The Effect of _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ on Clinical Diagnosis of Postpartum Depression

# Background The 2022 US Supreme Court decision in _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ eliminated the constitutional right to abortion and activated trigger laws in 21 states, either banning or significantly restricting abortion access. This study estimated changes in postpartum depressio...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Onur Baser, Yuanqing Lu, Facundo Sepulveda, Ariani Alemzadeh, Amy Endrizal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia Data Analytics, LLC 2025-02-01
Series:Journal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.36469/001c.129633
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849336379689926656
author Onur Baser
Yuanqing Lu
Facundo Sepulveda
Ariani Alemzadeh
Amy Endrizal
author_facet Onur Baser
Yuanqing Lu
Facundo Sepulveda
Ariani Alemzadeh
Amy Endrizal
author_sort Onur Baser
collection DOAJ
description # Background The 2022 US Supreme Court decision in _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ eliminated the constitutional right to abortion and activated trigger laws in 21 states, either banning or significantly restricting abortion access. This study estimated changes in postpartum depression (PPD) diagnoses after _Dobbs_ in states with trigger laws vs those without. # Methods Medicaid data from Kythera Labs spanning December 2019 to June 2024 were utilized. Difference-in-difference models assessed changes in PPD diagnosis rates post-_Dobbs_ (21 trigger states, 29 non-trigger states). # Results Women in trigger states were younger (mean, 26.53 vs 27.98 years), more likely to reside in low socioeconomic status areas (41.28% vs 24.42%) and less likely to have obstetrical complications (66.06% vs 77.36%), maternal complications (16.41% vs 18.9%), and lifestyle risk factors (13.58% vs 21.17%). Baseline PPD diagnosis rates were 8.51% in trigger states and 12.66% in non-trigger states. Post-_Dobbs_, PPD diagnosis rates were 10.20% in trigger states and 14.34% in non-trigger states. # Conclusions Overall, women in states with abortion trigger laws experienced a small positive but statistically insignificant increase in PPD diagnoses following _Dobbs_ compared with those in non-trigger states.
format Article
id doaj-art-e4f2c553289b42268be928e553a7272c
institution Kabale University
issn 2327-2236
language English
publishDate 2025-02-01
publisher Columbia Data Analytics, LLC
record_format Article
series Journal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research
spelling doaj-art-e4f2c553289b42268be928e553a7272c2025-08-20T03:44:58ZengColumbia Data Analytics, LLCJournal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research2327-22362025-02-0112110.36469/001c.129633The Effect of _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ on Clinical Diagnosis of Postpartum DepressionOnur BaserYuanqing LuFacundo SepulvedaAriani AlemzadehAmy Endrizal# Background The 2022 US Supreme Court decision in _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ eliminated the constitutional right to abortion and activated trigger laws in 21 states, either banning or significantly restricting abortion access. This study estimated changes in postpartum depression (PPD) diagnoses after _Dobbs_ in states with trigger laws vs those without. # Methods Medicaid data from Kythera Labs spanning December 2019 to June 2024 were utilized. Difference-in-difference models assessed changes in PPD diagnosis rates post-_Dobbs_ (21 trigger states, 29 non-trigger states). # Results Women in trigger states were younger (mean, 26.53 vs 27.98 years), more likely to reside in low socioeconomic status areas (41.28% vs 24.42%) and less likely to have obstetrical complications (66.06% vs 77.36%), maternal complications (16.41% vs 18.9%), and lifestyle risk factors (13.58% vs 21.17%). Baseline PPD diagnosis rates were 8.51% in trigger states and 12.66% in non-trigger states. Post-_Dobbs_, PPD diagnosis rates were 10.20% in trigger states and 14.34% in non-trigger states. # Conclusions Overall, women in states with abortion trigger laws experienced a small positive but statistically insignificant increase in PPD diagnoses following _Dobbs_ compared with those in non-trigger states.https://doi.org/10.36469/001c.129633
spellingShingle Onur Baser
Yuanqing Lu
Facundo Sepulveda
Ariani Alemzadeh
Amy Endrizal
The Effect of _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ on Clinical Diagnosis of Postpartum Depression
Journal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research
title The Effect of _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ on Clinical Diagnosis of Postpartum Depression
title_full The Effect of _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ on Clinical Diagnosis of Postpartum Depression
title_fullStr The Effect of _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ on Clinical Diagnosis of Postpartum Depression
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ on Clinical Diagnosis of Postpartum Depression
title_short The Effect of _Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization_ on Clinical Diagnosis of Postpartum Depression
title_sort effect of dobbs v jackson women s health organization on clinical diagnosis of postpartum depression
url https://doi.org/10.36469/001c.129633
work_keys_str_mv AT onurbaser theeffectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression
AT yuanqinglu theeffectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression
AT facundosepulveda theeffectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression
AT arianialemzadeh theeffectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression
AT amyendrizal theeffectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression
AT onurbaser effectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression
AT yuanqinglu effectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression
AT facundosepulveda effectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression
AT arianialemzadeh effectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression
AT amyendrizal effectofdobbsvjacksonwomenshealthorganizationonclinicaldiagnosisofpostpartumdepression