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PEDIATRICS Vol. 113 No. 3 March 2004, pp. 551-558

Detection of Postpartum Depressive Symptoms by Screening at Well-Child Visits

Linda H. Chaudron, MD, MS*, Peter G. Szilagyi, MD, MPH{ddagger}, Harriet J. Kitzman, PhD, RN§, Holly I.M. Wadkins, BA* and Yeates Conwell, MD*

* Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York
{ddagger} Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine and the Strong Children’s Research Center, Rochester, New York
§ University of Rochester School of Nursing, Rochester, New York

Objective. To assess 1) the feasibility of universal postpartum depression screening during well-child visits in the first year of life, 2) the prevalence of postpartum depressive symptoms among mothers who attend first-year well-child visits, 3) detection of postpartum depressive symptoms in a pediatric clinic before and after universal screening at each first-year well-child visit, and 4) social work referrals before and after universal screening.

Methods. The practice instituted universal screening for postpartum depressive symptoms during first-year well-child visits using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS). We randomly selected 110 infant medical records before (cohort 1) and 110 after (cohort 2) screening was initiated. Measures included demographics, notation of depression or depressive symptoms in the well-child visit note, and referral for depression. EPDS scores were collected for cohort 2 only. Before-after comparisons were made for detection of depression or depressive symptoms and mental health referrals.

Results. The EPDS was included in the medical record in 46% of well-child visits. Eighty-eight percent of these forms were completed. Twenty-one percent of completed EPDS forms had scores ≥10, and 27% of women who completed the EPDS had scores ≥10 sometime during the postpartum year. There was a significant increase in documentation of depressive symptoms with the EPDS after initiation of universal screening (1.6% of visits [cohort 1] vs 8.5% [cohort 2]). Social work referrals for mental health reasons increased significantly (0.2% of visits [cohort 1] to 3.6% [cohort 2]).

Conclusions. Women with high levels of postpartum depressive symptoms are common in an urban population and can be detected at well-child visits throughout the first postpartum year by pediatricians using a standardized screening tool. Because screening for depression during well-child visits is feasible using a standardized screening instrument, pediatricians can play an active role in early detection and referral for postpartum depression.


Key Words: postpartum depression • maternal depression • screening • detection

Abbreviations: EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale • SD, standard deviation


Received for publication Apr 11, 2003; Accepted Aug 28, 2003.




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