Family and friends should be on the lookout and give support, help and discussion as soon as they notice it.
Transitioning to the role of being a father can be a difficult
journey for a man, just as it is for a woman to become a mother. And it
can hit some men particularly hard.
A new study from Sweden says a significant number of men struggle with this to the extent that they get postnatal depression.
But how many?
Well,
in the group of 447 Swedish fathers who volunteered for the study (and
may therefore not represent your average British dad), a surprising one
in three men were more than a little depressed.
Fewer than one in five of the fathers who were depressed, however, sought help, despite a third having considered self-harming.
During
pregnancy, women in the UK are routinely asked a series of questions
that screens for postnatal depression (which affects up to one in eight
women) but men miss out on that.
It
also seems the standard test used for both females and males is good
for women but not so good for fathers, according to the lead author of
the Swedish study, Elisa Psouni.
Her research shows more – depression in dads
because it adds in an extra score that is more sensitive to male
symptoms of depression such as agitation, anger, irritability, working
longer hours and drinking too much. Considering this, it would seem that
more new dads are struggling than ever before.
Psouni believes that more and more, modern dads face the same problems mothers do – including trying to find work-life balance.
The
fathers who get depressed often have employment or financial issues,
and if their partner is depressed too, their own risk of depression can
double. Lack of sleep, having twins and relationship conflicts all make
things worse.
The knock-on effect is a depressed dad who will play and smile less with his child.
Children
can in turn be deeply affected by their dad’s mental state, displaying
more behavioural problems at the age of seven and poorer wellbeing.
Postnatal
depression in men seems to be spread throughout the first year and
shows up as irritability, poor concentration and disturbed sleep.
Family and friends should be on the lookout and give support, help
and discussion as soon as they notice it. Cognitive behavioural therapy
can also help, as can taking antidepressants .
Psouni
says that if the depression goes unrecognised, “one of most terrible
things is that you catch up with yourself a year later and realise you
have been really down and struggling – and the first year of your
child’s life has gone”.
Get help if you need it.
The Mirror
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