AJN July Issue: Postpartum Depression, Red Flags for Back Pain in the ED, More

“The deeper into the swamp we walked, the greater the stillness. Negativity and angst dissolved. Silence seeped into our spines, relaxing our amplified neural conversations and untying cranky muscles.”—Pamela Sturtevant in her Reflections essay, “Of Swamps and Pandemics”

The July issue of AJN is now live. Here’s what’s new. Some articles may be free only to subscribers.

CE: Assessing Back Pain in Patients Presenting to the ED

This article describes the red flags that can alert clinicians to serious underlying conditions in patients who seek emergency care for back pain.

CE: Postpartum Depression: A Nurse’s Guide

The author presents the latest information on this debilitating mood disorder, including risk factors; consequences for the mother, partner, and baby; and screening and treatment options.

Legal Clinic: Crisis Standards of Care

The author discusses the ethical issues that arise when the standards of care shift from conventional to crisis and explains the legal implications for nurses. […]

2021-06-30T09:52:35-04:00June 30th, 2021|Nursing|0 Comments

Taking Postpartum Mood Disorders Seriously

By Jacob Molyneux, AJN senior editor

Durer, Melancolia/Wikimedia Commons Durer, Melancolia/Wikimedia Commons

Last week, you probably heard that a 34-year-old mother was shot and killed by police after a car chase that ended with her trying to ram her car through White House barriers, her infant child still strapped in a car seat in the back.

Miriam Carey’s mother told reporters that her daughter was suffering from postpartum depression, though a number of commentators have pointed out that the extremity of her apparent delusions and the violence of her behavior suggest the more severe condition called postpartum psychosis (especially if it turns out that her condition was not chronic but instead began after she’d given birth).

Some estimates of the rate of major or minor depression in new mothers are as high as nearly 20%. AJN published a feature article (free until November 8) on this topic several years ago. The article describes postpartum depression and several related conditions (postpartum psychosis, panic attacks, PTSD, etc.) and discusses prevalence, risk factors, symptoms, diagnosis, interventions, and the potential long-term effects on children.

Postpartum depression can be powerful and hard to face, as it comes at a time that often combines social isolation with the expectation that […]

Angelina, Florence, End-of-Life Care, Nursing History, Postpartum Depression: A Web Roundup

By Jacob Molyneux, AJN senior editor/blog editor

In the news today we have an op-ed piece in the New York Times by Angelina Jolie about her rationale for getting a double mastectomy. There are sure to be many reactions to this disclosure, with many offering praise for her frankness about her decision. There may also be some who disagree with her decision to take this preventive step because she has the BRCA1 gene, which sharply increases her risk of getting breast cancer. Jolie’s perspective seems to be one of empowerment for women rather than a sense of helplessness or sorrow. Though Jolie’s circumstances are hardly universal in terms of the cushion provided by her great wealth, it’s hard not to admire the strength it takes to see things in such a positive light: “Life comes with many challenges,” she writes. “The ones that should not scare us are the ones we can take on and take control of.”

MarchCoverIt’s come to our attention that, in honor of Nurses Week, the American Antiquarian Society blog, PastIsPresent.org, put together an interesting collection of items related to nursing from its mid-19th century archives, leading their post with a mention of AJN‘s March cover, which featured a vintage illustration, “A Map of the Open Country of  Woman’s Heart.”

A recent post we ran about the fading away of certain nursing blogs gets a mention from PixelRN, who has […]

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