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Journal Article

Citation

Wall-Wieler E, Roos LL, Bolton J. Depress. Anxiety 2018; 35(4): 305-312.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, University of Manitoba, Manitoba, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/da.22729

PMID

29451948

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mothers have increased mental illness such as anxiety and depression after the death of a child. We examine the duration of this worsening of mental health.

METHODS: The mental health of all mothers who experience the death of an infant (< 1 years old) in Manitoba, Canada between April 1, 1999 and March 31, 2011 (n = 534) is examined in the 4 years leading up to, and the 4 years following, the death of their child. Mental health-related outcomes of these mothers are compared with a matched (3:1) cohort of mothers who did not experience the death of a child (n = 1,602). Three mental health-related outcomes are examined: depression diagnoses, anxiety diagnoses, and use of psychotropic medications.

RESULTS: Compared with mothers who did not experience the death of a child, mothers experiencing this event had higher rates of anxiety diagnoses and psychotropic prescriptions starting 6 months before the death. Elevated rates of anxiety continued for the first year and elevated rates of psychotropic prescriptions continued for 6 months after the death of the child. Mothers who experienced the death of a child had higher rates of depression diagnoses in the year after the death. Relative rates (RR) of depression (RR = 4.94), anxiety (RR = 2.21), and psychotropic medication use (RR = 3.18) were highest in the 6 months after the child's death.

CONCLUSIONS: Elevated rates of depression, anxiety, and psychotropic medication use after the death of a child end within 1 year of the child's death.

© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Language: en

Keywords

antidepressants; anxiety/anxiety disorders; depression; epidemiology; grief/bereavement/complicated grief; maternal-child

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