third, the guidelines do not acknowledge the impact of stigma that undermines women’s likelihood of sharing their symptoms. clinicians are convinced that women are unlikely to be forthcoming about their symptoms. research suggests women would be willing, or even relieved to be
screened, especially if there was a universal program.
finally, adherence to the guidelines will promote the negative, ironically preventable, lifelong effects of depression on women and their children’s health and development.
as the coalition for responsible healthcare guidelines indicates, canada is going against the recommendations for perinatal depression of essentially all other countries who take a position on screening — including the u.s., the uk, denmark and australia. for example, the u.s. task force recommended depression screening of adults, including pregnant and postpartum women, in june 2023.
screening for depression is essential to ensure mothers and their families receive adequate support. this will reduce serious mother and child harms that result from untreated depression.
it’s long past time for the task force to revisit the perinatal depression screening guidelines and listen to canadian expert opinion and international evidence.