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Building Better Mothers

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Clinical Leader, Reproductive Mental Health Service ... Down Came The Rain: Brooke Shields. Shouldn't I Be Happy: Shaila Misri MD ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building Better Mothers


1
Building Better Mothers ?
  • Resilience in Postpartum Depression

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Joanne MacDonald MD FRCPC
  • Clinical Leader, Reproductive Mental Health
    Service
  • Assistant Professor, Dalhousie University
    Department of Psychiatry
  • IWK Health Centre
  • 5850/5980 University Avenue
  • PO Box 9700, Halifax
  • Nova Scotia B3K 6R8
  • (902) 470-8098 Fax (902) 470-6760
  • joanne.macdonald_at_iwk.nshealth.ca

4
Motherhood
5
Motherhood
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Good Mother/Bad Mother
  • Strong societal/cultural/familial expectations
  • Limited community development of parents/families
  • Demands of workplace vs family
  • Assumes knowledge of loving, family, attachment,
    nurturing
  • We dont all start from the same place

7
Joan Rivers
  • Im going to sue my obstetrician. He was so
    dumb he forgot to cut the cord and for a year
    that kid followed me everywhere.

8
Martin Mull
  • Having children is like having a bowling alley
    installed in your head!

9
Anne Roiphe
  • Now that my children no longer wake me in the
    middle of the night, hungry or wet, with bad
    dream, I should, returned to myself, sleep
    soundly. But I dont. They are adults and still
    I am not myself. I remain a mother linked or
    is it chained by a thousand thoughts to her
    children.

10
Dimensions of Depression in Mothers
  • Nearly 50 pregnancies unplanned
  • 1 in 10 pregnant women will experience Major
    Depression
  • 60-70 have no prior history
  • 1 in 5 postpartum women will experience
    Depression or Anxiety Disorder
  • 1 in 1000 develop Postpartum Psychosis

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Symptoms
  • Low energy
  • Disturbed sleep
  • Altered appetite
  • Poor motivation
  • Crying
  • Worrisome thinking
  • Difficulty concentrating
  • This is pregnancy/coping with a newborn, right?

13
What to Watch For
  • Those symptoms becoming persistent, progressing,
    severe
  • Loss of sense of connectedness to loved ones,
    activities, interests
  • Intrusive, alarming fears or ideas of harm coming
    to loved ones
  • New or increased degree of obsessionality/compulsi
    veness

14
What to Watch For
  • Significant atypical social withdrawal
  • Loss of functional capacity
  • Thoughts or expressions of loss of control
  • Everyone would be better off without me around
    here

15
Dimensions of Assessment
  • Thorough general Mental Health Assessment - FD,
    Mental Health Clinic
  • Past History of Mood Disturbance
  • Past Gynecologic History, incl Menstrual Cycle
    mood sensitivity
  • Family History of Mood Disorder, PPD, severe PMS
  • Current Stressors/Triggers

16
Dimensions of Assessment
  • Available real supports
  • Open exploration of expectations/readiness for
    parenting
  • Marital/relationship dynamic
  • Past trauma/losses reactivated
  • Obstetrical history and trauma experience

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Dimensions of Assessment
  • Knowledge base/resources
  • Daily routine
  • Schedule and characteristics of baby/other
    children
  • Sense of safety/capacity/hope for improvement
  • Sense of herself as mother/risk analysis

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Approach to Treatment
  • Mothering and Family as a Work in Progress
  • Endorsement of Well Mother critical to Well Baby
  • Engagement of Extended Family/Friends
  • Pivotal Point in Personal Development

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Approach to Treatment
  • Genuinely Holistic/Multimodal
  • Biological General Health Mood Disorder Dx
    role of Psychotropic Medications Safety Analysis

21
Approach to Treatment
  • Psychological The Story of This Woman, This
    Family Not Pass/Fail Identifying Strengths
    Vulnerabilities

22
Approach to Treatment
  • Social Changing Roles Loss of
    Identity/Autonomy Differing Needs for Support

23
Our Treatment Team
  • Dr. Joanne MacDonald, Dr. Mary-Ann Hudec, Dr.
    Shannon MacDonald, Dr. Normand Carrey
  • Deborah Salyzyn, MN, Clinical Nursing Specialist
    in Mental Health
  • Faye Morrison, RN, Intake Nurse
  • Nena Nauss Coleen Flynn, MSW/Therapist
    Clinicians
  • Kim Bernard, MSW, Addictions Services
  • Residents in Psychiatry and Obstetrics, senior
    Medical Students
  • Angela Thibault, Admin Assistant

