Prioritizing Maternal Mental Health in Addressing Morbidity and Mortality

Author:

Wisner Katherine L.1,Murphy Caitlin2,Thomas Megan M.3

Affiliation:

1. Developing Brain Institute, Children’s National Hospital, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC

2. Department of Health Policy and Management, Milken Institute of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC

3. Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Kansas School of Medicine, Kansas City

Abstract

ImportanceThe rate of maternal mortality in the United States is 2-fold to 3-fold greater than that in other high-income countries. While many national initiatives have been developed to combat maternal mortality, these efforts often fail to include mental illness.ObjectiveTo highlight the underrecognized contribution of mental illness to maternal mortality, which is nearly double that of postpartum hemorrhage.Evidence ReviewA topic outline was developed to include challenges in measuring perinatal mental conditions and mortality rates; contributions of social determinants of health to mental conditions and mortality; perinatal psychiatric disorder characterization; mechanisms by which maternal mental illness increases mortality, specifically, suicide and addictive disorders; access limitations and care “deserts”; prenatal stress and its impact on reproductive outcomes; increasing clinician expertise through cross-disciplinary education; intervention sites and models; and asserting that mental health is fundamental to maternal health. Publications in the last 3 years were prioritized, particularly those relating to policy. References were selected through consensus. Sources were PubMed, Ovid, direct data published on government websites, and health policy sources such as the Policy Center for Maternal Mental Health.FindingsPriority was given to recent sources. Citations from 2022-2023 numbered 26; within the last 5 years, 14; and historical references, 15. Recommendations to address each topic area serve as concluding statements for each section. To mitigate the contributions of mental illness to the maternal mortality risk, a coordinated effort is required across professional and governmental organizations.Conclusions and RelevanceConcrete programmatic and policy changes are needed to reduce perinatal stress and address trauma, standardize the collection of social determinant of health data among perinatal patients, increase access to reproductive psychiatry curricula among prescribers, reduce perinatal mental health and obstetrical deserts, institute paid parental leave, and support seamless integration of perinatal and behavioral health care. Moreover, instead of focusing on a relatively minor portion of the contributors to health that current medical practice targets, fortifying the social foundation strengthens the prospects for the health of families for our current and future generations.

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

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