Mom, advocacy group want more open conversations about N.L. parents' mental health issues - Action News
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Mom, advocacy group want more open conversations about N.L. parents' mental health issues

When Krista Burton was pregnant with her second child, she was diagnosed with prenatal and postpartum depression. She believes there still needs to be more awareness about parents' struggles.

Provincial rate of new parents experiencing mental health issues is higher than national average

A middle-aged woman smiles.
Krista Burton has two children. She says she realized quickly during her second pregnancy that something felt very different. (Henrike Wilhelm/CBC)

When Krista Burton of St. John's was pregnant with her second child three years ago, she could tell "something had to be up."

While she describes her first pregnancy in 2018 as one of the happiest timesin her life,her second experience was very different.

"Instead of feeling excited, I felt a feeling of dread and it was really, really hard to process that,"said Burton, addingheremotions caused guilt and shame.

"My first pregnancy went so well and I wanted to bring that same energy and that same positivity to my son. And I felt really bad that I couldn't muster that up and worried thatwould impact him somehow."

Dread and support during pregnancy

1 year ago
Duration 1:53
Krista Burton dealt with mood and anxiety disorders during her second pregnancy. The St. John's mother says she's grateful for the support she had, and wants people to talk more openly about mental illness.

Still breastfeeding her daughter, Burton felt as though she was already giving most of her time and energy to her and she questionedwhether she could give even more of herself to someone else.

Her emotions a surprise and a shock, she said.

Fortunate to have a supportive networkand a family doctor, she sought help and wasreferred to a psychiatrist who diagnosed her withprenatal and postpartum depression.

"I thought, 'What is wrong with me? Why am I feeling this way? I did it the first time, I should be able to do it again,'"said Burton. "[The diagnosis]confirmed that what I was feeling was real and valid."

Burton is not alone.

Mental health issues during pregnancy and within one year of delivery are described with the umbrella term perinatal mood and anxiety disorders. About 20 per cent of people globally and 23 per cent nationally are estimated to be affected.That number is 28 per cent in Newfoundland and Labrador about 21 per cent higher thanthe national average.

St. John's-based psychiatrist Dr. Archana Vidyasankar, who specializes in perinatal mental health, said there are many reasons for the increase.

"We're talking about isolation, geography, stigma, awareness, education, resources. Where do you go if you are feeling this way?" said Vidyasankar. "There are, for so many reasons, a lot of challenges access to care, especially in our province that are creating these higher numbers."

Nationally, she said, numbers have doubled during the pandemic,increasing rates to between 40 and50 per cent.

To address these rates and streamline existing provincial resources, as well as offer a point of contact, Vidyasankar worked to launch the provincial Perinatal Mental Health Alliance in 2020.

A middle-aged woman smiles.
Archana Vidyasankar says the provincial Perinatal Mental Health Alliance advocates for more research, education and resources. (Henrike Wilhelm/CBC)

"I was meeting with nurse practitioners and public health nurses, psychologists, doulas, midwives, all with this same goal in mind,to decrease the silos because there are people and organizations working to support young families, but they don't quite know what the other person is doing," saidVidyasankar, noting that the alliance's board has representation from the island, Labradorand urban and rural regions, as well as people with lived experience.

"And sowe wanted to pull everyone together."

Provincial strategies for perinatal care, said Vidyasankar, could be modelled after approaches taken in Australia or in the U.K.,where perinatal mental health support has been a focusfor years. She said plansneed to include betteraccess to doulas, midwivesand family resource centres, as well as training for early childhood educators, who often know families best.

Whilea perinatal mental health program is listed as one of the provincial government's goals in its suicide prevention plan Our Path of Resilience, the alliance continues to advocate for more support and funding for resources, but also education and research.

"There are a lot of strengths in the province and we also have a lot of weaknesses,"said Vidyasankar.

"And so, it's trying to figure out, what are the needs of the families here and coordinate an approach that will help fill the needs for families, for parents, for grandparents, for support people, for health-care providers, and really get it right."

A newborn tightly wrapped on the left and a toddler, smiling, on the right.
Burton's experience motivated her to help other parents. (Henrike Wilhelm/CBC)

Burton's experience motivated her to help other parents. She started non-profit group Mothers of Avalon, which supports new parents in need with acleaning service and an emergency supply of essential items.

"I couldn't help but think about the people out there that didn't have the same support as me, that were on their own, single parents, perhaps [they] didn't even have a family doctor or were on a wait-list to see a psychologist," she said."How on earth were they surviving on their own?"

She thinks awareness for perinatal mental health issues needs to increaseand the stigma to be broken down.

"People need to check up on the new parents in their lives and let these people in their lives know that there is no shame around feeling any of these things and there's no shame in asking for help,"said Burton.

"There needs to be a solidarity in parenthood together."

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