6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

53

Transcript of 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Page 1: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 2: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Disclosures

Page 3: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

PAL for Moms 877-725-4666 (PAL4MOM)

• Partnership Access Line (PAL) for Moms

• Perinatal psychiatry telephone consultation

• Free for any healthcare provider in Washington State

• Mon-Fri 9-5

• Funded by State of Washington Health Care Authority (HCA)For information and care guides:

https://www.mcmh.uw.edu/pal-for-moms-faq

Page 4: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

OBJECTIVES

Page 5: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 6: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Let’s start with a case

Page 7: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Postpartum Depression

Page 8: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 9: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Postpartum depression is more likely if:

Page 10: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Outcomes

Page 11: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Good News!

Page 12: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Other postpartum mental health disorders

Page 13: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

Prenatal CareInitiated in First

Trimester

RecommendedNumber of Prenatal

Visits Attended

Timely PostpartumCare

Met Criteria

Met Criteria

Weir et al, 2011

Page 14: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Where to screen

Page 15: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Of note

Page 16: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 17: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Recommendations to Screen

• United States Preventive Services Task Force,

2016

• Depression screening for adults, including pregnant and postpartum women

• AAP Bright Futures

• recommends maternal depression screening at well-child visits as a best practice for pediatricians.

Page 18: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Recommendations to Screen

ACOG Committee Opinion #757, 2018

• Obstetric providers to complete a full assessment of “mood and emotional wellbeing” including postpartum screening with a validated instrumentfor depression and anxiety

NICE (National Institute for Health and Care

Excellence) CG192, 2014

• Screen with PHQ2 and GAD-2 during pregnancy and early postnatal period.

• EPDS or GAD7 if positive or at risk

• Consider ongoing screening until 1yr postpartumif regular contact with patient

Page 19: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

When to Screen

• 75% have symptoms in first 3 months

• If no screening after 3 months, miss 25% of cases

• Suicide rate highest 9-12 months postpartum

• Bright Futures recommendation

• Well child visits at 1, 2, 4 and 6 months

• Every visit

• Parents with previous or current mental health

symptoms

Page 20: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

How to Screen in the Era of COVID-19?

How are you doing this?

• Screening questionnaires as part of EMR

• Send questionnaires in advance

• Delay in seeing items related to suicidal thoughts

• Share screen and complete during visit

• Billing:

• As part of Well Child Visit: CPT 96161

• By interactive video/audio/phone/online patient portal: CPT 96127

Page 21: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Acceptability

• Patients - 80-90% find depression

screening to be acceptable, especially if:

• screening done by

paper/questionnaire/electronically

• results of screening discussed verbally

• they felt their healthcare professional was

engaged and empathetic

Page 22: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Liability

• Screening is “standard of care”

• Systematic, standardized approach

• Documentation of screening for maternal

depression as a risk factor for the child

Page 23: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Documentation

• Minimum – record that screening took place

and that referrals / recommendations were

provided

• Options for documentation:

- In child’s record

- In a stand-alone file

- Send to parent’s provider

Page 24: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 25: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Screening Tools

• PHQ-2 – brief; needs follow up

• EPDS-validated; not generalizable

• PHQ-9 – validated; high somatic symptom

loading; generalizable

Page 27: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Screening with the PHQ-2

• 2 items

• In the last 2 weeks, how often have you been

bothered by:

• Little interest or pleasure in doing things

• Feeling down, depressed, or hopeless

• Not at all (0), several days (1), more than half the

days (2), nearly every day (3)

• Score of 3 or more has sensitivity of 83%,

specificity of 92% for major depression

• <1 minute to administer

Page 28: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Screening with the PHQ-2 (continued)

• Parental Wellbeing Project (Dartmouth)

• 1398 parents screened at well child visits

• Accepted by parents; 6% nonresponse rate

• 17% had positive response to one item; 6% had score

of 3 or above

• 56.5% with score of 3 or above thought they might

be depressed; 83.5% of these willing to take action

• In 85-90% of cases, required <3 minutes extra

pediatrician time; >10 mins in 2% of cases

Page 29: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

2 8 616

Page 30: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 31: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 32: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

EPDS scores

• 10 items, each scored 0-3

• Items 1, 2, 4 are reverse-scored

• Score of 10 or more at 6-8 weeks

postpartum has 93% sensitivity, 83%

specificity for major depression

Page 33: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Reverse

Scoring

Page 34: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Comparing the PHQ-9 and the EPDS

• ≥

• ≥

Page 35: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 36: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Triage/

intervention

Page 37: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Maternal Depression Screening: the Pediatrician’s Role

• To motivate screen positive parents to get help

• To enable discussions of the effect of maternal

depression on child development

• To provide lactation decision support

• NOT to diagnose or treat depression or other

mental health conditions

Page 38: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 39: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Mood Disorders Question-

naire(MDQ)

Page 40: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 41: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides
Page 42: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

What do you do next?

http://cssrs.columbia.edu/wp-content/uploads/C-SSRS-Screener-with-Triage-Points-for-Primary-Care-2018-1.docx

Page 44: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Brown_StanleySafetyPlanTemplate.pdf

Page 45: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Interventions for positive depression screens

• Mild depression

• Education – common, not mother’s fault, will improve

• Extra visits/follow up call

• Address social support, sleep deprivation; exercise

• Moderate depression

• Refer for mental health treatment (psychotherapy and/or

medication)

• Contact OB/PCP

• Suicidal thoughts/psychosis

• Refer to crisis/emergency services

Page 46: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Psychotropic Medications in Breastfeeding

Page 47: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Antidepressants in lactation

•▫

•▫

•▫

Page 48: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

PPD recognition and treatment

16% treated

31% identified

50% screened

Page 49: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

What can we do?

• Increase screening

• Support, encouragement to follow up on referrals

• Consultation

• Telepsychiatry, increasing access to perinatal behavioral health care

Page 51: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Case

The mother of the 4-month-old has a PHQ-9 score of 16 and has a score of 1 on question 9. You question her further and she reports feeling hopeless at times, but denies active suicidal thoughts or plans. You explain that postpartum depression is common, does not mean she is a bad mother, and can be treated. You refer her for counseling and to her PCP for antidepressant medication. You also refer her to Perinatal Support Washington and talk with her about maximizing sleep, social support, and exercise.

Page 52: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides

Promoting First Relationships in Pediatric Primary Care

Page 53: 6.12.2021 Webinar Full Slides