Mental Health Support for New and Expectant Mothers
Ministry of HealthSpeakers
Summary
This question concerns Dr Wan Rizal’s inquiry on including mental health support for new and expectant mothers in periodic pregnancy health check-ups. Minister Gan Kim Yong responded that public hospitals already provide routine screening and early intervention, benefiting over 165,000 women since 2007. Multi-disciplinary teams offer psychiatric care and social work assistance to mothers screening positive for depression or anxiety during and after pregnancy. Obstetricians in both sectors identify symptoms, while hospitals like SGH integrate psychiatry clinics within specialist settings to ensure streamlined referrals. Lastly, the Ministry of Health is developing a Child and Maternal Health and Well-being Strategy to further enhance research-based support for mothers.
Transcript
119 Dr Wan Rizal asked the Minister for Health whether there are plans to include mental health support for new and expectant mothers as part of their periodic pregnancy health check-ups.
Mr Gan Kim Yong: A mother’s mental well-being during and after pregnancy has an impact on her pregnancy health and her child’s development. Most new and expectant mothers are managed by the obstetricians during their pregnancy, who play a major role in identifying mental health concerns such as antenatal and postnatal depression symptoms, both in the private and public sectors.
In this regard, our public healthcare institutions run mental health support services for pregnant mothers as part of routine obstetrics care. Since 2007, the KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital (KKH) and National University Hospital (NUH) have been providing screening and early intervention for perinatal mental health conditions. Under the NUH Women’s Emotional Health Service (WEHS), women are screened for depression and severe anxiety during pregnancy. The NUH WEHS and KKH’s Postnatal Depression Intervention Programme (PNDIP) also provide depression and/or severe anxiety screening at two to eight weeks postpartum, during outpatient postnatal reviews at the specialist clinics. As at December 2020, more than 165,000 women have benefited from the WEHS and PNDIP programmes. In addition, the Singapore General Hospital (SGH) has a psychiatry clinic located within the obstetric-gynaecology specialist outpatient clinic and obstetricians who pick up women with antenatal and postnatal depression symptoms can refer them to the psychiatry clinic.
Women who are screened positive for depression will be managed by a multi-disciplinary team comprising a psychiatrist, case manager, occupational therapist and psychologist. The women and their family members will also be given useful contacts and information on managing their emotional health. In addition, mothers who face challenges with finances, family support and caretaking will be referred to the Medical Social Workers, occupational therapists and/or nurses for the relevant assistance. The outcomes in this support system have been positive.
We had earlier announced this year, the plan to develop a Child and Maternal Health and Well-being Strategy. Under this effort, MOH will review how we could better support the mental well-being of new and expectant mothers arising from the latest research and pilots aimed at improving the health outcomes for both the mother and child.