Perinatal psychology is a new section of clinical (medical) psychology. Lecture: Perinatal psychology and psychiatry Perinatal pathopsychology

  1. History of the development of perinatology.
  2. Perinatal psychology.
  3. Perinatal psychiatry. The concept of diathesis.
  4. Diagnosis of neuropsychiatric disorders at an early age.

G. J. Craig determined perinatology(Greek peri - around, around; Lat. natus - birth). as “a branch of medicine that studies the health, diseases and methods of treating children in a time perspective, including conception, the prenatal period, childbirth and the first months of the postnatal period.” The perinatal period lasts from the 28th week of human intrauterine life to the 7th day of life after birth. Interest in new science is largely due to the need to find ways to stop the growing trend in the number of newborns with neuropsychiatric disorders. There are many reasons for this phenomenon: advances in medicine, leading to a decrease in the mortality rate of children with pathologies that in past years were incompatible with life, and unsatisfactory psychoprophylactic work with pregnant women, and errors in obstetric care, and environmental deterioration, and the growth of drug addiction. The development of perinatology in Russia and Western countries differed significantly. Widespread in the West psychoanalytically oriented research in perinatology. In the 1920s, psychoanalysis was attacked in Russia and it was banned as “propaganda of bourgeois ideology.” In 1924, the State Psychoanalytic Institute was closed, and in 1940, the director of the institute, I. D. Ermakov, was arrested and later died in the camp. In 1948, the famous psychiatrist Professor A. S. Chistovich was dismissed from the Leningrad Military Medical Academy for a lecture on dream analysis. In the Soviet Union, conception, pregnancy, and childbirth were viewed in the light of the prevailing ideas of nervism as a set of unconditioned and conditioned reflexes associated with instinctive activity. The psychology of pregnancy has been studied only from the perspective teachings of I. P. Pavlov. On its basis, I. Z. Velvovsky and his colleagues developed and implemented in 1949 “psychoprophylactic method of labor pain relief.” Mother-child relationships were studied in Soviet child psychology by L. S. Vygotsky and his students, but outside of perinatology (the mother, as a representative of the human race, as a subject of cognitive activity). The founders of perinatology in our country are deservedly considered N. L. Garmashova and N. N. Konstantinova (1985).

Research activity in this area continues to increase. In St. Petersburg, on March 20-22, 1997, a conference was held on issues of perinatology, at which it was decided to create the Association of Perinatal Psychology and Medicine of Russia. Since then, conferences have been held annually in Russia, bringing together obstetricians-gynecologists, neonatologists, neurologists, psychiatrists, psychotherapists and psychologists.

Perinatal psychology- This is an area of ​​psychological science that studies the patterns of human mental development determined by interaction with the mother at the earliest stages of his ontogenesis from conception to the first months of life after birth. The duration of the postnatal period, included in the sphere of interest of perinatologists, is assessed differently by different authors. However, if we consider the main features of the perinatal period to be the symbiotic relationship between mother and child, the child’s inability to distinguish himself from the surrounding world, that is, the absence of clear bodily and mental boundaries, the lack of independence of his psyche, then this period can be expanded as much as possible before the emergence of self-awareness, that is approximately up to three years of life. The founder of the theory of transactional analysis wrote about the influence of psychosocial factors on conception, on the formation of mental functions and the development of the personality of the unborn child. E. Bern(1972). He believed that “the situation of a person’s conception can greatly influence his fate” - this “rudimentary attitude”, i.e. the situation of childbirth can be the result of chance, passion, love, violence, deception, cunning or indifference - any of these options must be analyzed. E. Bern highlighted "generic scenarios". He considered the most common scenarios to be “origin” and “crippled mother.” The first is based on the child’s doubts that his parents are real, the second is based on the child’s knowledge of how difficult the birth was for the mother. E. Bern attaches great importance to the order of birth, given names and surnames.

Another, also widespread in Western countries, is the direction of perinatal psychology, in which the mother-child connection is interpreted as imprint form. The way mother communicated with her newborn child in the first hours of life has a great influence on their subsequent interaction.

