Background: We used population-based data to determine the public's views of prenatal and postnatal mental health and to identify predictors of those views.Methods: A computer-assisted telephone survey was conducted by the Population Health Laboratory (University of Alberta) with a random sample of participants from the province of Alberta, Canada. Respondents were eligible to participate if they were: 1) ≥18 years; and 2) contacted by direct dialing. Questions were drawn from the Perinatal Depression Monitor, an Australian population-based survey on perinatal mental health; additional questions were developed and tested to reflect the Canadian context. Descriptive and multivariable regression analyses were conducted.Results: Among the 1207 respondents, 74.7% had post-secondary education, 16.3% were in childbearing years, and over half (57.4%) reported knowing a woman who had experienced postpartum depression. Significantly more respondents had high levels of knowledge of postnatal (87.4%) than prenatal (70.5%) mental health (p
CITATION STYLE
Kingston, D. E., Mcdonald, S., Austin, M. P., Hegadoren, K., Lasiuk, G., & Tough, S. (2014). The Public’s views of mental health in pregnant and postpartum women: A population-based study. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-14-84
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