Hospital develops iPhone app to screen for postpartum depression

The app was developed by researchers at a Massachusetts hospital.

"We view this as so intuitive from a public health point of view given the prevalence of postpartum depression in the population," Dr. Lee S. Cohen, director of the hospital’s Ammon-Pinizzotto Center for Women’s Mental Health and professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, told ABC News. "Using apps is part of the fabric of people's day to day lives."

He explained, "A woman can fill out a screen, see what the score is and get a prompt about the result and then have a resource page on the app to help them."

The hospital’s Perinatal Depression Scale (MGHPDS) features questionnaires about mood, anxiety, sleep and stress that identify symptoms most critical in diagnosing women with postpartum depression ages 18 to 45, Massachusetts General said in a news release Tuesday.

The app utilizes common screening tools like the Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale (a 10-question self-rating scale), but also includes additional targeted questions about symptoms like anxiety, insomnia and perceived stress, Cohen said.

About one in nine women experiences postpartum depression, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Other celebrities including Alanis Morissette and Chrissy Teigen have also been vocal about their struggles with postpartum depression, which experts say can last up to a year after a child's birth.

"I looked at my doctor, and my eyes welled up because I was so tired of being in pain ... Of not having the energy to take my baby for a stroll," Teigen, who gave birth to daughter Luna in April 2016. wrote in Glamour magazine. "My doctor pulled out a book and started listing symptoms. And I was like, 'Yep, yep, yep.' I got my diagnosis: postpartum depression and anxiety."

The app was developed by a team of researchers at the hospital’s Ammon-Pinizzotto Center. It was funded entirely by an anonymous donor described by Cohen as a "grateful patient" who wanted to fund initiatives for depression in women.

"It was a family just saying, 'Thank you,'" Cohen said of the funding for the nearly two-year project. "It was very inspiring to us and really galvanized our team to bring it home and to make it worth their investment."

An Android version of the app is expected to launch later this fall.

For more information on postpartum depression and other conditions that affect mental health, go to MentalHealth.gov.