Research focusing on fathers' perinatal mental health is recent and less substantial
than the research focusing on mothers. Nevertheless, mental health problems and disorders
are common in fathers during the perinatal period and should be the focus of attention,
namely in planning promotion, preventive, and remedial interventions, with expected
benefits for all of the family over time.
The major purpose and potential contribution of this Research Topic is to share conceptual,
scientific and practical essays that can inform health care systems and policies about
the best practices in the field. The proposals included in this Research Topic reflect
the diversity of research aims among studies of fathers' perinatal mental health,
namely the development and validation of assessment measures for a range of issues
including involvement with the infant (Webb et al.; Pinto et al.), the study of the
impact of parental relationship satisfaction on infant development (Nicolaus et al.)
and associated processes, such as paternal bonding (Bieleninik et al.; Schaber et
al.) and paternal postpartum mental health (Macdonald et al.). The effectiveness and
scope of interventions aiming to promote fathers' psychological adjustment and family
functioning during parenthood (Rodrigues et al.; Tandon et al.; Battle et al.) and
the analysis of the neurobiological correlates of fatherhood (Sobral et al.) are other
relevant emerging areas of research.
Consistent evidence supports the impact of fathers' mental disorders on children's
mental health and development, on mothers' mental health, and on the overall family
functioning. The importance of considering fathers' mental health in perinatal health
care and treatments is also consistently suggested. Nevertheless, further research
is needed to provide better tools to screen and assess fathers, focusing their specific
needs and psychological experience specificities across different cultures. Moreover,
a better understanding of the mechanisms and processes involved in father' perinatal
psychological (mal)adjustment and parenting should be obtained.
More than being seen exclusively as a source of maternal support, empirical evidence
strongly indicates that fathers should be seen as a developing individual, with a
particular experience of the phenomena that occur during pregnancy and after childbirth,
as well as of the parental role. Using a developmental approach, both the research
and clinical practice should promote early (prenatal) identification of fathers at
psychosocial risk, exploring the risk and protective factors of their mental health
and well-being. Processes associated to father's mental health, as well as processes
explaining the impact of father's mental health on children's development and mental
health are also essential. Evidence-based interventions addressing the mental health
and specific needs of fathers, but also considering all members of the family system,
promoting communication, cohesion and mutual support, are still needed. Such promotion,
preventive, and remedial interventions are expected to benefit both father's and children's
developmental trajectories over time, as well as interrupt the intergenerational transmission
of psychosocial risk. At this level, exploring the neurobiological processes involved
in parenting is essential and should be prioritized.
In sum, despite the important steps that have been taken in the last two decades in
the study and intervention in the perinatal mental health of parents, there is still
a long way to go. And at this level, fathers are undoubtedly one of the main actors
to consider!
Author Contributions
All authors listed have made a substantial, direct, and intellectual contribution
to the work and approved it for publication.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial
or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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