BJPsych Open (Jul 2023)

Conceptual frameworks of barriers and facilitators to perinatal mental healthcare: the MATRIx models

  • Rebecca Webb,
  • Elizabeth Ford,
  • Abigail Easter,
  • Judy Shakespeare,
  • Jennifer Holly,
  • Sally Hogg,
  • Rose Coates,
  • Susan Ayers,
  • the MATRIx Study Team

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.510
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Background Perinatal mental health (PMH) problems are a leading cause of maternal death and increase the risk of poor outcomes for women and their families. It is therefore important to identify the barriers and facilitators to implementing and accessing PMH care. Aims To develop a conceptual framework of barriers and facilitators to PMH care to inform PMH services. Method Relevant literature was systematically identified, categorised and mapped onto the framework. The framework was then validated through evaluating confidence with the evidence base and feedback from stakeholders (women and families, health professionals, commissioners and policy makers). Results Barriers and facilitators to PMH care were identified at seven levels: individual (e.g. beliefs about mental illness), health professional (e.g. confidence addressing perinatal mental illness), interpersonal (e.g. relationship between women and health professionals), organisational (e.g. continuity of carer), commissioner (e.g. referral pathways), political (e.g. women's economic status) and societal (e.g. stigma). The MATRIx conceptual frameworks provide pictorial representations of 66 barriers and 39 facilitators to PMH care. Conclusions The MATRIx frameworks highlight the complex interplay of individual and system-level factors across different stages of the care pathway that influence women accessing PMH care and effective implementation of PMH services. Recommendations are made for health policy and practice. These include using the conceptual frameworks to inform comprehensive, strategic and evidence-based approaches to PMH care; ensuring care is easy to access and flexible; providing culturally sensitive care; adequate funding of services and quality training for health professionals, with protected time to complete it.

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