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Does Postpartum Depression Affect Dads?

by Colleen Fleiss on Jun 19 2022 10:37 PM
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Does Postpartum Depression Affect Dads?
Men encounter severe mood changes surrounding their child’s birth, but their condition is overlooked, says a study.
Researchers from Deakin University in Australia mined Reddit posts and discovered that dads’ posting behaviors in the period surrounding their child’s birth could be a warning sign for depression.

However, support for fathers’ mental health in the perinatal period is limited, as revealed in the study published in JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting.

"It’s a huge public health problem that’s not being addressed," said Dr. Sam Teague, who was until recently a postdoctoral research fellow at Deakin’s Center for Social and Early Emotional Development.

Research in this area is also limited — few researchers focus on fathers and those who struggle to find fathers with time to participate between their work and new family commitments.

Mental Health of New Fathers

Teague thus analyzed thousands of posts on Reddit’s fatherhood forums r/Daddit and r/PreDaddit to better understand what problems dads face and what kind of support they want.

Dads commonly post about milestones like pregnancy announcements and activities like paternal bonding, Teague found. But the topic with most users and posts was fatherhood challenges: struggles, budgeting, and sleep.

"One of the things that jumped out was that men tend to prefer sharing informational support. That’s where they share specific advice or information to solve a problem," reports Teague.

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Teague’s machine learning algorithm could predict with close to 70% accuracy which dads would use more language that reflected postpartum depression based on their prepartum posting habits.

"Impact on social engagement is a key symptom of depression. That’s expressed online through fathers’ posting behaviors," she says.

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Reddit users were quick to respond to posts about common challenges, like problems in the family environment or broader societal issues. But when posters shared individual challenges like mental health problems, the community was less available to help, Teague said.

Source-IANS


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