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Birth-related PTSD is 'strangely overlooked' in Australia

30 June 2023
Clinics could easily adopt a recently developed tool to identify at-risk mothers
Research by University of Sydney psychologists examining post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among Australian mothers shows that about a third of women experience a traumatic birth. Of these women, one in eight had symptoms of post traumatic stress. 
Alysha-leigh Fameli

Alysha-leigh Fameli

However, the vast majority of women who display symptoms of birth-related PTSD remain undiagnosed in healthcare settings.

The research, published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, is led by Alysha-leigh Fameli, a registered psychologist and PhD candidate at the University of Sydney’s School of Psychology in the Faculty of Science

“In Australia, routine antenatal health care and screening around mental health is quite narrow. It really only looks at antenatal and postnatal depression, with some mentions of anxiety,” Ms Fameli said.

“We really don't acknowledge other forms of postpartum psychopathology or mental health struggles.

“No one is screening for birth-related PTSD; it's strangely overlooked.”

The research indicates women who experience traumatic births may report difficulties bonding with their infants, strained relationships with their partners and reluctance to have more children.

Ms Fameli gleaned a snapshot of PTSD among Australian mothers using a new tool known as the City Birth Trauma Scale. The tool involves asking mothers 29 questions that allow clinicians and researchers to measure PTSD in women who experience trauma in childbirth.

Her message to clinicians is clear: adopting the tool is an easy way to identify PTSD that would likely otherwise go unnoticed and untreated.

“We could begin to address the PTSD issue in Australia by implementing the City Birth Trauma Scale in healthcare settings,” Ms Fameli said.

“It offers a really easy-to-interpret and administer solution to assess and measure childbirth-related PTSD symptoms, both antenatally and in the postpartum periods.”

Ms Fameli said using the City Birth Trauma Scale in clinical settings would ensure healthcare providers are referring women to appropriate services where they can receive suitable support, benefiting mothers, children and partners.

“We know the first 2000 days of an infant's life are the most crucial for brain development, and a mother's wellbeing is a huge predictor of that,” Ms Fameli said.

“If we invest more into mums and babies and perinatal mental health, we are going to be investing in future generations.

“About four percent of all mothers in Australia may meet the criteria for PTSD caused by their birth experience.”

Ms Fameli is currently recruiting participants for a second trial on birth-related PTSD. She is looking for mothers with babies younger than six months of age who can take part in a clinical interview and an observation of mum-baby interactions. Visit the study website for more information. 


DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2022.12.123

Declaration: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Philip Ritchie

Media and PR Adviser (Science)

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