Back in 1966, P. G. Svetlov established critical periods of ontogenesis:

· implantation period (5-6 days after conception);

· period of placenta development (4-6 weeks of pregnancy);

· The 20-24th weeks of pregnancy are also critical, since it is at this time that the rapid formation of many body systems takes place, acquiring by the end of this period the character characteristic of newborns [Anokhin P.K., 1966; Bodyazhina V.I., 1967].



The condition of a pregnant woman during critical periods can significantly influence the characteristics of the developing mental functions of the unborn child, and therefore largely determine his life scenario. The uterus represents the first ecological niche of humans. A woman experiences gestational dominant in the brain. There are physiological and psychological components of gestational dominance. The physiological and psychological components are respectively determined by biological or mental changes occurring in a woman’s body aimed at bearing, giving birth and nursing a child. The psychological component of gestational dominance is of particular interest to perinatal psychologists. 5 types of PCGD have been identified:

1. Optimal type PKGD is observed in women who treat their pregnancy responsibly, but without excessive anxiety. In these cases, as a rule, family relationships are harmonious, pregnancy is desired by both spouses. The optimal type contributes to the formation of a harmonious type of family upbringing of a child.

2. Hypogestognosic type often occurs in women who have not completed their studies and are passionate about work. Among them there are both young students and women who will soon be or have already turned 30 years old. The first ones do not want to take academic leave, they continue to take exams, attend discos, play sports, and go hiking. Their pregnancies are often unplanned. Women of the second subgroup, as a rule, already have a profession, are passionate about work, and often occupy leadership positions. They plan a pregnancy because they rightly fear that the risk of complications increases with age. The most common types of family upbringing are: hypoprotection, emotional rejection, underdeveloped parental feelings.

3. Euphoric type observed in women with hysterical personality traits, as well as in long-term infertility patients. Often pregnancy becomes a means of manipulation, a way to change relationships with a husband, and achieve mercantile goals. The euphoric type corresponds to an expansion of the sphere of parental feelings for the child, indulgent hyperprotection, and preference for children's qualities.

4. Anxious type characterized high level anxiety in pregnant women, which affects her somatic condition. Anxiety may be completely justified (the presence of acute or chronic diseases, disharmonious relationships in the family, unsatisfactory material and living conditions, etc.). In some cases, a pregnant woman either overestimates the existing problems or cannot explain what the anxiety is associated with, which is accompanied by hypochondriasis. With this type, most often in family education a dominant hyperprotection is formed, and increased moral responsibility is often noted. The mother's educational insecurity is expressed.

5. Depressive type manifests itself, first of all, in a sharply reduced mood in pregnant women. A woman who dreamed of a child may begin to claim that now she does not want one, does not believe in her ability to bear and give birth to a healthy child, and is afraid of dying in childbirth. Dysmorphomanic ideas often arise. The woman believes that pregnancy has “disfigured her” and is afraid of being abandoned by her husband. In severe cases, overvalued and sometimes delusional hypochondriacal ideas, ideas of self-deprecation with suicidal tendencies appear. There is emotional rejection of the child and cruel treatment of him.

Childbirth is a severe physical and mental trauma for a child, accompanied by a threat to life. This echoes the statement of K. Nogpeu (1946) that the horror experienced by a person being born and the experience from the first seconds of existence of a feeling of hostility in the world form “basic anxiety,” the level of which predetermines the person’s future actions. K. Nogpeu identifies three main types of behavioral strategies associated with basal anxiety:

  1. desire for people;
  2. desire from people (independence);
  3. desire against people (aggression).

Glad scientists agree with the existence hypothetical dynamic matrices, controlling processes related to the perinatal level of the unconscious, and name them basic perinatal matrices(BPM) on St. Grof.

