Perinatal Mental Health Awareness
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Transcript of Perinatal Mental Health Awareness

Hey, lets talk about perinatal mental health
Emma Jane Sasaru
Birth Trauma Trust and Perinatal Mental Health Network
Loving Baby

What is Perinatal mental?
• Perinatal mental health refers to a woman’s mental health/wellbeing during pregnancy and the first year after birth. This includes mental illness existing before she becomes pregnant, or that develops for the first time in pregnancy, or in the postnatal period after birth.
• Examples of perinatal mental illness include antenatal depression, postnatal depression, anxiety, perinatal obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), postpartum psychosis and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). These illnesses can be mild, moderate or severe, requiring different kinds of care or treatment.

Women from all parts of society can be affected by Perinatal Mental Illness
Factors associated with increased risk of perinatal mental illness
• Pervious history/ family history of mental illness
• lone parent
• Poor family relationships
• low levels of social support
• recent adverse or stressful life events
• socio-economic disadvantage
• teenage pregnancy
• early emotional trauma/childhood abuse
• unwanted pregnancy

Estimated numbers nationally of women affected by Perinatal
Mental Health
NSPCC

20% women

1/10 women develop PND

Women can be affected by theirbirth experience.
40% report traumatic birth

Suicide is the biggest cause of death for women during pregnancy and first year after birth.
Centre for Mental Health

Asking for help can be hard

Didn’t know who could help

Families worry about stigma



Cost Implications
Centre for Mental Health

Costs apply to both mother and baby

Dads/ Partners suffer too

We must do better?

Signs of PND
• a persistent feeling of sadness and low mood
• lack of enjoyment and loss of interest in the wider world
• lack of energy and feeling tired all the time
• trouble sleeping at night and feeling sleepy during the day
• difficulty bonding with your baby
• withdrawing from contact with other people
• problems concentrating and making decisions
• frightening thoughts – for example, about hurting your baby

Signs of Postpartum Psychosis
• Excited, elated, or ‘high’.• Depressed, anxious, confused, excessively irritable or
changeable in mood, loss of touch with reality (mania)• Strange beliefs that could not be true (delusions).• Hearing, seeing, feeling or smelling things that are not there
(hallucinations).• Being excessively more talkative, sociable.• Having a very busy mind or racing thoughts.• Feeling very energetic and like ‘super-mum’ or agitated and
restless.• Having trouble sleeping, or not feeling the need to sleep.• Behaving in a way that is out of character or out of control.• Feeling paranoid or suspicious of people’s motives.• Feeling that things are connected in special ways or that

Perinatal PTSD• Feelings of intense fear, helplessness and/or terror.
• Re-experiencing of the event by intrusive memories, flashbacks and/or nightmares.
• The individual will usually feel distressed, anxious or panicky when exposed to anything, which remind them of the event.
• Avoidance of anything that reminds them of the trauma. This can include talking about it, the place where the trauma happened or people that may have been involved in the trauma. (such as hospitals, doctors, healthcare professionals)
• Difficulties with sleeping, concentrating and daily activities.
• Feeling angry, irritable or hyper-vigilant or jumpy and easily startled.
• Panic attacks, anxiety and depression.
• They may feel detached, alone and have a sense of something bad may happen to them or their loved ones at any time.

Impact of Perinatal Mental Health• Emotional wellbeing of the whole family.
• Bonding, attachment, feeding and caring for baby, day to day life.
• Relationships partner, wider family and friends.
• Infant brain development/long term issues for child emotionally/ behaviorally
• Life threatening
• Impacts other services acute, primary, public.
• Cost of perinatal mental health UK each year £8.1 Billion

My Girls and Me• Mental Health can
affect anyone• No previous mental
health issues• Unable to access
support• Impact is
devastating and long lasting

Video

What did you struggle with?
“However pragmatic you are, it is very
demanding being anew parent.”
Robert Winston

We all need to work together to support families
Maternal mental health alliance

What can you do?Think of ways in your role you can support families.
Compassion
Stigma Awareness
Support
Signpost
ing
Information
Safeguarding
Kindness
Listen


Support Matters
Unfold your
Wings

Resources
• Perinatal Mental Health Toolkit -http://www.rcgp.org.uk/clinical-and-research/toolkits/perinatal-mental-health-toolkit.aspx
• Maternal Mental Health Alliance -http://maternalmentalhealthalliance.org/
• Centre for Mental Health -https://www.centreformentalhealth.org.uk/maternal-mental-health
• Everyone’s Business - http://everyonesbusiness.org.uk/
• MIND -http://www.mind.org.uk/information-support/tips-for-everyday-living/parenting-with-a-mental-health-problem/#.WJDrq7aLSb8

Families Matter
Loving Baby

Thank You
Emma Jane Sasaru
BirthTraumaTrust.org
Unfoldyourwings.co.uk
Perinatal Mental Health Network
Follow me on Twitter:
@ESasaruNHS @unfoldURwings @PNMHnetwork
Facebook: unfoldyourwings / birthtraumatrust
LovingBabyLtd