Abstract

Postnatal depression is linked with adverse outcomes for mothers, offspring, and her entire family, which stands as a significant public health problem and is often taken as a neglected issue of maternal and child health in the developing world. Postnatal depression is often falsely interpreted as common consequences related to the recent delivery. The main objective of this study is to find out the status of postnatal depression and the factors associated with it among the postnatal mothers attending at Bharatpur Hospital. Methodology. A total of 242 postnatal women were included in a hospital-based cross-sectional descriptive study. A systematic random sampling technique was done to get the sampling interval. Face to face interview technique was used for data collection, and depressive symptoms were measured by the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale. Data was entered in Epi-Data and imported to SPSS for analysis. The data were summarized in terms of frequency (percentage), mean (SD), or median (IQR) as per necessity for descriptive analysis. The chi-square test and binary logistic regression were performed to find out the association between the covariates and depression status, assuming significance at p value <0.05. Results. The study revealed that the prevalence of postnatal depression was 16.9% by EPDS at cutoff point ≥12. It was found that postnatal depression was associated with current age, smoking, pressure to conceive a child, intent of pregnancy, and delivery-related complications. Conclusion. Postnatal depression within six months of delivery was found among nearly one-fifth of women, where 13.6% also had suicidal thoughts. More than half of the postnatal women had an early marriage. It is recommended that mothers with high risk should be routinely screened for postnatal depression followed by necessary interventions as well as safe motherhood counseling.

Highlights

  • Mental health problems are the crucial public health issues for women of reproductive age in both high- and low middle-income countries [1]

  • The main aim of this research is to study factors associated with postnatal depression among postnatal mothers attending at Bharatpur Hospital, Chitwan

  • A hospital-based crosssectional study was conducted from August to September 2019 among postnatal mothers attending Bharatpur Hospital, Chitwan District, Nepal, which is the second-largest government hospital, providing a range of quality healthcare services since seven decades with a large number of patient flow, even from the neighboring districts [7]

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Summary

Introduction

Mental health problems are the crucial public health issues for women of reproductive age in both high- and low middle-income countries [1]. Childbirth signifies for women a time of great vulnerability to develop poor mental health, with postnatal mood disorders, which is the most common form of maternal morbidity following delivery. The prevalence of postnatal depression is especially high in developing countries, where psychological issues are mostly ignored [2]. Studies conducted at different times in Maternity Hospital, Dhulikhel Hospital, and Teaching Hospital reported the prevalence of PPD among women who delivered to be 30%, 29%, and 22.2%, respectively [1, 5, 6]. The main aim of this research is to study factors associated with postnatal depression among postnatal mothers attending at Bharatpur Hospital, Chitwan

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