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Peer Support
THE ROLE OF PEER SUPPORT IN THE TREATMENT OF PERINATAL PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS (PPD)
RALPH WITTENBERG, MD

OBJECTIVES
Explain the concept of peer support
Show its place in the treatment of perinatal psychiatric disorders (PPD)
Demonstrate its unique power
Describe how it works
Describe how to set up a program

THE PPD PUZZLE
How can there be such a catastrophic problem as PPD and no one seems to know about it?
How can less than 15% percent of patients get any treatment in what is supposed to be the best medical system in the world?
How is it that even when women are diagnosed they refuse treatment?

THE ROLE OF ANXIETY

PPD (PERINATAL PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS) are always associated with intense anxiety
Many patients appear to have pure anxiety disorders;
  • Panic disorder
  • Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
  • Untreated, they all progress to depression
RATIONALIZED ANXIETY
Rationalization
A good reason for doing something that is not the real reason
Anxiety is a feeling of fear for no apparent reason
Anxiety makes people avoid things
Sometimes, as in compulsion, there is not choice but action

ANXIETY OBSTRUCTS CARE
Afraid of spouse's anger and rejection
Afraid of going crazy
Being institutionalized
Having the baby removed
Don't believe that those around them will help: family doctors, etc.
Afraid of losing control

SOCIAL SUPPORT
  • Society, which includes family, church, neighbors and friends, protects the individual
  • The social support network is the system in which one is cared for and protected
  • Role of the extended family (The tribe) Lost to many city dwellers and Non-existent in impoverished populations
  • The marital relationship
  • The structure of society
  • Mobility
  • Uninvolvement
  • Societal customs
THE CONVENTIONAL HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
Not set up to provide social support
Aims are generally short term
Not oriented to psychological or emotional needs
Represents societal authority, i.e. definition of what is important, repository of approval, forced hospitalization, removal of children

NURSING AND OTHERS
Nurses are often the most likely personnel to provide emotional support to patients
They often run the health care system
Other support personnel include; social workers, psychologists, case managers, home visitors, lactation consultants, health educators and doulas

THE MEANING OF NURSING
Nurses originally "nursed" babies
Importance in the history of maternal and child care is from time immemorial
Nursing has to do with nurturance on many levels (including the doctors)
Theoretically, then, nurses were peer mothers

THE NURSING EQUATION
Official parts of the medical system
Unofficial executives of hospitals, clinics, etc.
Multiple roles
  • Nurse administrators
  • Nurse practitioners
  • Nursing assistants
  • "The patient's friend"
PPD RX COMPONENTS
Identification and referral of patients
  • Universal depression screening
  • Clinical detection
  • Peer contact

  • Treatment
  • Medication
  • Psychotherapy
  • Peer support
  • Follow up and tracking

PEER SUPPORT IN ACTION
Cheryl Hall
In the beginning, I honestly thought that when women told me I had saved their lives or made such a difference, they were saying it to make me feel good? It felt a bit make believe. It seemed too powerful for just talking. But that is just it? It is the power of talking as a peer, listening, not judging, allowing a woman to cry on the phone for as long as she needs to, assuring her over and over that what she is experiencing is not who she is, it is the illness and when she gets treatment and when she gets better she will be herself. To be kind to herself, that she is not being punished, she didnêt bring this upon herself, she is not to blame. To find the help a woman asks for, to try to ask the right questions, to not try to practice medicine, and just to listen. And somehow to the woman suffering this horrific illness on the other end of a phone line, this feels life saving. All of these women have opened my eyes and entered my soul.

ASPECTS OF PEER SUPPORT
One to one
  • Telephone response
  • Reply to consultation
Group
  • Entry to treatment system
  • Treatment itself
ADVICE
  • Suggest group members seek medical care
  • "It is not your fault!" Try to see these problems as your illness rather than about you.
  • Empowering activities to relieve depression, i.e. talk to friends, exercise, etc
  • Nothing else! Otherwise it will appear to be the practice of medicine.
PEER SUPPORT TRAINING
PPD MOMS training
  • Active listening
  • Recommendations of coping activities
DRADA training
  • Learning to tolerate feelings of helplessness
  • Use of empathy
PROGRAM COMPONENTS
Telephone access
Recruitment of volunteers
Training programs
For PPD MOMS™
For nurse facilitators Developing treatment sites
Supervision
Tracking and data reporting

Summary
Social support is the key concept
Mothers with PPD avoid the usual sources
Conventional medical care does not meet their needs
Nurses have a unique role to play (as do social workers, lactation consultantês health educators, etc.)
Peer support helps many mothers who would get none otherwise

CONCLUSIONS
Peer support is an essential component of the treatment of PPD
It can be organized and administered by nurses in conjunction with survivor volunteers (PPD MOMS™)
These programs are stabilizing, empowering and therapeutic

RESOURCES
PPDHOPE.COM
The FMHI website for mothers.
1(877) PPD-HOPE
Postpartum Support International Website, Postpartum.net
Links to other resources from our website
Brochures

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Jane Honikman: Step by Step, A Guide to Organizing A Postpartum Parent Support Network in Your Community

Carolyn White: R.N, B.S.N How You Can Build Your Own Social Support Network

Shoshanna Bennett, PhD and Pec Indman, Ed.D, MFT: Beyond the Blues



 
Mother & BabyPPD Hotline: 1.877.PPD-Hope

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