Videos

4 experts in this video

Panelists discuss how effective screening goes beyond formal tools like the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale to include genuine patient connection, direct questioning about emotional well-being, and clinical observation, while emphasizing the important role pediatricians can play in identifying maternal mental health concerns during frequent baby visits.

4 experts in this video

Panelists discuss how reproductive psychiatry is an evolving subspecialty that requires collaboration between obstetricians, primary care providers, and psychiatrists, with clear guidelines for when to refer patients (such as those with bipolar history, psychosis, or treatment resistance) while building capacity for basic screening and treatment in obstetric settings.

4 experts in this video

Panelists discuss how certain patients require closer monitoring, including those with previous mental health histories, recent losses, childhood trauma, or abrupt medication cessation, while emphasizing the importance of continuing necessary psychiatric medications during pregnancy and lactation through proper risk-benefit discussions.

4 experts in this video

Panelists discuss how perinatal mood and anxiety disorders can occur throughout pregnancy and postpartum periods, with symptoms varying based on timing and requiring differentiation from other conditions like obsessive-compulsive disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and panic disorder through careful assessment of presenting symptoms.

A panelist emphasizes that the OASIS 4 findings, with those of prior OASIS studies, strongly support the use of this drug class for managing vasomotor symptoms (VMS) in patients with breast cancer receiving endocrine therapy and highlights the need for future research in underserved populations such as men with breast cancer and those with metastatic disease.

A panelist explains that although liver function was closely monitored due to potential concerns about the investigational therapy and concurrent endocrine treatments, no serious hepatotoxicity was observed during the trial. However, continued monitoring in longer-term and real-world settings remains important to confirm the treatment’s liver safety profile.