  1. Biological basis first perinatal matrix is the experience of the initial unity of the fetus and mother in the period of ideal intrauterine existence.
  2. Empirical pattern second perinatal matrix refers to the very beginning of biological birth, to its first clinical stage. With the full development of this stage, the fetus is periodically compressed by uterine spasms, but the cervix is ​​still closed, there is no way out. The child experiences a feeling of increasing anxiety associated with the impending mortal danger, aggravated by the fact that it is impossible to determine the source of the danger.
  3. Third perinatal matrix reflects the second clinical stage of biological labor. At this stage, uterine contractions continue, but the cervix is ​​already open. This allows the fetus to constantly move along the birth canal, which is accompanied by severe mechanical compression, suffocation, and often contact with biological materials (blood, urine, mucus, feces). All this happens in context desperate fight for survival. The situation does not seem hopeless.
  4. Fourth Perinatal Matrix associated with the final stage of labor, with the immediate birth of a child. believes that the act of birth is liberation and, at the same time, an irrevocable rejection of the past. The joy of liberation is combined with anxiety: after intrauterine darkness, the child encounters bright light for the first time, the cutting of the umbilical cord ends the bodily connection with the mother, and the child becomes anatomically independent. Physical and mental trauma, associated with a threat to life, with a sharp change in living conditions, largely determines the further development of the child.

After childbirth, the process of adaptation of the child to new conditions begins. If during childbirth the child can receive and, as a rule, receives acute psychological trauma, then if the attitude towards it is incorrect in the postnatal period, the baby may end up into a chronic traumatic situation. As a result of research, it has been established that the relationship between mother and child develops during the first three months of life and determines the quality of their attachment at the end of the year and beyond.

M. Einsfort was able to identify three types of behavior in children when communicating with their mother:

Type A. Avoidant attachment - occurs in approximately 21.5% of cases. It is characterized by the fact that the child does not pay attention to the mother’s leaving the room and then to her return and does not seek contact with her. He does not make contact even when his mother begins to flirt with him.

Type IN. Secure attachment- occurs more often than others (66%). It is characterized by the fact that the child feels comfortable in the presence of the mother. If she leaves, the child begins to worry, stops research activities. When the mother returns, she seeks contact with her and, having established it, quickly calms down and continues her studies again.

Type WITH. Ambivalent attachment - occurs in approximately 12.5% ​​of cases. Even in the presence of the mother, the child remains anxious. When she leaves, anxiety increases. When she returns, the baby strives for her, but resists contact. If his mother picks him up, he breaks away.

PERINATAL PSYCHIATRY. For more than 10 years now, in our country and even earlier abroad, a new branch of psychotherapy and psychiatry has emerged, specializing in serving young children. childhood. Under early age understand

  • neonatal period (from 0 to 1 month of life),
  • infant period (from 1 month to 1 year of life)
  • the period of early childhood itself (from 1 to 3 years of life).

Perinatal psychiatry- a section of child psychiatry devoted to the study of etiology, pathogenesis, clinical picture and prevalence, as well as the development of methods for diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitation and prevention of mental disorders of children that arise in the earliest stages of ontogenesis from conception to the first months of life after birth in the context of interaction between the child and the mother and her mental state.

In many ways, the development of micropsychiatry was predetermined by the successes of child psychoanalysis (A. Freud, M. Klein, D. Bowlby, D. Vinicott, R. A. Spitz). The most consistent studies of children from the group high risk on mental pathology are carried out by the American researcher V. Fish, who began observing children born to parents with schizophrenia (from the day of their birth) in 1952. The developmental disorders that she was able to establish in children in the first 2 years of life were ration, or PDM ) and the syndrome of “pathologically calm children”.

In Russia, interest in mental disorders of children early age appeared around the 50s of the XX century separate works such famous child psychiatrists as G. E. Sukhareva, T. P. Simeon, S. S. Mnukhin, M. Sh. Vrono, G. V. Kozlovskaya, O. V. Bazhenova. In domestic child psychiatry in Lately a set of signs characterizing a predisposition to mental pathology is designated by the term "mental diathesis". These can be short-term stops in development, jumps and “pseudo-delays”. In these cases there is developmental dissociation. Epidemiological studies (1985-1992) showed that the prevalence of schizotypal diathesis in young children is 1,6 %.

Clinical manifestations schizotypal diathesis.(mental features of schizotypal diathesis are based on observation and examination using the GNOM 1 technique of children with schizophrenic parents in infancy and children under 3 years of age). Already at the early stages of ontogenesis in children, psychical deviations in the psychobiological systems mother - child, sleep - wakefulness and in food rituals that form the basis of the preverbal behavior of the newborn. Developmental disorders are expressed in the form of 4 groups of disorders: 1) disharmony of psychophysical development; 2) irregularity or uneven development; 3) developmental dissociation; 4) deficiency of mental manifestations.

