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Postpartum Depression & Psychosis: New Study Reveals Unexpected Trends

Postpartum‍ Psychosis‍ Risk Substantially Elevated, Swedish Study Finds

stockholm, Sweden – A new ‍analysis of nearly 1.8 million pregnancies in Sweden reveals a significantly⁤ increased risk of psychosis in the ⁤first 20 weeks after childbirth – up to seven times higher‍ than before pregnancy. The research, conducted by scientists at the⁤ Karolinska ‌Institutet and spanning ‍data from 2003 to 2019, also indicates a heightened risk of depression, peaking around 20% higher during weeks 5 to 15⁤ postpartum.

While the risk of these conditions rises after delivery, the​ study simultaneously found a decrease in diagnoses of other psychiatric conditions, including ⁣anxiety, stress-related disorders, and substance abuse, compared to periods ⁣before pregnancy. Researchers attribute this decline to a ‌combination of biological changes and lifestyle adjustments during and after pregnancy, such as cessation of alcohol​ and tobacco ​use and increased engagement with healthcare.

“There is a fairly hard zero tolerance‌ for alcohol use and drug use‌ during⁣ pregnancy, especially here in Sweden,” explained ⁤researcher Emma Bränn. “Our results indicate that many women have a strong driving force⁢ to actually end their addiction, ⁢not only for themselves but also for the child.”

The study’s methodology distinguishes it ‍from ⁢previous research by comparing mental health ⁣diagnoses⁣ statistically‍ to a woman’s baseline before pregnancy, offering greater ​confidence in the findings.

Researchers acknowledge uncertainty surrounding the precise causes ⁢of the elevated psychosis ​risk. “It’s a very fragile time,” stated ‌researcher Donghao Lu. “After childbirth, a lot ​happens in the body: hormone levels drop,‍ you have a large wound in the uterus after ⁢the placenta‌ that will heal, you have to ‍get to know your child and then there is​ a ‍lot⁢ of sleep ​deprivation. Why the risk of psychosis‍ is so high we ‍do not know exactly.”

The implementation of national guidelines‌ for screening depressive symptoms ⁤in 2010⁤ appears‍ to​ be ‌having a positive impact, with diagnoses⁢ now occurring earlier – shifting from approximately 13 weeks postpartum to around​ 8 weeks. “We see ⁣that the top of​ depression diagnoses has been moved… I think screening is a good tool for detecting mental illness early​ and for reducing stigma,” Bränn added.

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