Women’s Health and Perinatal Mood and Anxiety Disorders
A special issue of Journal of Clinical Medicine (ISSN 2077-0383). This special issue belongs to the section "Mental Health".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 January 2022) | Viewed by 49568
Special Issue Editor
2. The Center for Women’s Health Studies and Promotion, Beer Sheva, Israel
Interests: social epidemiology; women's health; immigrants and socio-cultural patterns in health and illness; new mothers and parenting; fathers and parenting; prevention and treatment of perinatal mood and anxiety disorders; mixed method research design; mother–daughter relationships; stress; coping and health; midwifery and traumatic birth experiences; cognitive-behavioral techniques and stress reduction; machine learning (MI), artificial intelligence (AI), and natural language processing (NLP) methods to refine diagnostic and treatment planning for diverse groups of persons in distress or in illness; long COVID
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The tumultuous events of 2020–2021 have far-reaching implications for women’s health and gender-based medicine. One area where current health, political, social, and economic trends are playing out is in the expression of maternal mental health, specifically in the area of perinatal mood and anxiety disorders (PMADs), which is the current broader term for post-partum depression (PPD). The term PMAD represents new understandings of the etiology of maternal mental and physical health risks, given that many women suffer from mood and anxiety disorders while pregnant, and depression is a frequent co-morbidity along with other psychiatric disorders such as generalized anxiety, PTSD, OCD, bi-polar affective disorders, and puerperal psychosis. COVID-19 has been associated with an increase in anxiety and depression in international studies among women of reproductive age who are considering pregnancy, pregnant, or post-partum; yet, the effects of these patterns of distress on other aspects of women’s health have scarcely been reported in the medical literature. I call on my colleagues from around the world to contribute to this Special Issue, which will explore the intersection between PMAD and women’s health before and during the pandemic era.
Prof. Julie Cwikel
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- reproductive health
- pregnancy
- perinatal health
- post-partum depression
- COVID-19
- psychiatric disorders
- prevention
- diagnosis
- treatment
- cross-cultural
- pandemic
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