Psychopathology of early age has the following features: mosaic clinical symptoms in the form of a combination of mental disorders with manifestations of developmental disorders; “coherence” of mental disorders with neurological disorders; coexistence of positive and negative symptoms; rudimentary psychopathological phenomena (microsymptoms), transient clinical phenomena.

Children experience disorders in all areas of the body's vital functions. In the instinctive-vegetative sphere this is expressed by dissomnias, perverted reactions to hunger and microclimatic stimuli. There is an absence or decrease in the “food dominant” in eating behavior, a peak symptom, pathological cravings, a decrease and perversion of the instinct of self-preservation, with simultaneous reactions of panic, conservatism and rigidity of protective rituals, the phenomenon of identity. As a rule, the listed disorders develop against the background of various somatovegetative dysfunctions. The described disorders can be noted starting from the 2nd month of life. Emotional sphere : from the first 2 months of a child’s life, emotional disturbances are also noted. They are manifested by distortion of the maturation of the formula of the revitalization complex, emotional rigidity and the prevalence of the negative pole of mood, the absence or weakness of emotional resonance, exhaustion of emotional reactions, their inadequacy and paradoxicality. Against this background general characteristics emotional response in children from infancy, more pronounced dysthymia, dysphoria, and less often hypomania, fears, and panic reactions (mainly nocturnal) are noted. Signs of depression are especially common: depression with phobias, masked by a somatovegetative component, with persistent weight loss and anorexia, an endogenous mood rhythm. Among the wide variety of depressive reactions, two relatively defined variants have been identified - “infantile depression” (after birth distress) and “deprivation depression”.

Cognitive disorders most often expressed in a distortion of gaming activity in the form of stereotypical rigid gaming manipulations with non-gaming objects. The structure of cognitive disorders also includes symptoms of distortion of a child’s self-awareness and sense of self. This manifests itself in the form of persistent pathological fantasizing with reincarnation and loss of self-awareness as a child, as well as violations of gender identification at an older age (3-4 years).

Also characteristic attention disorders observed from the 1st month of a child’s life. They are expressed by a frozen “doll” look or a look “to nowhere”, which is usually associated with the phenomena of “withdrawal” (without disorders of consciousness) in the form of short “disconnections” from the environment. Among attention disorders, the phenomenon of “hypermetamorphosis” (over-attention) and selectivity of attention are observed. In these cases, concentration of attention is both fleeting in a forced situation and rigid in spontaneous activity.

Social behavior disorders are manifested by a delay and distortion of neatness and self-care skills, as well as stereotypy of behavior in the form of meaningless rituals when falling asleep, eating, dressing, and playing. Communication disorders manifested by a negative attitude towards the mother or an ambivalent symbiotic relationship with her, the phenomenon of protodiacrisis and fear of people (anthropophobia) with simultaneous indifference to them in general. Quite often, autistic behavior is observed, which, traced from the first months of life, becomes more pronounced by the age of 1 year and older, reaching the degree of “pseudo-blindness” and “pseudo-deafness.” Disorders of communication function play an important role speech disorders: true and pseudo speech delays, as well as selective mutism, echolalia, speech stereotypies, neologisms, “stammers” and disorders such as “stuttering”.

Among motor disorders The most frequently observed are microcatatonic symptoms and phenomena related to specific neurological pathology.

Neurological manifestations schizotypal diathesis. In the 1st year of life, the following phenomena are already quite clearly visible: violations of adaptive reactions in the vegetative-instinctive sphere with hypersensitivity to sensory stimuli, violation of orienting reflexes; formation of diffuse muscle hypotonia and decreased motor activity in the absence of focal motor symptoms.

