2013
DOI: 10.1089/jwh.2012.4121
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Is Screening for Depression in the Perinatal Period Enough? The Co-Occurrence of Depression, Substance Abuse, and Intimate Partner Violence in Culturally Diverse Pregnant Women

Abstract: Background: The perinatal period provides unique opportunities to identify and intervene with the co-occurrence of perinatal depression, intimate partner violence (IPV), and substance use problems. Psychosocial screening recommended for women seen in maternal child health settings tends to target single rather than multiple risk factors; there is limited research examining the co-occurrence of these issues especially in racially and ethnically diverse women across the perinatal period. These analyses explore t… Show more

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Cited by 97 publications
(109 citation statements)
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“…Finally, nearly 80% of those studies examining the association between IPV and sexually transmitted infections or urinary tract infections found an association. 32 Maternal mental health IPV during pregnancy is associated with depression, both during pregnancy 19,33,34 and in the postpartum period. [35][36][37] Indeed, women experiencing abuse during pregnancy are 2.5 times more likely to report depressive symptomatology than their nonabused counterparts.…”
Section: Health Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, nearly 80% of those studies examining the association between IPV and sexually transmitted infections or urinary tract infections found an association. 32 Maternal mental health IPV during pregnancy is associated with depression, both during pregnancy 19,33,34 and in the postpartum period. [35][36][37] Indeed, women experiencing abuse during pregnancy are 2.5 times more likely to report depressive symptomatology than their nonabused counterparts.…”
Section: Health Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Currently, opioid use in pregnancy is a growing health problem. 43,44 Women who use heroin intravenously face additional complications that include overdosing, contracting sexually transmitted and other infectious diseases, and living in potentially lethal, explosive, and 4 Not only are these pregnant women at risk physically but also they are at risk mentally due to stress and anxiety. An additional risk for pregnant women who use opioids is the concomitant use of other drugs (polysubstance use), such as alcohol, benzodiazepines, amphetamines, and cocaine, which are potentially teratogenic.…”
Section: Substance Use and Pregnancymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…44 The researchers identified a range of comorbid problems including depressive symptoms, IPV, and substance use. 44 In a largely Latina sample, they discovered that ∼20% screened positive for depressive symptoms and more than 30% reported psychosocial issues during the pregnancy period. Similar to the clinic established by Nguyen et al, 2 the range of support and targeted treatment provided an unexpected outcome-social support.…”
Section: Integration Of Servicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In particular, substance abuse by the male partner elevates risk considerably (Klostermann, Kelley, Mignone, Pusateri, & Fals-Stewart, 2010). Additionally, safety concerns are raised if she (Connelly, Hazen, Baker-Ericzén, Landsverk, & Horwitz, 2013) or both (Smith, 2013) are abusing substances. The effects are noted in the increased likelihood (Curadi, 2009) and severity (Kraanen et al, 2013a) of abuse under those circumstances.…”
Section: Substance Abusementioning
confidence: 99%