Panelists discuss how untreated perinatal mood disorders create cascading effects that impact breastfeeding, partner relationships, and child development, and can lead to adverse childhood experiences with long-term consequences for both mothers and children across generations.
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This segment explores the far-reaching consequences of untreated perinatal mood and anxiety disorders on both immediate and long-term outcomes for mothers, infants, and families. During pregnancy, untreated mental health conditions increase risks for low birth weight, small-for-gestational-age infants, intrauterine growth restriction, and NICU admissions. In the postpartum period, these conditions significantly impact breastfeeding success, maternal-infant bonding, and partner relationships, creating a cascade of challenges that affect the entire family system.
The long-term implications are particularly concerning, as having a mother with untreated perinatal mental health disorders is considered an adverse childhood experience. This exposure increases children’s risk for developing chronic health conditions and their own mental health disorders later in life. The panel describes this as a “household Tasmanian devil” that circulates through generations, causing global social, emotional, and developmental delays that become apparent when children reach school age.
Partners are also significantly affected, with approximately 1 in 10 partners experiencing mood disorders when living with someone who has a perinatal mood disorder. The greatest risk factor for partner mental health issues is having a birthing parent who is also struggling. This highlights the importance of treating the family unit rather than just the individual, with recommendations for postpartum planning that includes both parents, focuses on sleep hygiene, physical activity, community support, and teaches couples to work together rather than against each other during this vulnerable period.
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