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Maternal Mental Health after Custody Loss and Death of a Child: A Retrospective Cohort Study Using Linkable Administrative Data

  • Mar 20
  • 2 min read

Abstract

Objective:

The objective was to compare mental illness diagnoses and treatment use among mothers who lost custody of their child through involvement with child protection services and those seen in mothers dealing with the death of a child.


Methods:

We studied mental health outcomes of a cohort of women whose first child was born in Manitoba, Canada between 1 April 1997 and 31 March 2015. Of these women, 5,792 had a child taken into care, and 1,143 mothers experienced the death of a child (<18 y old) before 31 March 2015. Adjusted relative rates (ARR) of 3 mental health diagnoses and 3 mental health treatment use outcomes between these 2 groups were examined.


Results:

Mothers with a child taken into care had significantly greater ARR of depression (ARR = 1.90; 95% CI, 1.82 to 1.98), anxiety (ARR = 2.51; 95% CI, 2.40 to 2.63), substance use (ARR = 8.54; 95% CI, 7.49 to 9.74), physician visits for mental illness (ARR = 3.01; 95% CI, 2.91 to 3.12), and psychotropic medication use (ARR = 4.95; 95% CI, 4.85 to 5.06) in the years after custody loss compared with mothers who experienced the death of a child.


Conclusion:

Losing custody of a child to child protection services is associated with significantly worse maternal mental health than experiencing the death of a child. Greater acknowledgement and supportive services should be provided to mothers experiencing the loss of a child through the involvement of child protection services.


Keywords: cohort study, epidemiology, maternal mental health, child protection services, child death, linkable administrative data




CITE

Wall-Wieler E, Roos LL, Bolton J, Brownell M, Nickel N, Chateau D. Maternal Mental Health after Custody Loss and Death of a Child: A Retrospective Cohort Study Using Linkable Administrative Data. Can J Psychiatry. 2018 May;63(5):322-328. doi: 10.1177/0706743717738494.

Comments


 

KEY FINDINGS

Le placement familial traditionnel à long terme ne semble pas améliorer les chances de vie des enfants maltraités (Brännström et al. 2020).

La perte de la garde d’un enfant au profit des services de protection de l’enfance est associée à une santé mentale maternelle significativement plus dégradée que celle observée après le décès d’un enfant (Wall-Wieler, 2018).

Le placement hors du domicile a aggravé l’état de santé des enfants ainsi que leurs trajectoires dans le système judiciaire (Brownell et al., 2024).

Le placement hors du domicile durant l’enfance est associé à un doublement du risque de maladie coronarienne et d’accident vasculaire cérébral entre 18 et 48 ans (Hjern et al., 2024).

Les mères dont un enfant a été placé par les services de protection de l’enfance présentent des taux de mortalité plus élevés que ceux observés chez leurs sœurs biologiques n’ayant pas connu un tel placement (Wall-Wieler et al. 2018).

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