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Friday, July 31, 2009

Boot Camp for New Dads Now Working with Renowned Katherine Stone - Educating Fathers about Postpartum Depression

 

In an effort to reach and educate more men about Postpartum Depression (PPD) and what they can do; Boot Camp for New Dads (http://www.bcnd.org), a non-profit orientation program for fathers-to-be, operating in more than 260 hospitals, clinics, schools, fire stations and churches around North America and internationally, is now working with Katherine Stone, a nationally-recognized, award-winning advocate for women with perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, and author of Postpartum Progress.

Irvine, CA (Vocus/PRWEB ) July 31, 2009 -- In an effort to reach and educate more men about Postpartum Depression (PPD) and what they can do; Boot Camp for New Dads (http://www.bcnd.org), a non-profit orientation program for fathers-to-be, operating in more than 260 hospitals, clinics, schools, fire stations and churches around North America and internationally, is now working with Katherine Stone, a nationally-recognized, award-winning advocate for women with perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, and author of Postpartum Progress.

Boot Camp will be working with Stone in the development of a new section on the bcnd.org website that is dedicated to PPD, as well as collaborating with Postpartum Support International on their website.

According to Postpartum Support International, one in eight women suffer from a postpartum mood disorder. New dads (and veteran dads) should know the difference between the Baby Blues and Postpartum Depression (PPD). Oftentimes, these disorders go undiagnosed because a new mother's support system, typically the husband/partner, does not know what to look for and where to go to get help.

Working with more than 200,000 new dads over the past 19 years, Boot Camp for New Dads advises new fathers to watch for signs of PPD in mom and offers tips on how to recognize it.

Boot Camp for New Dads Now Working with Renowned Katherine Stone - Educating Fathers about Postpartum Depression

PSI’s response the Otty Sanchez case

 

Postpartum Support International is aware of the tragic Otty Sanchez infanticide case in San Antonio.  While we are unable to comment on the specifics of this particular case because we don’t have the details,  we would like to respond to some errors we have seen in the media with regard to this case:

· Postpartum depression and postpartum psychosis are very different illnesses and are not interchangeable.  With postpartum psychosis there is a real break from reality, whereas with postpartum depression or anxiety, the woman is in distress but in touch with reality. An informed medical professional can and should assess whether a woman is depressed, anxious, or psychotic.

· When the subject of postpartum depression (PPD) comes up in the media, it is often accompanied by misinformation and erroneously linked to mothers who commit infanticide, abuse or neglect their children.  There is NO direct correlation between infanticide, abuse or neglect and postpartum depression.  Making these incorrect connections only serves to unnecessarily stigmatize women with PPD and make them more afraid to reach out for professional help.  Women with postpartum depression do not harm their children.

· Most women who experience postpartum psychosis do not harm themselves or anyone else. However, there is always the risk of danger because psychosis includes delusional thinking and irrational judgment.   It is, therefore, considered a psychiatric emergency when a woman is suffering symptoms of postpartum psychosis, and she is often committed to a hospital for careful monitoring and treatment.

· Postpartum psychosis always includes delusions, disordered thinking, and sometimes includes auditory or visual hallucinations. In her psychotic state, the delusions and beliefs make sense to her; they feel very meaningful and are often religious. As opposed to non-psychotic religious states, women often mix spiritual beliefs with paranoia and a very personal identification with the divine. Before any psychosis is evident, there are often fluctuating states of mania, depression, and significant detachment. The first symptoms of Postpartum Psychosis might start within the first 3 or 4 months postpartum, but most often symptoms start within the first four weeks postpartum.

· From the few details available, it does not appear that Otty Sanchez was suffering from postpartum depression.  Women with postpartum depression do not suffer from delusions or command hallucinations.

· It must be understood that a woman in a postpartum psychosis might understand the concept of right and wrong according to the law of the land, but at the same time might be hearing commands that she fully believes to arise from a higher and more powerful authority. These delusions are extremely powerful and she may feel compelled to follow instructions as if everything depended on her actions.