When To Call a Doctor
Call911or other emergency
services if you think you cannot keep from harming yourself, your baby,
or another person. You can also call the national suicide hotline, National
Hopeline Network, at 1-800-784-2433 or the National Child Abuse Hotline at
1-800-422-4453.
Call your health professional immediately
if:
- You are not having symptoms of
postpartum depression (listed below), but you have
hallucinations involving smell, touch, hearing, or
sight or have thoughts that may not be based in reality (delusions). Examples of delusions are fears that
someone is watching you, stealing from you, or reading your mind.
- You have severe symptoms of postpartum depression.
- You have any
symptoms of depression and have had depression or
postpartum depression before.
- You have had any symptoms of
depression for longer than 2 weeks. You don't necessarily have all possible
symptoms when you have depression. Call sooner rather than later, before your
condition gets worse.
Symptoms of postpartum depression include:
- Depressed mood—tearfulness, hopelessness, and
feeling empty inside, with or without severe
anxiety.
- Loss of pleasure in either all
or almost all of your daily activities.
- Appetite and weight
change—usually a drop in appetite and weight, but sometimes the
opposite.
- Sleep problems—usually trouble with sleeping, even when
your baby is sleeping.
- Noticeable change in how you walk and
talk—usually restlessness, but sometimes sluggishness.
- Extreme
fatigue or loss of energy.
- Feelings of worthlessness or guilt, with
no reasonable cause.
- Difficulty concentrating and making
decisions.
- Thoughts about death or suicide. Some women with PPD
have fleeting, frightening thoughts of harming their babies: these tend to be
fearful thoughts, rather than urges to harm.
Watchful Waiting
If your symptoms are new and not severe, you can wait up to 2
weeks to see if they will go away. Otherwise, call your doctor as soon as you
notice symptoms. The earlier you are treated, the more quickly you will
recover, and the less your baby's development will be affected by your
condition.5
Who To See
Your
obstetrician may be the first health professional to
note and diagnose PPD. This is one of many reasons why it's important to have a
medical check 3 to 6 weeks after childbirth. Treatment for PPD ideally involves
both medication and some form of professional counseling. To effectively treat
depression, it's important that you and your counselor have a comfortable
relationship.
Diagnosis and medication management of postpartum depression can
be provided by a:
Professional counseling can be provided by a:
To prepare for your appointment, see the topic Making the Most of Your Appointment