Health
Study Finds Sharp Rise in Depression and Psychosis Risk After Childbirth
Women face a significantly higher risk of developing serious mental health conditions in the weeks following childbirth, according to a major new study published in Molecular Psychiatry. The research highlights the critical importance of monitoring maternal mental health in the postpartum period.
The study, which examined data from nearly 1.8 million births in Sweden between 2003 and 2019, found that the risk of depression rises by about 20 percent in the five to 15 weeks after childbirth compared to the year before pregnancy. Even more striking, the risk of psychosis is six to seven times higher in the first five weeks postpartum and remains double the pre-pregnancy level through week 20.
Researchers stressed that postpartum psychosis, unlike the temporary “baby blues” many women experience, is a severe mental health condition requiring urgent treatment. Symptoms can include delusions, hallucinations, mania, low mood, and confusion. However, with proper medical care, recovery is possible. “The drastic peak observed postpartum clearly highlights the vulnerability of new mothers,” the authors wrote.
The analysis also showed that diagnoses of depression and psychosis rise most sharply after delivery, while conditions such as anxiety, stress-related disorders, and substance abuse decline during and after pregnancy. Researchers suggested this trend may reflect biological and lifestyle changes, as well as closer medical supervision during pregnancy.
Women typically have more frequent contact with healthcare providers while pregnant, which can lead to earlier detection and intervention. “We don’t see that more people are being diagnosed, but screening could mean that women are identified earlier and don’t have to suffer as long before they can get the support and help they need,” said Emma Bränn, a researcher at Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet and one of the study’s authors.
Globally, the World Health Organization estimates that around 10 percent of pregnant women and 13 percent of women after childbirth suffer from a mental disorder, most often depression. The Swedish findings add to growing evidence that the postpartum period is a time of heightened vulnerability, particularly for severe conditions like psychosis.
Despite these risks, another recent study from the Karolinska Institutet found that suicide attempts among new parents in Sweden decline in the weeks after childbirth. Mothers, in particular, were less likely to attempt suicide during or after pregnancy compared to fathers—a finding that stands in contrast to broader population trends, where women are more likely than men to attempt suicide.
Experts say the research underscores the need for targeted mental health support for women after childbirth. While pregnancy itself may provide some protective factors, the weeks following delivery remain a period of elevated risk requiring careful attention from families, healthcare systems, and policymakers.
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