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Journal Article

Citation

Hughes K, Gianelis K. Nurs. Womens Health 2024; 28(1): 66-74.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1016/j.nwh.2023.11.003

PMID

38065223

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To improve screening for perinatal mood and anxiety disorders (PMAD) and follow-up care while balancing team workload.
DESIGN: Four rapid plan-do-study-act cycles were implemented over 8 weeks.
SETTING/LOCAL PROBLEM: At baseline, only 2% of patients with PMAD were identified at a rural obstetric clinic, and none (n = 0 of 50) received screening with a validated tool. Of the 12 patients who had a current or prior history of PMAD, 92% (n = 11) were not screened for self-harm, and 67% (n = 8) received no referral. The clinic had no standardized care for PMAD.
PARTICIPANTS: Patients (n = 253) screened at initial pregnancy intake, early in the third trimester, and at the 6-week postpartum visit.
INTERVENTION/MEASUREMENTS: Following the screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment model, patients were screened using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, and brief intervention and referral to treatment were used with a point-of-care checklist. Data were collected three times weekly for run chart analysis, and team surveys measured workload.
RESULTS: At the end of 8 weeks, effective screening for PMAD and follow-up care were achieved for 98% of patients and included screening, education, shared decision-making for management, referral, and clinic and phone follow-up to support mental health care uptake.
CONCLUSIONS: Standardizing screening and follow-up care can increase identification of PMAD and increase uptake of mental health care. For sustainability, a decision aid can streamline patient-provider communication and reduce visit length.


Language: en

Keywords

Aftercare; and referral to treatment; Anxiety; Anxiety Disorders; brief intervention; Child; decision aid; Depression; Depression, Postpartum; Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; Female; Humans; Infant, Newborn; Mass Screening; Mood Disorders; Perinatal Care; perinatal mood and anxiety disorders; postpartum depression; Postpartum Period; Pregnancy; quality improvement; screening; shared decision-making

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