Abstract
Introduction
The COVID-19 pandemic posed a significant lifecourse rupture, not least to those who had specific physical vulnerabilities to the virus, but also to those who were suffering with mental ill health. Women and birthing people who were pregnant, experienced a perinatal bereavement, or were in the first post-partum year (i.e., perinatal) were exposed to a number of risk factors for mental ill health, including alterations to the way in which their perinatal care was delivered.
Methods
A consensus statement was derived from a cross-disciplinary collaboration of experts, whereby evidence from collaborative work on perinatal mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic was synthesised, and priorities were established as recommendations for research, healthcare practice, and policy.
Results
The synthesis of research focused on the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on perinatal health outcomes and care practices led to three immediate recommendations: what to retain, what to reinstate, and what to remove from perinatal mental healthcare provision. Longer-term recommendations for action were also made, categorised as follows: Equity and Relational Healthcare; Parity of Esteem in Mental and Physical Healthcare with an Emphasis on Specialist Perinatal Services; and Horizon Scanning for Perinatal Mental Health Research, Policy, & Practice.
Discussion
The evidence base on the effect of the pandemic on perinatal mental health is growing. This consensus statement synthesises said evidence and makes recommendations for a post-pandemic recovery and re-build of perinatal mental health services and care provision.
Keywords: consensus statement, COVID-19, perinatal mental health, women’s health, recommendations for policy and practice
1. Introduction
The COVID-19 pandemic presented an unprecedented health system shock to the world between January 2020 and May 2023. Although first detected in Wuhan, China, on 31 December 2019 (1), the virus—a respiratory disease with high mortality risk for individuals with pre-existing comorbidities (2)—spread quickly, worldwide. Concerns about the mortality and spread of the novel virus prompted a global, co-ordinated implementation of social and physical distancing restrictions. Meanwhile, research efforts turned towards vaccine development (3) and understanding the health system shock and the possible ramifications for short-, medium-, and long-term health, especially as the world braced itself for the further pandemic of mental health issues caused by the virus and associated fears, bereavements, and restrictions (4). Maternity care was significantly disrupted during government-mandated lockdown restrictions (5). Social and physical distancing restrictions interrupted access to routine maternity care and adversely impacted perinatal mental health (6, 7) and child development (8, 9). Worryingly, these restrictions saw increased instances of child neglect, child abuse, and domestic abuse risk (10); restricted access to reproductive healthcare including abortion services (11); increase in maternal morbidity (12); and serious adverse obstetric events such as stillbirths (13, 14). Further, the potential for maternity staff to experience work-related trauma and subsequent post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was likely to have been exacerbated beyond levels already recognised as significant (15–17). The extent of the long-term impacts of the pandemic, however, has yet to be fully realised and may take years to be understood completely.
This article presents a consensus statement on amassed evidence from research and syntheses on perinatal mental health undertaken during the COVID-19 pandemic. We suggest recommendations in the form of what healthcare policy, services, and professionals should retain, reinstate, and remove from their care provision in the immediate period of post-pandemic recovery and re-build. We also provide guidance on longer-term recommendations for practice.
2. Methods
This consensus statement was originally conceived by a collective of cross-disciplinary researchers (Psychologists, Psychiatrists, Sociologists, Anthropologists, Midwives, Obstetricians, Obstetric Physicians, Physiologists, and Patient Advocates; mainly based in London and Liverpool, UK) who, in late 2020/early 2021 wanted to synthesise evidence from research they had conducted during the early stages of the pandemic about how it had affected perinatal mental health outcomes, services, and care. They secured funding from the Society for Reproductive and Infant Psychology—via a Research Development Workshop Grant (ref:- SRIP/DWA/01)—to do so, which contributed to the second origin—a policy-oriented research dissemination event held at The Royal Society of Medicine (The RSM) in London on 22 September 2022. The RSM event was hosted by PIVOT-AL, a national collaborative in the UK of over 60 researchers, academics, policymakers, and members of third sector organisations from more than 25 institutions (see Figure 1). During the pandemic, the collaborative undertook research focused on the impact of the pandemic on maternal, child, and family health, healthcare professionals, and service provision. A formal synthesis of this evidence on perinatal mental health was presented as a key part of the programme at The RSM event. This consensus statement provides a summary of this evidence and identifies priorities for future research, policy, and healthcare practice.
