Abstract

When untreated, postpartum depression (PPD) can severely, negatively affect maternal health, child development, and the wellbeing and functioning of the entire family. Yet, despite screening and treatment programs for PPD, many women who experience depression with onset in the postpartum year do not communicate their symptoms. Negative relational experiences early in life, such as not receiving sensitive help and support when needed, often result in so-called insecure attachment styles, and there is evidence that these may contribute to the development and maintenance of PPD. However, the role of insecure attachment styles in non-help-seeking is unknown for this group. Using mixed quantitative and qualitative methodology, we identified help-seeking barriers of women who experienced depression with onset in the postpartum year but who had not sought help for their depression (N = 37), and explored links to their attachment orientations as assessed through both self-reported attachment style and narrative based attachment script assessment. The sample was non-normative regarding attachment, with an over-representation of avoidant attachment styles. Help-seeking barriers varied systematically with the mother’s adult attachment style. Specifically, convictions of a strong self and lack of trust in healthcare professionals constituted a common barrier among women with avoidant attachment styles, while unrealistic expectations about motherhood constituted a barrier for women with secure attachment styles. This new knowledge on how barriers to communicating symptoms and seeking help when suffering from PPD vary systematically with attachment orientation can help formulate individualized, and therefore more efficient, approaches to addressing non-help-seeking behavior in women who suffer in silence.

Highlights

  • While mild depressive symptoms that typically decline after four weeks postpartum are common among women after giving birth [1], for many women these feelings are not transient [2,3,4]

  • Convictions of a strong self and lack of trust in healthcare professionals constituted a common barrier among women with avoidant attachment styles, while unrealistic expectations about motherhood constituted a barrier for women with secure attachment styles

  • This new knowledge on how barriers to communicating symptoms and seeking help when suffering from postpartum depression (PPD) vary systematically with attachment orientation can help formulate individualized, and more efficient, approaches to addressing non-help-seeking behavior in women who suffer in silence

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Summary

Introduction

While mild depressive symptoms that typically decline after four weeks postpartum are common among women after giving birth [1], for many women these feelings are not transient [2,3,4]. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5 [5]) defines postpartum depression (PPD) as a major depressive disorder (MDD) with onset in the peri-partum, which includes the period during pregnancy and the four weeks following delivery [5]. As it is well-established that women may develop depressive symptoms, and continue to suffer for up to one year postpartum and still remain undiagnosed [6], many researchers and clinicians have argued for, and used, a wider onset specifier (e.g., [7]). PPD is recognized as a worldwide mental health problem negatively affecting maternal health [6], child development [9,10], and family functioning [11,12].

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