Immigrants at higher risk for postpartum depression
Reported May 07, 2008
Immigrants, refugees and women seeking asylum in Canada are four to five times more likely to suffer from postpartum depression than women born here, according to a study published this month in the Canadian Journal of Psychiatry.
“Postpartum is more likely to be recognized in Canadian-born moms, but our study shows it’s much more common in immigrant women and they don’t seek help as much as the Canadian women do,” said Dr. Donna Stewart, the principal author of the study.
She said the results of the study surprised her, considering a well-documented phenomenon known as the “healthy immigrant effect.”
“Immigrants to Canada are much healthier than Canadian-born women, and there have been lots and lots of studies showing that, so from that perspective it did surprise me. From the perspective that it didn’t surprise me, as a clinician, I see a lot of foreign-born women who get depression after they have a baby. I also know from the public health nurses that they see them in the community and they’re not willing to come and seek services.”
The study looked at four groups of women, including 65 refugees, 94 non-refugee immigrants, 109 asylum seekers and 73 Canadian-born women.
Stewart said both the women and the health-care providers who see them were interviewed.
“We find from the women that there’s the stigma of depression, that they’re frightened word will get around that they’re not good mothers, that their babies might be taken into care. We hear from the health-care providers that they’re not quite sure what the customs are for these groups, sometimes the language is an impediment, and sometimes they feel that the families don’t want these women to seek care.”
Stewart said the high incidence of postpartum is largely due to the lack of social support for newly arrived women. “Their parents are often in their country of origin, their families are back in their country of origin and they may not have had time to make friends here yet. So I think they’re very isolated. And I think they often don’t know about social services that might be out there, how to meet other moms with young babies, and they also don’t know how to access health services very well.”
Stewart said many people — pediatricians, doctors, nurses and social workers — see these women, but their focus is often on the baby.
“They also need to maintain a focus on the woman and how she’s coping.”
She said immigrant social services staff also need to become better educated, and more aware that new, immigrant moms have a greater risk of postpartum depression. Professionals should also know about services available for this cohort of women.
“In many countries, depression isn’t talked about. So if you have someone coming from one of the far eastern countries, for example, where depression isn’t talked about very much and where it’s highly stigmatized, the service providers from that background may also not think to ask about it,” Stewart said.
“We know that babies of depressed moms don’t do as well as babies of non-depressed moms. They’re more likely to have health problems, they’re less likely to be adequately fed, they’re less likely to get complete immunization, the socialization between mom and baby aren’t as good as they are for other moms, so there are all sorts of reasons why one would want to fix this.”
SOURCE : The Calgary Herald 2008