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  • Title: Measurement issues in postpartum depression part 1: anxiety as a feature of postpartum depression.
    Author: Ross LE, Gilbert Evans SE, Sellers EM, Romach MK.
    Journal: Arch Womens Ment Health; 2003 Feb; 6(1):51-7. PubMed ID: 12715264.
    Abstract:
    We investigated the contribution of anxiety symptoms to scores on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) between 36 weeks gestation and 16 weeks postpartum in 150 women. The 3-item anxiety subscale of the EPDS accounted for 47% of the total score in late pregnancy, and 38% of the total score in the postpartum period. Two categories of anxiety were common in the perinatal period: subsyndromal, situational anxiety (in particular during the last weeks of pregnancy); and clinically significant comorbid anxiety, which was experienced by nearly 50% of clinically depressed pregnant and postpartum women. The close relationship between anxiety and depression raises questions about whether symptoms of anxiety might be more common in the perinatal period than in other depressions. A strong role for anxiety symptoms in postpartum depression, and implications for its etiology and treatment, are discussed.
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