Abstract

Background: Postpartum depression (PPD) has been recognized as a severe public health problem worldwide due to its high incidence and the detrimental consequences not only for the mother but for the infant and the family. However, the pattern of natural transition trajectories of PPD has rarely been explored. Methods: In this research, a quantitative longitudinal study was conducted to explore the PPD progression process, providing information on the transition probability, hazard ratio, and the mean sojourn time in the three postnatal mental states, namely normal state, mild PPD, and severe PPD. The multi-state Markov model was built based on 912 depression status assessments in 304 Chinese primiparous women over multiple time points of six weeks postpartum, three months postpartum, and six months postpartum. Results: Among the 608 PPD status transitions from one visit to the next visit, 6.2% (38/608) showed deterioration of mental status from the level at the previous visit; while 40.0% (243/608) showed improvement at the next visit. A subject in normal state who does transition then has a probability of 49.8% of worsening to mild PPD, and 50.2% to severe PPD. A subject with mild PPD who does transition has a 20.0% chance of worsening to severe PPD. A subject with severe PPD is more likely to improve to mild PPD than developing to the normal state. On average, the sojourn time in the normal state, mild PPD, and severe PPD was 64.12, 6.29, and 9.37 weeks, respectively. Women in normal state had 6.0%, 8.5%, 8.7%, and 8.8% chances of progress to severe PPD within three months, nine months, one year, and three years, respectively. Increased all kinds of supports were associated with decreased risk of deterioration from normal state to severe PPD (hazard ratio, HR: 0.42–0.65); and increased informational supports, evaluation of support, and maternal age were associated with alleviation from severe PPD to normal state (HR: 1.46–2.27). Conclusions: The PPD state transition probabilities caused more attention and awareness about the regular PPD screening for postnatal women and the timely intervention for women with mild or severe PPD. The preventive actions on PPD should be conducted at the early stages, and three yearly; at least one yearly screening is strongly recommended. Emotional support, material support, informational support, and evaluation of support had significant positive associations with the prevention of PPD progression transitions. The derived transition probabilities and sojourn time can serve as an importance reference for health professionals to make proactive plans and target interventions for PPD.

Highlights

  • Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Postpartum depression (PPD) is defined as a non-psychotic depressive episode beginning in or extending to the postpartum period [1]

  • Thereby, a multi-state Markov model was used in this research to explore the PPD progression process, providing information on the transition probability, hazard ratio, and the mean sojourn time in each state to fill the research gap

  • There were 33 occurrences where participants remained in mild PPD and 19 cases where participants progressed from mild PPD to severe PPD at the following visit

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Summary

Introduction

In addition to its high incidence, PPD can lead to several detrimental consequences in the longer terms for the mother, but for the infant and the family as a whole [12]. From the perspective of risk factor discovery, regression and structural equation analysis have been widely used in PPD studies to explore the factors [3,15,16,28]. The pattern of nature progressive trajectories of PPD from normal status has been poorly explored. Thereby, a multi-state Markov model was used in this research to explore the PPD progression process, providing information on the transition probability, hazard ratio, and the mean sojourn time in each state to fill the research gap

Study Design and Participants
Data Collection Procedure
Data Analysis
Participants
Observed Numbers of PPD Status Transitions from One Visit to the Next Visit
PPD State Transition Probabilities
Model-Estimated Transition Probabilities over a Given Follow-Up Interval
Discussion
Conclusions

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