Postpartum Depression, Postpartum Psychosis and the New Bipolar Mom
I am not a mom myself, but I am of the age that people around me are having kids. Accordingly, it seems time to take a look at some of the challenges new bipolar moms face. Challenges for the new bipolar mom include postpartum depression and postpartum psychosis, among others.
Postpartum Depression and the New Bipolar Mom
Postpartum depression (also called postnatal depression) is a big deal. We’re not simply talking about the “baby blues” here. It is completely normal to experience an emotional disturbance after having a baby (about 85% of women do) but this emotional disturbance (including fluctuating mood, tearfulness, and anxiety) is transient and relatively mild. Postpartum depression, on the other hand, is not. Postpartum depression has the same severity of any other major depression and can be particularly devastating in new moms due to the stress that new motherhood puts on women. According to Medscape, about 10-15% of women experience postpartum depression. And doctors are notoriously bad at screening for it. This is because once the baby is born, the health of the baby becomes the priority and doctors (and likely moms themselves) seem not to focus on the health of the mother.
People with bipolar disorder are at a higher risk than average of developing postpartum depression and women who have experienced postpartum depression or psychosis have a risk of recurrence of up to 90%.
Postpartum Psychosis and the New Bipolar Mom
Of even bigger concern to moms with bipolar disorder, is postpartum psychosis. According to Medscape, postpartum psychosis occurs in only 0.1-0.2% of women, but at highest risk are women with bipolar disorder and those who have experienced postpartum psychosis in the past. This is a risk not to be taken lightly as postpartum psychosis has been known to drive women to suicide and even infanticide of their own children. Risk of infanticide in this population is as high as 4%.
Postpartum psychosis has a dramatic onset, emerging as early as the first 48-72 hours after delivery. In most women, symptoms develop within the first 2 postpartum weeks. The condition resembles a rapidly evolving manic or mixed episode, with symptoms such as restlessness and insomnia, irritability, rapidly shifting depressed or elated mood, and disorganized behavior.
The mother may have delusional beliefs that relate to the infant (eg, the baby is defective or dying, the infant is Satan or God), or she may have auditory hallucinations that instruct her to harm herself or her infant.
If you’re familiar with bipolar disorder you’ll see the similarities there between what many people experience in postpartum psychosis and what people experience with regular old bipolar disorder.
In Part 2 of this article I’ll be discussing postpartum depression’s effect on the child, screening for postpartum mood disorders, and postpartum depression and postpartum psychosis treatment.
For references and more information on postpartum depression and postpartum psychosis, please see this Medscape article
You can find Natasha Tracy on Facebook or GooglePlus or @Natasha_Tracy on Twitter or at the Bipolar Burble, her blog.
APA Reference
Tracy, N.
(2014, January 14). Postpartum Depression, Postpartum Psychosis and the New Bipolar Mom, HealthyPlace. Retrieved
on 2024, November 5 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/breakingbipolar/2014/01/postpartum-depression-postpartum-psychosis-new-bipolar-mom