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Implications for practice and research
▪ Public health nurses (PHNs) can play a significant role in identifying and treating postpartum depression.
▪ The results obtained in this demonstration project suggest the need for a larger, randomised controlled trial.
Context
This study focuses on postpartum depression, a problem that has lasting negative effects on children of affected mothers.1 The authors note that in Norway, postpartum mental health is inadequately addressed, thus postpartum depression is underidentified as well as undertreated. To improve the postpartum care provided by PHNs, the authors describe a programme in which standard care is reshaped to include a mental health perspective.
Methods
This study compares the frequency and severity of depressive symptoms and parenting stress among postpartum women in two convenience samples: (1) a municipality implementing standard PHN postpartum care (about 650 annual births) and (2) a municipality implementing an enhanced postpartum care model that emphasised mental health (about 1500 annual births).
Standard PHN care in Norway includes one home visit and …
Footnotes
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Competing interests None.