A recognised approach for deriving consensus statements is usually to construct a panel of experts amongst whom ideas are shared with a focus on establishing priorities for research, healthcare practice, and policy (18). Discussions at this event were based on the expert knowledge of attendees and enhanced by patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) at both the event and in writing the statement. The cross-disciplinary nature of the group allowed for a breadth and depth of perspectives to be represented. The authors recognise that whilst this synthesis is extensive, it is not exhaustive of all the research efforts which took place in perinatal mental health services across the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic. Neither does it have a reach into global literature—which is equally important, but would be inappropriate to incorporate as part of an assessment into UK policy and practice. Therefore, this statement does not aim to provide a comprehensive nor systematic review of the literature base, but rather represents an overview of issues and priorities discussed by attendees at the dissemination event. Indeed, the statement presents the consensus reached by academics and clinical experts who authored the literature included in the synthesis and by those present at the dissemination event.
3. Available evidence
The perinatal mental health research captured by The PIVOT-AL National Collaborative primarily focused on post-partum mental health and the transition into new motherhood during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, extensive efforts have also spanned the psycho-social experiences of pregnancy and childbirth, incidences of domestic abuse and violence, and support requirements of perinatal mental health staff and services during mandated social and physical distancing restrictions.
One of the earliest PIVOT-AL investigative efforts was The Pregnancy and Motherhood Study [PRaM; (19)]. A large, online, national survey was distributed to pregnant and post-partum women during initial mandated lockdown restrictions (20), during the initial easing of social distancing restrictions (21), and post-“Freedom Day” [defined as the easing of all legal restrictions on social contact; (22)]. The PRaM Study involved the distribution of a battery of psychometric measures (19, 23), with nested qualitative interviews in accordance with the corresponding mandated lockdown restrictions (24, 25).
Quantitative findings indicated that 43% and 61% of post-partum women were experiencing clinically relevant levels of depression and anxiety symptoms, respectively (19). Perceived psychological change, resulting from the introduction of social distancing measures, predicted unique variance in the risk of clinically relevant maternal depression (30%) and anxiety symptoms (33%), respectively (19). These data were consistent with UK data found in global comparisons of perinatal mental health data as reported by a consortium of the RISEUP-PPD Network, where the UK consistently ranked highly amongst reports of increased symptoms of perinatal anxiety and depression (26). The PRaM Study also rapidly developed and validated a research short form of the Postpartum Specific Anxiety Scale for use in global crises [PSAS-RSF-C (23);]. This short form was translated into Chinese, Dutch, French, Italian, and Spanish (23), and validations are underway including in Persian [PSAS-IR-RSF-C; (27)].
Qualitatively, the PRaM Study found post-partum women continued to experience distress throughout the pandemic, despite the easing of social distancing restrictions (24). A lack of support for the schooling of older children was particularly inflammatory to maternal mental health and wellbeing disturbance (24). Antenatally, respondents were consistent across timepoints in feeling their pregnancy was overshadowed by uncertainties pertaining to the pandemic, which left respondents grieving for the loss of the kind of transition to motherhood that they would have had in the absence of mandated lockdown restrictions (25).
Echoing these findings, an analysis of qualitative data from women recruited to The King's Together Fund Changing Maternity Care Study identified tensions between good and poor practices, which affected perinatal psycho-social wellbeing (28). Results included dyadic pairs of experiences as women struggled to navigate the uncertainties of the pandemic and pregnancy, alone. The dyadic pairs included the following: “lack of relational care vs. good practice persisting during the pandemic”; “denying the embodied experience of pregnancy and birth vs. trying to keep everyone safe”; and “removed from support network vs. importance of being at home as a family” (28). Consistent with other PIVOT-AL works, the realities of maternity care were disappointing compared with expectations and experiences before the pandemic, which exacerbated distress (28). The lack of access to relational care, the introduction of telemedicine and reliance on virtual appointments, and the exclusion of partners from routine care were particularly challenging for emotional wellbeing. This was despite an acknowledgement of the pressures placed on healthcare professionals and on NHS services during the unprecedented times of the pandemic (28). A lack of access to emergency and gynaecological care was also flagged as being detrimental to the care of early pregnancy loss and later perinatal deaths (29, 30).
