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Top 10 Myths About PPD
Myth 1: PPD is normal -- all
new mothers feel tired and depressed.Fact:
New mothers often feel tired and overwhelmed.
They may be experiencing "baby blues." Women
with baby blues may feel tired, weepy, and have
no energy. However, the feelings that go with
PPD are stronger and longer lasting. A mother
with PPD may not want to play with her baby.
She may have trouble paying attention to things
and may not be able to meet her baby's needs
for warmth and affection. She may feel guilty
or worthless.
Fact:
PPD can happen any time in the first year after a woman gives birth.
Fact:
The "baby blues" may last up to 4 weeks but usually goes away on its own. Like many illnesses, PPD almost never goes away without treatment. The good news is that there are available treatments that work.
Fact:
Women with postpartum psychosis, which is a life-threatening disorder separate from PPD, are at risk for hurting their babies or themselves. If you have thoughts about harming yourself or your child you should ask for help right away from your family and your doctor.
Fact:
You can't tell someone has PPD by looking at her. A woman with PPD may look perfectly "normal" to everyone else. She may even try especially hard to look polished or put together – keeping her makeup done, and her hair styled – to turn attention away from the pain she is feeling on the inside.
Fact:
Having PPD does not make someone a bad mother. Fact:
PPD is nobody's fault. There is nothing that a woman with PPD could have done to avoid having this disorder. Fact:
Although it's important for women with PPD to get enough sleep, sleep by itself will not cure PPD.
Fact:
Studies have shown that there is a very small risk to the baby with the antidepressants most likely to be prescribed for PPD. If it is necessary for a woman with PPD to take an antidepressant, her doctor will carefully choose one that is most likely to help her and least likely to hurt her baby.
Fact:
Being pregnant, or having just given birth, is not a guarantee against getting depression. In other words, pregnancy does not protect a woman from depression, and in fact, studies show that the childbearing years are when a woman is most likely to experience depression in her lifetime.
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