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Erschienen in: Archives of Women's Mental Health 3/2009

01.06.2009 | Original Contribution

Obstetric care provider engagement in a perinatal depression screening program

verfasst von: J. Jo Kim, Laura M. La Porte, Marci G. Adams, Trent E. J. Gordon, Jessica M. Kuendig, Richard K. Silver

Erschienen in: Archives of Women's Mental Health | Ausgabe 3/2009

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Abstract

To investigate obstetric care provider attitudes toward perinatal depression screening and factors associated with variable screening rates. Provider attitudes about depression screening were investigated via structured interviews (open-ended and rating scale questions) and analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Most providers (86%) found screening effective at identifying women at risk for perinatal depression (average rating of 8.7 on 10-point analog scale). However, 95% overestimated their own screening rates and 67% inaccurately thought they achieved universal screening. Providers not directly involved in their office-based screening process demonstrated lower average screening rates (37%) than those who maintained active involvement (59%; p = 0.07). Obstetric care providers support perinatal depression screening in the context of a program that assumes responsibility for processing screens, conducts assessments of at-risk women and provides referrals to mental health professionals. Provider participation in screening and tying screening to routine obstetric outpatient activities such as glucose tolerance testing are associated with higher screening rates.
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Metadaten
Titel
Obstetric care provider engagement in a perinatal depression screening program
verfasst von
J. Jo Kim
Laura M. La Porte
Marci G. Adams
Trent E. J. Gordon
Jessica M. Kuendig
Richard K. Silver
Publikationsdatum
01.06.2009
Verlag
Springer Vienna
Erschienen in
Archives of Women's Mental Health / Ausgabe 3/2009
Print ISSN: 1434-1816
Elektronische ISSN: 1435-1102
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00737-009-0057-6

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