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Psychiatric Training in Perinatal Mental Health Across European Countries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

M. Casanova Dias
Affiliation:
Cardiff University School of Medicine, MRC Center for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, Cardiff, United Kingdom
E. Sonmez
Affiliation:
Marmara University School of Medicine, Istanbul, Turkey
F. Baessler
Affiliation:
Centre for Psychosocial Medicine and Department of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
A. Kanellopoulos
Affiliation:
Mental Health Unit Evgenidion Therapeftirion, National Kapodistrian University Athens, Athens, Greece
S. Naughton
Affiliation:
Psychiatry of Old Age Registrar, Mater Misericordiae University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
M. Pinto Da Costa
Affiliation:
Hospital Magalhaes Lemos, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal Unit for Social and Community Psychiatry, Queen Mary University, London, United Kingdom
H. Ryland
Affiliation:
South West London and St. George's Mental Health NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom
L. De Picker
Affiliation:
University of Antwerp, Collaborative Antwerp Psychiatric Research Unit, Antwerp, Belgium

Abstract

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Introduction

The aim of postgraduate psychiatric training is to prepare psychiatrists to practice independently. The quality of care provided will depend on the training they received. Pregnancy and childbirth (usually called the perinatal period) are a high-risk period for many women with psychiatric problems. An illness episode at that time can have a devastating effect on women and the whole family, including the child's development.

Objectives

To understand how perinatal mental health training is organized within Europe and how it fits in the training curricula.

Methods

The European Federation of Psychiatric Trainees conducts an annual survey of all member country organizations. We have asked respondents if they received training in perinatal psychiatry, whether that was optional or mandatory and what was its duration. Where training in perinatal psychiatry was not available we asked if they felt it should be.

Results

Data will be presented from the 35 countries that responded in the 2016 survey. Six countries reported that training in perinatal mental health is available. But it is mandatory in only one, with the others offering a mix of theoretical and practical optional training. Of the 29 countries that do not offer perinatal psychiatry training, the majority reported it should be offered and mandatory.

Conclusion

There is a gap in the expectations of psychiatrists treating women in pregnancy and after birth, and a widespread lack of training for them to be able to do so effectively.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
Workshop: Mothers with major mental illness and their young infants: Can we meet the challenges?
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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