Paternal Treatment Barriers Predictability of Preference for Types of Postpartum Depression Treatment

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Paternal Treatment Barriers Predictability of Preference for Types of Postpartum Depression Treatment
المؤلفون: Pooja R. Sohal, Lianne Tomfohr-Madsen, Emily E. Cameron
المصدر: Alberta Academic Review. 2:3
بيانات النشر: University of Alberta Libraries, 2019.
سنة النشر: 2019
مصطلحات موضوعية: Postpartum depression, business.industry, Ethnic group, medicine.disease, Mental health, Preference, Health care, General Earth and Planetary Sciences, Medicine, business, Reference group, Depression (differential diagnoses), General Environmental Science, Multinomial logistic regression, Clinical psychology
الوصف: Background: There is a growing prevalence of paternal postpartum depression (PPD) but many individuals fail to seek treatment due to some form of inconvenience or receiving treatment outside their first choice of treatment. Recent research has shown that identifying specific preferences to types of treatment encourage fathers to continue treatment and improve depression outcome. The objective of this study is to explore treatment barriers of PPD within health care systems to further improve treatment outcomes and to provide more accessible therapy. Method: Fathers of infants aged 0-12 months were recruited from low-risk maternity clinics, baby shows and partner referrals. Participants (N = 140) completed a 20-minute survey upon recruitment. Surveys contained measurements of barriers to treatment and preferences to broad treatment categories for paternal PPD including pharmacotherapy, couple therapy and individual therapy. Correlation analyses and multinomial logistic regression using pharmacotherapy as the reference group was conducted to examine if specific types of barriers could predict types of treatments for depression in fathers. Results: Correlation analyses indicated that three specific barriers were significantly related to treatment preference; specifically, participants’ responses indicated that barriers included that prayer would be enough in helping to treat depression (r = .21, p = .011), the depression would go away once the baby is a little older (r = .18, p = .033), and professional mental health services would not be sensitive to the participants’ race, ethnicity or culture (r = .19, p = .022). One broad category of treatment barriers, Spiritual Barriers, was also significantly related to treatment preference (r = .19, p = .023). Multinomial regression models were significant for the three significant individual barriers (χ2 = 23.01, p = .001) and Spiritual Barriers (χ2 = 16.54, p < .001) in predicting likelihood for treatment preference. Conclusions: The results of the current study indicated that barriers to seek professional therapies included spirituality, beliefs that the depression would remit overtime, and concerns over professionals’ responses to demographic characteristics. Future research should focus on addressing the barriers to treatment to promote mental health treatment for new fathers.
تدمد: 2561-5335
2561-5327
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::4f322985af67ef8675260867ef3f9b86
https://doi.org/10.29173/aar91
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi...........4f322985af67ef8675260867ef3f9b86
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE