Fernanda Schier De Fraga
Pontifical Catholic University of Paraná, Curitiba Campus, Brazil
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Psychiatry
Statement of the Problem: The diagnosis of mood disorders (MD) during pregnancy is challenging and may bring negative consequences to the maternal-fetal binomial. The long waitlist for specialized psychiatric evaluation in Brazil contributes to the treatment omission. Almost 20.0% of women treated with antidepressants have a positive screening for bipolar disorder. Therefore, it has been recommended the investigation of depressive and bipolar disorder during prenatal care. Unfortunately, the screening for mood disorders is not a reality in Brazil and many childbearing women remain undiagnosed. The objective of this study is to observe the frequency of MD and the effectiveness of screening scales for routine use by health professionals during prenatal care in high-risk pregnancies. Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: This cross-sectional study included 61 childbearing women in their second trimester who were interviewed using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) and the Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ). The cut-off point was EPDS ≥ 13 and MDQ ≥ 7 and the SCID-5 was the gold standard diagnosis. Findings: MD were diagnosed in 24.6% of the high-risk pregnancies. EDPS was positive in 19.7% and the frequency of major depression was 8.2%. 16.4% of the childbearing women were diagnosed with bipolar disorder, while MDQ was positive in 36.1%. 11.5% of the women had EPDS and MDQ positive. EPDS sensitivity was 80.0% and specificity 92.1%, whereas MDQ presented a sensitivity of 70.0% and specificity of 70.6%. Conclusion & Significance: There is a high prevalence of MD in high-risk pregnancies. The routine use of EPDS simultaneously to MDQ during antenatal care is effective and plays an important role in early diagnosis, counselling, and promotion of perinatal mental health.
Physician graduated in 2014 from the Medical School of the Pontifical Catholic University of Paraná (2009/2014). She performed a Medical Residency in Gynecology and Obstetrics at the UNIVERSITY OF PARANA CLINICS HOSPITAL in Curitiba (2015/2018). Master's degree started at the Department of Tocogynecology at UFPR in 2018, with research in the area of â??â??Mood Disorders in Pregnancy and Postpartum. She works in consultancy with a focus on women's health, serving as areas of General Gynecology (adolescents, adults, elderly and LGBTQ + populations), Obstetrics (habitual and high risk) and mental health (woman and perinatal). Teacher of the department of Gynecology at UFPR (2019-) and vice-coordinator of the discipline of sexual transmitted infections.