From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject Tackling Perinatal Mental Health In The US
Date April 3, 2024 8:02 PM
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📢 Join Us for Journal Club on 4/24 📢

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Wednesday, April 3, 2024 | The Latest Research, Commentary, and News from Health Affairs

Dear John,

Join us April 24 for our next virtual Journal Club featuring a deep dive into a paper from our new issue focused on Perinatal Mental Health.

Author Stephanie Hall will discuss antidepressant prescriptions for perinatal anxiety disorders with Laura Tollen.

Register
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In their opening piece in the April Perinatal Mental Health and Well-Being issue, Emily Dossett of the University of Southern California and coauthors provide an overview of the perinatal mental health landscape ([link removed] ) in the United States.

They argue that current approaches to perinatal mental health should acknowledge the broader structural determinants of perinatal mental health for women and birthing people.

Dossett and coauthors advocate for policies that are grounded in a reproductive justice framework.

Among other recommendations, the researchers call for a broadened understanding of perinatal mental health challenges, standardized certifications for perinatal mental health providers, and community-centered payment structures.

For more on the paper, listen to a recent episode of A Health Podyssey featuring Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil and authors Emily Dossett and Karen Tabb Dina.

Read the Article
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Financing Our Future In The Pandemic Agreement And International Health Regulations ([link removed] )

Alexandra Finch et al.

In Memoriam: Remembering The Contributions Of Jeffrey Kelman, MD ([link removed] )

Steven M. Lieberman et al.

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Health Affairs is implementing a new word limit for journal research articles.

Beginning with submissions received on or after April 1, 2024, the word limit will change from 5,000 words, including endnotes, to 3,250, excluding endnotes.

Research papers using both qualitative and quantitative methods will be allowed a word count of 4,000 (excluding endnotes).

For more on this change, check out an article from Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil.

Learn More
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