Observations placeholder
The role of midwives in facilitating recovery in postpartum psychosis
Identifier
024034
Type of Spiritual Experience
Invisible input - healing
Hallucination
Background
Two per 1000 women is difficult to put into absolute terms as numbers. This paper applies to the USA only and in 2016 ' Number of births: 3,988,076', which means that around 8000 women per year suffer from this in the USA. We have thus put the hallucinations at this figure, in absolute terms over the years it will of course be far more.
A description of the experience
J Midwifery Womens Health. 2010 Sep-Oct;55(5):430-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jmwh.2010.02.011.
The role of midwives in facilitating recovery in postpartum psychosis.
Posmontier B1.
Postpartum psychosis, an emergency psychiatric condition affecting one to two women per 1000 after childbirth, can result in a significant increased risk for suicide and infanticide.
Symptoms of postpartum psychosis, such as mood lability, delusional beliefs, hallucinations, and disorganized thinking, can be frightening for the women who are affected and for families and obstetric care providers of those women.
Women experiencing postpartum psychosis are often thrust into a mental health system that does not capitalize on the close relational bond that forms between midwives and the women they care for over the course of prenatal care.
The purpose of this article is to propose using the Recovery Advisory Group Model of mental illness as a theoretical framework for care of women with postpartum psychosis, to assist midwives in recognizing symptoms, define the role of the midwife in treatment, and learn the importance of becoming part of the psychiatric mental health care team in order to facilitate optimum recovery for women with postpartum psychosis.
(c) 2010 American College of Nurse-Midwives. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PMID: 20732664