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October 22, 2004|Volume 33, Number 8



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Grant funds research on stress
disorders in pregnant women

Yale received a $5 million grant for what is believed to be a first-of-its-kind study examining a possible link between stress-related psychiatric disorders in pregnancy and low birth weight and premature delivery.

"Historically, there has been concern about psychiatric disorders occurring during the postpartum period, but this has been coupled with the notion that pregnancy protects mothers from becoming ill with a psychiatric illness, including a depressive, anxiety or psychotic disorder," says Kimberly Yonkers, associate professor of psychiatry at the School of Medicine and principal investigator of the study.

"In a report my group recently published we found that the rate of depression was 20% among pregnant women in New Haven prenatal clinics," she notes. "Moreover, of those depressed women, about 20% had suicidal thoughts."

The five-year grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Development will be used to, among other things, screen women for stress-related psychiatric illness. It will also recruit women who have no current or lifetime stress-related illness, such as depression or anxiety. In order to recruit the necessary 3,400 women, about 10,000 pregnant women in Connecticut and western Massachusetts will be screened.

The study also will allow the researchers to look at any possible effects of anti-depressants taken during pregnancy.

"A lot of people argue that you don't want to use anti-depressants during pregnancy," says project director Megan Smith. "This study will allow us to separate out women who are on anti-depressants, and the possible effects on birth weight and pre-term delivery, from women experiencing stress, anxiety and depression."

Those who enroll in the study will be interviewed at their home for 60 to 90 minutes. A follow-up telephone call will be made in the third trimester, and then another call will be made after the baby is born.

For more information about enrolling in the study, call Megan Smith at (203) 764-6621, or send e-mail to pinkandblue@yale.edu.


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

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Benson named to third term as dean of School of Art

Art Stars program brings a twinkle into lives of pediatric patients

Encouraging love of discovery a priority for new Graduate School dean

Yale Endowment gains 19.4%; total assets reach $12.7 billion

Creating a bike-friendly city is graduate student's goal

New Haven's (and Yale's) earliest bikers recalled in 'Bicycle: The History'

Faherty tapped as Yale's top Bulldog -- in virtual world

MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS

Beinecke conference will explore influence of philosopher John Locke

School of Drama to stage historical Shakespearean play

Scenes by Mozart, Verdi and Gilbert & Sullivan to be highlights . . .

Composer and former dean to be lauded with concert

Demetz's contributions to 'culture of peace' recognized

Yale researchers discover cooperative RNA switches in nature

Visiting professor to talk about environment, energy

Oswaldo Rodriguez Roque symposium and lecture . . .

Symposium examined American modernism in the 1930s

Robert Lange, advocated for human subjects in research

Sixteen Yale affiliates win YUWO scholarships

Art and sole

Campus Notes


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