Noonan Maria, Doody Owen, Jomeen Julie, O'Regan Andrew, Galvin Rose
Department of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Education & Health Sciences Health Sciences Building, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland.
Faculty of Health and Social Care, University of Hull, Hull, UK.
BMC Fam Pract. 2018 Sep 8;19(1):154. doi: 10.1186/s12875-018-0843-1.
Responding to and caring for women who experience mental health problems during the perinatal period, from pregnancy up to one year after birth, is complex and requires a multidisciplinary response. Family physicians are ideally placed to provide an effective response as it is recognised that they are responsible for organising care and supports for women and their families. This paper reports an integrative review undertaken to examine family physicians' perceived role in perinatal mental health care and concludes with recommendations for health policy, research and practice.
A systematic search of literature in seven databases from January 2000 to March 2016 identified a total of 1125 articles. Qualitative, quantitative and mixed-method studies were eligible for inclusion if they explored family physicians' experiences of caring for women who experience perinatal mental health problems.
Thirteen articles reporting 11 studies met the inclusion criteria for this review and quality of included studies were assessed using published criteria for the critical appraisal of qualitative and quantitative research methods. Cross-study narrative syntheses of quantitative and qualitative findings are presented under three themes: identification of perinatal mental health problems, management of perinatal mental health problems and barriers to care provision. While family physicians recognise their role in relation to perinatal mental health the collective interpretation revealed that; they receive variable levels of preparation for this role, no consistent approach to screening exists, pharmacological management of mood disorders is the main treatment modality and limited access to specialist perinatal mental health services exists which impacts on pharmacology decisions.
Family physicians require timely access to local integrated care pathways that provide a wide range of services that are culturally sensitive, perinatal mental health specific, support psychological well-being and infant/family mental health. Family physicians are open to incorporating a brief validated screening tool into primary practice supported by succinct guidelines. Research that examines training needs in relation to perinatal mental health could be used to inform family physician training programmes and curriculum development around perinatal mental health.
应对和照顾围产期(从怀孕到产后一年)出现心理健康问题的女性是一项复杂的工作,需要多学科协作。家庭医生处于理想位置来提供有效的应对措施,因为人们认识到他们负责为女性及其家庭组织护理和支持。本文报告了一项综合综述,旨在研究家庭医生在围产期心理健康护理中所感知到的角色,并最后提出了针对卫生政策、研究和实践的建议。
对2000年1月至2016年3月期间七个数据库中的文献进行系统检索,共识别出1125篇文章。如果定性、定量和混合方法研究探讨了家庭医生照顾有围产期心理健康问题女性的经历,则符合纳入标准。
13篇报告11项研究的文章符合本综述的纳入标准,并使用已发表的定性和定量研究方法批判性评价标准对纳入研究的质量进行了评估。定量和定性研究结果的跨研究叙述性综合在三个主题下呈现:围产期心理健康问题的识别、围产期心理健康问题的管理以及护理提供的障碍。虽然家庭医生认识到他们在围产期心理健康方面的作用,但综合分析表明;他们为这一角色接受的准备程度各不相同,不存在一致的筛查方法,情绪障碍的药物管理是主要治疗方式,并且获得围产期心理健康专科服务的机会有限,这影响了药物治疗决策。
家庭医生需要及时获得当地的综合护理路径,这些路径应提供广泛的、具有文化敏感性、针对围产期心理健康、支持心理健康以及婴儿/家庭心理健康的服务。家庭医生愿意在简洁指南的支持下,将经过验证的简短筛查工具纳入初级医疗实践。研究围产期心理健康方面的培训需求,可用于为家庭医生培训计划和围绕围产期心理健康的课程开发提供参考。