24
Our Partners
  • Woman and her Supports
  • Family Physicians
  • Obstetrician/Gynecologists
  • Obstetrical and Family Nursing
  • Public Health Nursing and Enhanced Home Visitors
  • Family Resource Centres
  • Child Protection Services
  • Addictions Services
  • Parent Volunteer/Support/Education Agencies
  • MISA
  • Community Mental Health Services
  • At Risk Youth/ Transition Shelters Agencies

25
Treatment Components
  • Ongoing mental health care, followup,
    reassessment
  • Medications incl antidepressants, sleep
    medicines, antipsychotics, anxiolytics
  • Risk/benefit analysis individualized
  • Sleep cycle interventions

26
Treatment Components
  • Enhanced self-care nutrition, supplementation,
    fluids, moderate exercise
  • Respite
  • Combined Addiction/Mental Health Treatment
  • Psychotherapies incl CognitiveBehavioral,
    Interpersonal, Emotional Regulation, Attachment
    Development, Marital

27
Treatment Components
  • Increase social connectedness
  • Parenting support and education
  • Skill development return to education, new
    activities, work roles
  • Adjunct Modalities eg Massage Therapy,
    Mindfulness Training, Acupuncture, Physical
    Relaxation Strategies

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Mothers and Child Development
  • Attachment to primary caregiver creates base for
    secure sense of self, emotional regulation,
    learning, connection to others
  • Disturbances of Attachment linked to personality
    development, learning, behavioral control,
    self-worth, respect of others, capacity to
    self-regulate, tolerate limits

30
Developing a Secure Base
31
A. Slade, Yale Child Study Group
  • The time between a womans discovery she is
    pregnant and the babys first smile is one of
    great crisis and opportunity . . .most important,
    it is the beginning of life for the baby, the
    beginning of a long complex journey, whose
    contours are established during the first months
    and years in the world.

32
Every Woman Has a Story
  • Understand story of this pregnancy, this baby
  • Challenge myths of motherhood, culture of
    perfectionism
  • Identify basic needs for baby as mirroring basic
    needs for mother takes time to establish rhythm
    and language with one another
  • Crisis of opportunity to take time to take
    stock to look at whole self to embrace notion
    of recovery

33
How would you weather a storm?
34
The Story
  • Every life transition creates likelihood to
    stumble and to move forward
  • Spectrum from health to illness
  • Imagine your best friend
  • Importance of presence/intimacy in our lives
    generally
  • Metaphors for life?

35
Parenting as Harness Racing
36
Parenting as Surfing
37
Maya Angelou, in Mother A Cradle to Hold Me
  • It is true
  • I was created in you.
  • It is also true
  • That you were created for me.
  • I owned your voice.
  • It was shaped and tuned to soothe me.
  • The scent of your body was the air
  • Perfumed for me to breathe
  • Mother,
  • During those early, dearest days
  • I did not dream that you had
  • A large life which included me,
  • For I had a life
  • Which was only you.

38
Motherhood as Empowering Experience
  • Baby On Board!
  • New, Intensely Held Views, Priorities, Likes,
    Dislikes, Focus
  • Consolidation of Picture of the Self
  • Integration vs. Competition Roles
  • Like Mother, Like Father Parallel challenges and
    opportunities
  • Most couples intend to be successful

39
Build Capacity in the Couple
40
Postpartum Depression as Experience of Resilience
  • Success as a person/mother equals success in
    recovery
  • Elements of awareness of self and others,
    action/intervention, tolerance, balance,
    self-care, realistic expectations, attunement to
    emotions, reciprocity with others, courage to
    try, belief in future

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Resources
  • This Isnt What I Expected Valerie Raskin MD
  • Meditations for New Mothers Beth Wilson Saavedra
  • Down Came The Rain Brooke Shields
  • Shouldnt I Be Happy Shaila Misri MD
  • Becoming the Parent You Want to Be Laura Davis
    Janis Keyser
  • The Mother of All (Pregnancy/Baby/Toddler) Books
    Ann Douglas

44
Resources
  • www.womensmentalhealth.org
  • www.postpartum.net
  • www.bcrmh.com
  • www.motherisk.com
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