A critical review and mapping of service provision suggested that perinatal distress had increased, which was attributable to the increasing inaccessibility of support services (31). However, this was occasionally countered by services providing reconfigured and/or extended perinatal mental health services. As healthcare transitioned from pandemic to para-pandemic circumstances, it was imperative to provide support for perinatal mental health professionals within the context of developing new post-pandemic services (31). Some women struggled to engage with virtual mental health assessments in perinatal mental health services (32). This was especially concerning for circumstances whereby virtual appointments prevented disclosure of urgent needs and risks, e.g., in cases of domestic abuse (32). However, for women who struggled with the practicalities of attending face-to-face consultations, e.g., due to travel time, virtual appointments offered a flexible and well-received alternative (32).
Maintaining perinatal mental health services was found to be challenging for ethnic minority women, who experienced many difficulties and disruptions in accessing perinatal mental healthcare, which exacerbated pre-existing challenges such as living in insecure social housing and experiencing financial hardship (33). Most had a strong preference for face-to-face consultations and experienced high levels of social isolation and heightened anxiety as the pandemic continued (33). A large study was also conducted that utilised linked maternity and mental health records held within the Early Life Cross-Linkage in Research (eLIXIR) database (34). Data from three NHS Foundation Trusts (including one Mental Health Trust) in South London constitute the eLIXIR database (34, 35). Research using an interrupted time series study design found that the rate of recording domestic abuse and violence during national lockdown restrictions was reduced by 78% in mental healthcare settings. There was also an increased prevalence of positive screening on the Whooley depression screening measure, by 40%, in the same period (35).
A large body of international work investigating the effects of the pandemic on new, expectant, and bereaved parents [COCOON; (36)] is underway, complete with a nested qualitative study [PUDDLES; (30)] which focuses on the experiences of women bereaved by pregnancy loss (e.g., early elective abortion, pregnancy of unknown location, miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy, molar pregnancy, or termination of pregnancy due to foetal anomaly) or perinatal death (stillbirth and neonatal death). Results specifically linked to the mental health outcomes are pending, but they will provide important insight into another aspect of perinatal mental health, not otherwise covered by the information synthesised above.
Whilst there has been much evidence to support worsening conditions for perinatal mental healthcare and support during the pandemic, the ending of the global health crises allows a period of reflection and reset for recovery and re-build from the health system shock. What follows are recommendations for immediate action, followed by long-term recommendations for policy, service provision, and research.
4. Discussion of recommendations
4.1. Immediate action
4.1.1. What to retain
Access to essential reproductive services such as contraception and abortion (37, 38), ensuring high levels of relational care are prioritised in healthcare service and delivery (28, 31), and redoubling efforts to ensure that perinatal and infant mental health are given the parity of esteem of physical health concerns (39) are recommended for retention in line with other calls for prioritisation of specialist women's mental healthcare (40–42). Communication of health messaging to families should continue to be clear, concise, and consistent, and the option for remote care provision should be maintained (32, 33). However, this should be offered in line with clinical decision-making around safety and appropriateness for individual women and birthing people.
4.1.2. What to reinstate
At a system level, reinstating time for processing and reflection on new directives for service delivery, as well as including the voices of healthcare professionals and service users, is important across all aspects of healthcare serving perinatal women (43). This will enable teams to consider how best to implement new service provisions. Bi-directional communication amongst central NHS management, individual trusts, and healthcare professionals is recommended to optimise satisfaction with care and workplace satisfaction for staff (31). Within this, the voices of perinatal women and birthing people must also be heard and their perspectives on prospective changes must be sought. Recommendations are also made to reinstate the autonomy and judgement of healthcare professionals in providing empathic, evidence-based care, including professional judgement on when to use remote vs. in-person care (32, 43).
During the pandemic, a large proportion of healthcare professionals were displaced within their services to provide support to COVID-19 wards (28), and early pregnancy and/or gynaecological services were dramatically rationalised (29). Maternity care was consequently stripped of vital service provision by specialist midwives for mental health and bereavement care (31). Evidence from the PIVOT-AL collaborative highlights the importance of protecting healthcare professionals across all aspects of perinatal care services from redeployment to ensure that a full complement of staff is available to perinatal women/people, their babies, and their families (31). This also requires recognising the importance of quality, holistic, post-partum care, specifically in the community (33). To re-establish these priorities, face-to-face care and support should be reinstated (24, 25, 35) and should remain the dominant form of care provision.
Finally, re-introducing consented partners, family members, and/or other trusted support (e.g., friends and Doulas) should be prioritised across all interactions across the perinatal period (28, 30, 31). Importantly, this form of support should be seen as part of the caregiving team and not simply visitors, and should be regarded as a basic birthing right, never again to be removed.
