Litcius/Paper detail

Racial-Ethnic Differences in Treatment Initiation for New Diagnoses of Perinatal Depression

Lyndsay A. Avalos, Nerissa Nance, Esti Iturralde, Sylvia E. Badon, Charles P. Quesenberry, Stacy Sterling, De‐Kun Li, Tracy Flanagan

2022Psychiatric Services17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The adverse consequences of untreated perinatal depression highlight the need to identify populations to target in order to increase treatment rates. The authors sought to evaluate treatment initiation for a new diagnosis of depression during pregnancy or postpartum and to describe racial-ethnic differences in initiation and type (psychotherapy, antidepressants) of treatment in a large health care system with universal perinatal depression screening. METHODS: codes from electronic health records. Treatment initiation was defined as receiving at least one antidepressant medication dispensation or psychotherapy visit up to 90 days after the diagnosis. Modified Poisson regression was used to estimate the risk for initiating treatment and the type of treatment initiated. RESULTS: In total, 13,637 women with a new depression diagnosis (prenatal: N=7,041, 51.6%; postpartum: N=6,596, 48.4%) were identified. Of the pregnant women, 31.4% initiated treatment, and of the postpartum women, 73.1% initiated treatment. Latina and Asian women were less likely than White women to initiate treatment postpartum. During pregnancy and postpartum, non-White women were more likely to initiate psychotherapy. White women were more likely to initiate antidepressant medication during pregnancy and postpartum or a combination of antidepressant medication and psychotherapy during the postpartum period. CONCLUSIONS: Research is warranted to identify patient-, provider-, and system-level barriers that contribute to racial-ethnic disparities in perinatal mental health care.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePregnancyDepression (economics)Postpartum depressionPoisson regressionAntidepressantRetrospective cohort studyPostpartum periodPsychiatryObstetricsPopulationInternal medicineEconomicsGeneticsBiologyAnxietyEnvironmental healthMacroeconomicsMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and PostpartumTreatment of Major DepressionMental Health Treatment and Access