Have access already?

Get access to this article:

Or get access to the particular issue:

Or get access to the entire journal:

Advertisement

Abstract

The onset of depressive symptoms during pregnancy or the first year postpartum, termed perinatal depression, occurs in approximately 15 percent of women. Perinatal depression can have a significant negative impact on health outcomes for the mother and her infant including maternal emotional distress and parenting difficulties and infant behavioral and developmental problems. Nurses caring for patients in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) are in a key position to affect positive change in the lives of families affected by perinatal depression. An overview of antepartum and postpartum depression is provided that has been tailored to the educational needs of the neonatal nurse. A discussion of the role of neonatal nurses in the identification and treatment of perinatal depression follows in order that neonatal nurses may improve both short- and long-term outcomes for mothers, infants, and families in the NICU affected by perinatal depression.

Article usage
Article Usage
Period Abstract Full PDF Total
Jan 2022 34 1 1 36
Dec 2021 27 0 0 27
Nov 2021 49 0 0 49
Oct 2021 38 4 2 44
Sep 2021 35 2 1 38
Aug 2021 35 0 1 36
Jul 2021 21 1 2 24
Jun 2021 30 1 0 31
May 2021 49 0 0 49
Apr 2021 41 0 0 41
Mar 2021 43 1 0 44
Feb 2021 62 1 0 63
Jan 2021 34 2 2 38
Dec 2020 31 0 0 31
Nov 2020 42 1 0 43
Oct 2020 58 9 2 69
Sep 2020 89 0 0 89
Aug 2020 63 0 0 63
Jul 2020 43 2 1 46
Jun 2020 31 1 0 32
May 2020 60 0 0 60
Apr 2020 50 3 1 54
Mar 2020 65 4 4 73
Feb 2020 49 0 0 49
Jan 2020 61 0 0 61
Dec 2019 42 1 1 44
Nov 2019 47 3 3 53
Oct 2019 61 2 1 64
Sep 2019 31 3 3 37
Aug 2019 21 0 2 23
Jul 2019 16 0 1 17
Jun 2019 18 0 1 19
May 2019 36 0 0 36
Apr 2019 52 0 0 52
Mar 2019 45 0 0 45
Feb 2019 41 2 2 45
Jan 2019 25 0 0 25
Dec 2018 2 1 0 3
Nov 2018 24 1 0 25
Oct 2018 14 7 4 25
Sep 2018 27 0 1 28
Aug 2018 10 0 0 10
Jul 2018 12 0 0 12
Jun 2018 2 1 1 4