4.1.3. What to remove
First, recommendations are made to cease blanket or “one size fits all” policies from being rolled out across all services without consideration of variations in demographic need or accessibility to essential support services (33), as this would lead to inequitable health services. During the pandemic, ethical, moral, and relational care was replaced by priorities of infection control (28, 31), thereby swapping a broad notion of safety that encompassed women's psychological safety for one bearing a narrow definition focused on the notion that safety was synonymous with not spreading the infection, and prioritising prevention of COVID deaths above other serious and potentially fatal risks such as severe mental health episodes, domestic abuse and violence, and suicide.
At this time, personalised care was often deprioritised (24, 25). Considering these findings, recommendations are made to cease the provision of exclusively virtual or remote care (28) and the exclusion of wanted birth partners (31). Furthermore, confusing and conflicting messaging amongst government organisations, Royal Colleges, individual NHS Trusts, and other Learned Academies has been a persistent issue of concern (28). When national public health messaging is necessary, disinformation and/or conflicting information must be stopped as a matter of utmost importance (24, 25). Messaging must be consistent from policy to practice, and policymakers and healthcare professionals must be agile enough to interpret and implement change in a uniform way.
4.2. Long-term recommendations
4.2.1. Equity and relational healthcare
Equitable, relational care should be offered to all in the perinatal community (39), with special consideration made for populations who struggle to access healthcare (e.g., women from ethnic and sexual minority groups or those living with high levels of social complexity or in areas with high levels of social deprivation), who may be particularly avoidant of using perinatal mental health services (33). Support for women, birthing people, and their families should be curated, based on personalised needs assessments in circumstances of high physical, mental, or social risk (24, 25). It would also be prudent to not only maintain focus on the health of women and birthing people, but also attend to the established relationship amongst parental, child health, and wider family health, acknowledging the reciprocal nature of the caregiver-infant mental health outcomes (44) and ensuring healthcare professionals are working holistically (31) and with the whole family to be proactive and to intervene before families reach crisis point (45). We must also give greater energy to and focus on those families who find care hard to access (46); experience high levels of social complexity, inequality, and deprivation (47); may have a rooted distrust for the NHS and wider social care systems (48); or are generally underserved by the health and care system (49). In doing so, we must integrate psychological support across the healthcare systems linked to maternal and child health, especially for families who experience pregnancy losses (50), those whose babies are born premature or become ill (51), or whose babies die (30, 52), as these parents and families require additional psychological support as they access other parts of the healthcare system such as Neonatal Intensive Care Units [NICU; (30)] or perinatal bereavement care services (53).
4.2.2. Parity of esteem in mental and physical healthcare with an emphasis on specialist perinatal services
Protecting healthcare professionals’ emotional wellbeing and capacity, protecting against redeployment, and arguing for a greater representation of minoritised staff are recommended across perinatal mental health services (31, 32), echoing broader calls across all maternity and children's healthcare services (54). A better integration of physical and mental healthcare is also required (39), whilst retaining and improving specialist perinatal mental health services (41). Community, educative, and public health engagement needs targeting to better support marginalised and disadvantaged communities suffering from perinatal mental health problems (33, 35). New and evolving information about the potential negative effects on perinatal mental health, transmitted from leading experts, should be concise, credible, and transparent (24, 25).
4.2.3. Horizon scanning for perinatal mental health research, policy, and practice
Perinatal mental health research covers a broad expanse of time (preconception to post-partum), engages women and their families, and involves many aspects of the healthcare system. The ability to mobilise research using innovative methods and having prompt access to accurate, identifiable routine data is imperative for rapid-response research. The effects of the pandemic on mental health during preconception (55), after an early elective abortion or termination of pregnancy due to foetal anomaly, or following an early pregnancy loss or late perinatal death (30, 36), have yet to be fully understood and should remain areas of priority. Global data may also be useful to understanding best practices in aspects of perinatal mental healthcare that could be applied to the UK NHS context.
5. Conclusion
Post-partum distress was elevated during mandated social distancing restrictions imposed during the COVID-19 pandemic (19, 26). Qualitative and critical review literature contextualised these findings. Specifically, perinatal women struggled to navigate scaled-back maternity care and felt that their experience of maternity had been overshadowed by uncertainties and health anxiety pertaining to the pandemic (24, 25, 28, 31, 33). For families facing additional adversities (e.g., those experiencing domestic abuse and violence), the depletion of face-to-face care proved a particularly grievous threat to wellbeing (35). Finally, The Postpartum Specific Anxiety Scale—Research Short Form was produced and validated in English for use in global crises (23), allowing for a rapid assessment of post-partum anxiety in future global health crises.
