Health (United Kingdom)
Volume 19, Issue 3, 2015, Pages 318-335

Postpartum depression in refugee and asylum-seeking women in Canada: A critical health psychology perspective (Article)

Brown-Bowers A.* , McShane K. , Wilson-Mitchell K. , Gurevich M.
  • a Ryerson University, Canada
  • b Ryerson University, Canada
  • c Ryerson University, Canada
  • d Ryerson University, Canada

Abstract

Canada has one of the world’s largest refugee resettlement programs in the world. Just over 48 percent of Canadian refugees are women, with many of them of childbearing age and pregnant. Refugee and asylum-seeking women in Canada face a five times greater risk of developing postpartum depression than Canadian-born women. Mainstream psychological approaches to postpartum depression emphasize individual-level risk factors (e.g. hormones, thoughts, emotions) and individualized treatments (e.g. psychotherapy, medication). This conceptualization is problematic when applied to refugee and asylum-seeking women because it fails to acknowledge the migrant experience and the unique set of circumstances from which these women have come. The present theoretical article explores some of the consequences of applying this psychiatric label to the distress experienced by refugee and asylum-seeking women and presents an alternative way of conceptualizing and alleviating this distress. © The Author(s) 2014.

Author Keywords

Asylum-seekers Refugees Critical perspectives Postpartum depression

Index Keywords

puerperal depression refugee medical sociology human epidemiology Refugees Environment ethnology Humans psychology Canada female organization and management adult Social Environment midwife Midwifery Sociology, Medical Depression, Postpartum

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84930456385&doi=10.1177%2f1363459314554315&partnerID=40&md5=731d6261908ef1ae1b59f8d21d08549d

DOI: 10.1177/1363459314554315
ISSN: 13634593
Cited by: 4
Original Language: English