Evaluation of Repeated Web-Based Screening for Predicting Postpartum Depression: Prospective Cohort Study.
Kathrin HassdenteufelKatrin LingenfelderCornelia E SchwarzeManuel FeisstKatharina BrusniakLina Maria MatthiesMaren GoetzMarkus WallwienerStephanie WallwienerPublished in: JMIR mental health (2021)
The best predictive accuracy for PPD has been shown for screening between the 24th and the 28th gestational week (GW) and seems to be beneficial for identifying women at risk. In combination with the aforementioned predictive factors, the discriminatory power improved, particularly at 3 months postpartum. Screening for depression during pregnancy, combined with the women's personal risk profile, can be used as a starting point for developing a digital screening algorithm. Thereby, web-based assessment tools constitute feasible, efficient, and cost-effective approaches. Thus, they seem to be beneficial in detecting high-risk pregnancies in order to improve maternal and infant birth outcomes in the long term.