Recommendations for immediate action were suggested under aspects of care to retain, reintroduce, and to remove. Maintaining access to essential reproductive and perinatal health services (37, 38), ensuring quality healthcare delivery (28, 31, 33), and giving perinatal mental health parity of esteem with physical health concerns (39), as well as providing specialist, tailored services for perinatal women (40–42), are recommended for retention as we recover and re-build services after the pandemic. Remote care should be retained (32, 33) but not at the expense of face-to-face consultation (24, 25, 35), nor should it be the dominant provision. Partners and family members, who women and birthing people want to be present, should be prioritised in healthcare settings (28, 31). Reinstating trust in the professional judgement of healthcare staff (32), ensuring adequate and timely communication amongst central NHS management, individual trusts, and healthcare professionals (31), and protecting staff from unnecessary redeployment (28, 31) are recommended for reinstation, whilst recognising the importance of social care being able to visit families rather than offering remote assessments and follow-up. Blanket policies made without considering demographic and accessibility variation should be ceased (30, 33, 56). Efforts should be made to investigate the long-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on women, birthing people, and their families.
It is envisioned that this statement will provide a foundation for future research, policy implications, and service provision and care practices in perinatal mental health as we emerge from the pandemic, recover our healthcare systems and services, and build back a better provision for perinatal mental healthcare in the future. The services of the future must be resilient, adaptable, tensile, and plastic enough to weather future health system shocks when they inevitably arise—in order to provide the safest, most up-to-date, and best possible perinatal mental healthcare in the future.
Acknowledgments
We would like to acknowledge The PIVOT-AL National Collaborative (https://www.pivotal-collab.co.uk/) for allowing a focus in part to be placed on perinatal mental health at the inaugural policy dissemination meeting of 22 September 22 at The Royal Society of Medicine, London, UK. We would also like to thank the following colleagues for their input and advice at various points during some or all parts of this work, including the grant application, the studies related to this work, and/or the synthesis of this work: Abigail Easter & Rosanna Hildersley (King's College London); Mary Adams (The University of Manchester); and Elizabeth J. Harris (University of Liverpool). Abigail Easter and Mary Adams were also part of the original funding bid.
Funding Statement
The authors declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
This consensus statement was funded by the Society for Reproductive & Infant Psychology Research Development Workshop Grant (ref:- SRIP/DWA/01; Title: “Lockdown Babies & Lockdown Blues: Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Maternal Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic”).
Author contributions
LJ: Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing, Data curation, Formal Analysis, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Visualisation. MG: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Validation. EP: Writing – review & editing, Project administration. KB: Writing – review & editing, Investigation. MO: Writing – review & editing, Investigation. CS: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. SMD: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. KDB: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. FEK-N: Writing – review & editing, Investigation. SP: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. SW: Writing – review & editing, Investigation. LB: Writing – review & editing, Investigation. NK: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. DR: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. LEC: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. LDP: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. VF: Funding acquisition, Investigation, Writing – review & editing. JMH: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. EM: Funding acquisition, Investigation, Writing – review & editing. MN: Funding acquisition, Investigation, Writing – review & editing. CAW: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. JAH: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. LMH: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. JS: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Investigation. LAM: Funding acquisition, Investigation, Writing – review & editing. KSS: Investigation, Writing – review & editing. SAS: Conceptualisation, Data curation, Formal Analysis, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Visualisation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing.
Conflict of interest
SAS (King's College London) is in receipt of a Personal Doctoral Fellowship from the NIHR ARC South London Capacity Building Theme [NIHR-INF-2170]. KDB (King's College London) is in receipt of an NIHR Doctoral Research Fellowship [NIHR302565]. CAW (King's College London) is supported by the NIHR as an Academic Clinical Lecturer. MN and JS (King's College London) are currently supported by the National Institute for Health Research Applied Research Collaboration South London [NIHR ARC South London] at King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. CS (The International Stillbirth Alliance) is a Trustee for Mothers for Mothers, a perinatal mental health charity. VF (University of Liverpool) and KSS (University of the West of England Bristol) are currently serving committee members of the Society for Reproductive & Infant Psychology, with VF being a core officer (Treasurer) and KSS being the Communications Officer and one of the co-ordinators for the Research Development Workshop Grant scheme.
The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Some of the authors declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision.
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