NorthShore’s perinatal depression program offers an array of innovative services to expectant and new moms suffering from depression, psychosis, or other pregnancy-related mood disorders. Those services include universal depression screening, a round-the-clock hotline staffed by licensed mental health professionals, and access to a wide network of community-based mental health providers. The department also offers training for health care practitioners on the signs and symptoms of perinatal mood disorders, as well as their prevalence and the importance of universal screening. All services are free of charge, which ties into NorthShore’s mission to target underserved populations, says Dr. Jo Kim, the program’s director.
The foundation also helps fund the department’s groundbreaking research on preterm labor. Led by Dr. Emmet Hirsch, a team of researchers seeks to understand the normal physiological processes that initiate labor and compares them to abnormal conditions seen in preterm deliveries. Most recently, Dr. Hirsch’s team has been studying signals from a fetus that when disturbed under certain conditions might trigger labor. Research into those fetal chemicals may eventually lead to treatments that could potentially prevent preterm labor, according to Dr. Richard Silver, chairman of the OB/GYN department.