Abstract
Universal assessment practices aimed at assessing the mental states of women during pregnancy and early parenthood have led to the perinatal period being viewed as synonymous with psychological vulnerability. In addition, women themselves are encouraged to engage in taxing self-monitoring processes aimed at recognising potential ‘signs’ of mental distress, with friends and family also urged to participate. Although both professional and ‘lay’ assessments of maternal mental health are usually imbued with notions of ‘care’ and ‘best interests’, medical and/or therapeutic interventions for mothers who have been identified as distressed frequently locate distress as a biological process and as evidence of individual ‘dysfunction’, thus failing to recognise or address the social drivers of distress, including isolation, gendered violence, and poverty. Further, the highly gendered nexus between maternal mental health and child development theorisations has led to a discourse of ‘compulsory happiness’ for pregnant women and new mothers, whereby they are obliged to manage and monitor their emotional states, regardless of their interpersonal and socio-political circumstances.
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Notes
- 1.
Pregnancy and childbirth are experiences that people of all genders experience. However, aside from the discussion on male PND, the screening tools for perinatal mental health that are analysed in this chapter have been constructed to assess perinatal mental health outcomes in women, as they are underpinned by cissexist assumptions about gender.
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Tseris, E. (2022). The Psychiatric Surveillance of Pregnancy and Early Parenting. In: Harbusch, M. (eds) Troubled Persons Industries. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-83745-7_8
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