Increasing postpartum depression screening in the postpartum period
Date
2023
Authors
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Publisher
Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Nursing
Abstract
Postpartum depression (PPD) affects approximately 15% to 20% of mothers and is the most common obstetric complication and leading cause of maternal mortality, which can be avoided with identification and intervention. The Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles were used throughout a 4-week pre- and post-intervention in a primary practice that provides postpartum care, whose PPD screenings were inconsistent and without a standardized screening tool. Descriptive statistics were used to evaluate post-intervention changes. By providing education to all clinicians, adding the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) into standard provider practice, developing an algorithm for PPD screening and mental health referral, and developing patient education through a maternal wellness packer, the project aimed to enhance PPD screening up to 100% by project completion. When postpartum patients screened positive, the goal was that 100% of these patients were offered a referral to mental health and a maternal wellness packet. The goal of 100% staff education was achieved. Although the limited 4-week timeline allowed for only two postpartum patients, the 100% PPD screening goal was met and both were offered a referral and the maternal wellness packet, of which only one accepted services. Consistent universal PPD screening with standardized screening tools, such as the EDPS and PHQ-9, and process provided by the project's workflow process, increased overall PPD screening rates allowing for early identification and intervention.