Financial Times FT.com

Depression ‘more likely’ in pregnancy

By Clive Cookson

Published: April 3 2007 23:09 | Last updated: April 3 2007 23:09

Depression in pregnancy is more common than after giving birth and is a cause of premature birth, infant death and severe childhood illness, a London conference was told yesterday.

A natural increase in stress hormones during pregnancy can trigger depression and increase the risk of a pre-term birth. Although antenatal depression is hardly recognised by the medical profession, treating it could prevent thousands of premature births a year.

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