Introduction
If you have the "baby blues" after childbirth, you're not
alone—about half of women have a few days of mild depression after having a
baby.1 However unsettling, a certain amount of
insomnia, irritability, tears, overwhelmed feelings, and mood swings are
normal. Baby blues usually peak around the fourth postpartum day and subside in
less than 2 weeks, when hormonal changes have settled down. But you can have
bouts of baby blues throughout your baby's first year.
If your
depressed feelings have lasted more than 2 weeks, your body isn't recovering
from childbirth as expected. Postpartum depression:
- Is very common, affecting 1 in 8 women during
the first months of their babies' lives.2
- Is a serious medical condition that can be
prolonged and disabling without treatment and can affect a baby's development.
- Is best treated with counseling and an antidepressant
medicine.3
- Can further improve when you
take some home treatment measures.
To prevent serious problems for you and your baby, now is
the time to work with your doctor to treat your symptoms.
If you
are having thoughts of hurting yourself, your baby, or anyone else,
see your doctor immediately or call 911 for emergency medical
care.
What is postpartum depression?
Why treat postpartum depression?
How is postpartum depression treated?
Where to go from here
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