8; third trimester=2.2)., Conclusion: The ANRQ-R is a structured psychosocial assessment questionnaire that can be scored to provide an overall measure of psychosocial risk. Cut-off scores need not be uniform across settings. Such decisions should be guided by factors including diagnostic prevalence rates, local needs and resource availability., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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198. Disclosure of sensitive material at routine antenatal psychosocial assessment: The role of psychosocial risk and mode of assessment.
- Author
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Austin MV, Reilly N, Mule V, Kingston D, Black E, and Hadzi-Pavlovic D
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Mental Health, Pregnancy, Risk Factors, Disclosure, Pregnant Women psychology
- Abstract
Problem: While routine psychosocial assessment is acceptable to most pregnant women, some women will not fully disclose psychosocial concerns to their clinician., Aims: To assess the impact of psychosocial risk, current symptoms and mode of assessment on women's honesty of disclosure at psychosocial assessment., Methods: Logistic regression was used to examine associations between disclosure and a range of psychosocial characteristics in women who were 'always honest' and 'not always honest'. Mixed ANOVAs were used to test the influence of mode of assessment and honesty on scores on a repeated measure of psychosocial risk., Findings: 10.8% (N=193 of 1788) of women did not fully disclose at psychosocial assessment. Non-disclosure was associated with a mental health history (aOR=1.78, 95%CI: 1.18-2.67, p<0.01) and lack of social and partner support (aOR=1.74, 95%CI: 1.16-2.62, p<0.05; aOR=2.08, 95%CI: 1.11-3.90, p<0.05, respectively). Those reporting not always being honest at face to face assessment showed a greater increase in psychosocial risk score when the assessment was repeated online via self-report, compared to women who were always honest., Discussion: A history of mental health issues and lack of social and partner support are associated with reduced disclosure at face to face assessment. Online self-report assessment may promote greater disclosure, however this should always be conducted in the context of clinician feedback., Conclusion: Greater psychosocial vulnerability is associated with a lower likelihood of full disclosure. Preliminary findings relating to mode of assessment warrant further exploration within a clinical context., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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199. Why do some pregnant women not fully disclose at comprehensive psychosocial assessment with their midwife?
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Mule V, Reilly NM, Schmied V, Kingston D, and Austin MV
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Pregnant Women, Prenatal Care, Trust, Maternal Health Services, Midwifery
- Abstract
Problem: While comprehensive psychosocial assessment is recommended as part of routine maternity care, unless women engage and disclose, psychosocial risk will not be identified or referred in a timely manner. We need to better understand and where possible overcome the barriers to disclosure if we are to reduce mental health morbidity and complex psychosocial adversity., Aims: To assess pregnant women's attitude to, and reasons for non-disclosure at, comprehensive psychosocial assessment with their midwife., Methods: Data from 1796 pregnant women were analysed using a mixed method approach. After ascertaining women's comfort with, attitude to, and non-disclosure at psychosocial screening, thematic analysis was used to understand the reasons underpinning non-disclosure., Findings: 99% of participants were comfortable with the assessment, however 11.1% (N = 193) reported some level of nondisclosure. Key themes for non-disclosure included (1) Normalising and negative self-perception, (2) Fear of negative perceptions from others, (3) Lack of trust of midwife, (4) Differing expectation of appointment and (5) Mode of assessment and time issues., Discussion: Factors associated with high comfort and disclosure levels in this sample include an experienced and skilled midwifery workforce at the study site and a relatively advantaged and mental health literate sample. Proper implementation of psychosocial assessment policy; setting clear expectations for women and, for more vulnerable women, extending assessment time, modifying mode of assessment, and offering continuity of midwifery care will help build rapport, improve disclosure, and increase the chance of early identification and intervention., Conclusions: This study informs approaches to improving comprehensive psychosocial assessment in the maternity setting., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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200. Increases in use of Medicare Benefits Schedule mental health items among women who gave birth in New South Wales, 2009-2015.
- Author
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Reilly N, Egan N, Austin MP, Forder PM, and Loxton D
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- Aged, Australia, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, New South Wales, Pregnancy, Mental Health, National Health Programs
- Abstract
Objective: To report rates of Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) mental health item use among a sample of women who gave birth in NSW (2009-2015) and examine if the SAFE START policy increased use of these items among perinatal women., Methods: Data was drawn from women participating in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health 1973-1978 cohort, linked to data from the NSW Perinatal Data Collection and MBS., Results: Use of Medicare-subsidised mental health items increased 2.7-fold among perinatal women (n=1,453) between 2009 and 2015 (4.1% versus 11.0% respectively), compared to a 1.3-fold increase among non-perinatal women (n=1,800, 6.3% versus 8.4% respectively). However, the increased use of MBS mental health items among perinatal women was not observed to be impacted by the SAFE START policy, after accounting for time trends., Conclusion: There was a substantial increase in the use of MBS mental health items among women in NSW between 2009 and 2015, with a more pronounced increase among women who had given birth compared to those who had not. Implications for public health: This study provides important information about changes in mental health service use during a time of significant investment in perinatal mental health, and demonstrates the value of longitudinal survey data linked with administrative health data to evaluate the impact of health policy., (© 2021 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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