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30 J.L. & Health 1 (2017)

handle is hein.journals/jlah30 and id is 1 raw text is: 









   SUPPORTING MOTHERS WITH MENTAL ILLNESS: POSTPARTUM
                 MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE LINKAGE
  AS A MATTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND CHILD WELFARE POLICY


         JESSE KROHN, MSED, JD, AND MEREDITH  MATONE, DRPH,  MHS

    I. INTRODUCTION                      .............................................3
    II. CONSEQUENCES   OF TREATMENT DISCONTINUITY.............. 4
  III. MOTHERS   AT HEIGHTENED RISK OF TREATMENT DISCONTINUITY 7
  IV. ROOT   CAUSES  OF TREATMENT DISCONTINUITY ..           ............. 10
  V.  CONCLUSION: POLICY PROBLEMS, POLICY SOLUTIONS.............. 13

  About  the Article

  Through   our work in youth advocacy as, respectively, legal and public health
professionals, we are all too aware of the high levels of health care fragmentation
experienced during pregnancy and postpartum by poor, young mothers of color.
Meredith Matone's research highlights the heightened risk of fragmentation for girls
with histories of child welfare involvement. For example, she found that 66.7% of
young  mothers who had  resided in out-of-home placements and who had taken
antipsychotic medication prior to becoming pregnant failed to fill prescriptions for
antipsychotics in their first postpartum year. Put another way, two-thirds of these
vulnerable young mothers-a far higher proportion than young mothers without
histories of child welfare involvement-were not getting the treatment that they needed
to care for themselves and their children. The very real consequences of this
phenomenon  can be seen in the experiences ofJesse Krohn's clients, several ofwhom
have their stories told here.

   Treatment discontinuity, particularly during the transition to parenthood, places
mothers at risk for poor health outcomes and maladaptive parenting approaches;
threatens the health and safety of infants; and triggers child welfare involvement. This
article explores the negative consequences and root causes of treatment discontinuity,
as well as particularized population vulnerabilities for treatment discontinuity
including, as noted, involvement with child welfare. It will also provide public health
and child welfare policy solutions for reducing treatment discontinuity and improving
mental and physical health outcomes for new mothers and infants.

   The population of mothers at highest risk for postpartum treatment gaps is not
small: more than 40% of Medicaid-financed births to young women aged 15 to 24
occurred in mothers who had a childhood relationship to the child welfare system. It
is unacceptable to be aware of the pervasiveness of this problem, particularly among
intersectionally vulnerable women, and not deploy a targeted and evidence-based
preventative and remedial response.

   About the Authors

   Jesse Krohn has a BA  from Harvard College and an MSEd  and JD from the
University of Pennsylvania. She clerked in the District of Maryland and, beginning as


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