Higher Risk for New Moms of Multiples Little Rock AR

Even under the best of circumstances, giving birth and caring for a newborn baby isn't easy. New mothers are dealing with the constant demands of an infant, including feeding, changing, stimulating, and settling. Breastfeeding requires a woman to be available at least every few hours around the clock, leaving her little time for unbroken sleep.

Alessandro Santin
(501) 686-8000
4301 W Markham St # 783
Little Rock, AR
Dr.Amy Wiedower
(501) 227-5885
9601 Lile Dr # 500
Little Rock, AR
Dr.Stephen Chatelain
(501) 217-8467
9501 Lile Dr # 810
Little Rock, AR
Sharon Catherine Keith, MD
501-666-8846
500 S University Ave Ste 709
Little Rock, AR
Cynthia Ann Hubach
(501) 227-5885
9601 Lile Dr
Little Rock, AR
William Henry Galloway, MD
4301 W Markham St
Little Rock, AR
Dean Menelaos Moutos, MD
501-686-6319
9101 Kanis Rd Ste 300
Little Rock, AR
William L Garner
(501) 224-6699
9500 Kanis Rd
Little Rock, AR
Michael M Miller, MD
501-686-6319
Slot 518 4301 W Markham St
Little Rock, AR
Tracy Eden Kidd, MD
501-224-5500
1 Lile Ct Ste 200
Little Rock, AR
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Higher Risk for New Moms of Multiples

Even under the best of circumstances, giving birth and caring for a newborn baby isn't easy. New mothers are dealing with the constant demands of an infant, including feeding, changing, stimulating, and settling. Breastfeeding requires a woman to be available at least every few hours around the clock, leaving her little time for unbroken sleep. Add to that the sudden drop in hormones that occurs after childbirth and you've got a basic recipe for depression. And while postpartum depression doesn't happen to all new mothers, it certainly is fairly common: Statistics show that up to 15 percent of women report moderate to severe depression after their babies are born.

But for mothers of multiples, the numbers--and the problems--can be even bigger.

Researchers at Johns Hopkins looked at data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort, a large-scale study of children born in 2001. At nine months after delivery, mothers of multiples were 43 percent more likely than mothers of singletons to report feeling depressed. More worrisome was the fact that only 27 percent of new mothers of either singletons or multiples had sought counseling or medical help.

It's no surprise that women who give birth to twins, triplets or more children feel more depressed than moms who deliver just one infant. But the risks of untreated postpartum depression are real. Not only can the depression last for months or years, but women who suffer from it are at risk of harming their babies or themselves. They may begin to abuse alcohol or other substances. They may neglect their diet, even while breastfeeding. And since they're likely to feel exhausted all the time, their ability to care for their children is compromised. Depressed mothers may not play with, read to, touch, hold or try to bond with their children as much as mothers who aren't depressed do...

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