Commentary

Racial disparities in perinatal mental health care during COVID-19

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The pandemic has exacerbated barriers to screening, diagnosis, and treatment of women of color


 

References

Perinatal mental health disorders such as perinatal depression are common complications of pregnancy1 and cause significant disability in mothers and children.2 Yet despite facing higher 12-month rates of depression than White women,3 Black and Hispanic women are less likely than White women to be diagnosed with and receive treatment for postpartum depression.4

In addition to leading to >800,000 deaths in the United States alone (as of mid-December 2021),5 COVID-19 has disrupted health care delivery, including perinatal mental health services.6 Emerging data also describe neuropsychiatric effects of COVID-19 on both infected and uninfected individuals.7 Because Black and Hispanic individuals bear a disproportionate burden of COVID-19,8 compared to White women, women of color stand to be more adversely impacted by the direct effects of the disease as well as by related disruptions in perinatal psychiatry services.

Reasons for perinatal health disparities are multifactorial, complex, and interrelated. Disparities, which can be seen as proportionate differences in access by members of minority groups compared with groups in the majority, are related to differences in mental health screening, health care accessibility, and decisions to initiate treatment. In this commentary, we define “women of color” as non-White women, and focus on how traditional barriers to perinatal mental health treatment in women of color are exacerbated in the era of COVID-19. We focus primarily on postpartum depression because it is the peripartum mental health disorder with the highest likelihood of uptake in screening and treatment practices; however, disparities may be present in other mental health disorders during this period.

Gaps in screening and identification

Postpartum depression is a source of mitigatable risk for mother and neonate in the peripartum period, and the topic of screening for its presence arises in educational and best practices materials for primary care, OB-GYN, and pediatric care clinicians. Despite considerable evidence demonstrating better outcomes (for mother and child) with early detection and treatment of perinatal mental health disorders, racial and ethnic disparities persist in the screening process. At baseline, Black, Asian, and American Indian and Alaska Native women are less likely than White women to be screened for depression.9 Research shows that screening practices differ based on type of clinic, with one study noting that patients of family physicians were more likely to be screened for perinatal depression than were patients of OB-GYNs or nursing midwives.9 Even after adjusting for clinic type, racial differences in screening persist, with fewer women of color screened than their White counterparts.9 The literature consistently shows that within the same care settings, physicians deliver less information, less supportive talk, and less evidence-based treatment to Black and Hispanic patients and patients of lower economic status.10-12 Patient-clinician ethnic concordance is shown to positively impact the therapeutic relationship; at present, depressive symptoms are underrecognized in people of color, for whom referral to psychiatric care may be further compounded by inadequate knowledge of psychiatric resources.10-13

Data from Medicaid programs reveal that compared to White women, Black women are less likely to attend postpartum visits, which leads to a downstream effect on the ability to identify Black women with mental health disorders during the postpartum period.14 In addition to experiencing fewer opportunities for detection, women of color are more likely to report somatic symptoms of depression, which may not be detected in routinely employed perinatal depression screening tools.15

Continue to: Disparities in accessibility and treatment...

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