From the first year of life the following are determined: neurological disorders: hydrocephalus syndrome; “gaze ataxia”, instability of gaze during fixation, insufficiency of friendly movements eyeballs, convergences, divergences, oculogyric crises; suprasegmental lesions of VII, IX, XII pairs of cranial nerves, expressed in disturbances in the process of development of complex complex acts of chewing, swallowing, expressive facial expressions, speech; muscle hypotonia in combination with dynamic muscular dystonia; change in general motor activity; violation of the concordance of left- and right-sided orientation of movements; hypomimia and orofacial hyperkinesis; hypotonic-hyperkinetic and hypokinetic-rigid disorders; dyspraxic disorders; motor stereotypies; ataxic syndromes of the developmental period; disturbances in tempo and general expressiveness of speech; speech development dissociation; cortical dysarthria during speech development; tactile and sensory hypo- and hypersensitivity; sleep disorders, night screams; hyperventilation disorders, heart rate arrhythmia; distal hyperhidrosis; transient miosis, anisocoria. A special neurological status is formed that does not fit into the framework of any of the known neurological syndromes. According to EEG data, in children at high risk of developing schizophrenia due to varying degrees the severity of immaturity of bioelectrical activity, signs of pathological electrogenesis were identified in the form of hypersynchrony of physiological wave forms and abnormal activity “burst” activity.

After 3 years of age, if the schizotypal diathesis remains quite pronounced, it begins to gradually transform into schizoid personality traits from character accentuations (an extreme variant of the norm) to pronounced schizoidia, sometimes with outpost symptoms of endogenous psychosis, but without signs of manifestation of the disease. It is possible to transform schizotypal diathesis into early childhood autism and schizophrenia, as well as its full compensation before practical recovery. In this sense, the first option is naturally more favorable, although its greater severity does not always mean an unfavorable prognosis.

Pathopsychology (from the Greek pathos - suffering, illness) is a branch of clinical psychology that studies the patterns of disintegration of mental activity and personality traits in comparison with the patterns of the formation and course of mental processes in the norm.

Pathopsychology is one of the intensively and fruitfully developing areas of psychology.

The founder of Russian pathopsychology, Zeigarnik, is a student of Levin, a world-famous German psychologist. She developed the theoretical foundations of pathopsychology, described disorders of mental processes, and formulated the principles of work of a pathopsychologist. Scientific and practical activities were continued by students and followers: Polyakov, S. Ya. Rubinshtein, Sokolova, Spivakovskaya, Nikolaeva, Tkhostov, Bratus and others.

Clinical psychopathology examines, identifies, describes and systematizes the manifestations of disturbed mental functions, while pathopsychology uses psychological methods to reveal the nature of the course and structural features of mental processes leading to disorders observed in the clinic. Although pathopsychology has become more widely used in psychiatric clinics, it is currently methodological techniques are used not only in psychiatry. Accounting for shifts in mental state the patient, changes in his performance, his personal characteristics become necessary in therapeutic, surgical clinics and other areas of medicine.

Knowledge of pathopsychology is important for psychologists of any specialty and specialization, since a psychologist’s professional communication with people does not exclude meeting with a mentally ill person.

In this regard, it should be emphasized that on the border between psychology and pathopsychology lies a problem that is so relevant for social practice and especially for a number of its areas, as the question of the norm, that is, normal mental development. In pathopsychology, in determining the norm and mental health, they usually adhere to the position World Organization healthcare, the norm is understood as “... not only the absence of disease, but a state of physical, social and mental well-being.”

In pathopsychology, ideas about pathopsychological syndromes of disorders of the cognitive, motivational-volitional and personal spheres have been developed in mental illness(Polyakov, Kudryavtsev, Bleicher, etc.).

According to Korsakova, a “clinical-psychological syndrome” is a naturally occurring combination of symptoms of a disorder of cognitive processes or personality, which is based on the insufficiency of the link that unites them in the systemic-structural structure of the psyche caused by the disease process. The author considers the clinical and psychological syndrome within the framework of two approaches - pathopsychological and neuropsychological. In pathopsychology, the central place is occupied by the search for a common link in the violation of higher mental functions, which underlies the development of individual symptoms during the implementation of such functions. For example, a syndrome-forming radical in schizophrenia may be a violation of motivation, the consequence of which is changes (or features) in thinking, perception, memory, etc., characteristic of this disease.

As Polyakov writes, the clinical-psychological syndrome does not differ from the clinical-psychopathological one, but has a different content. “If clinical (psychopathological) studies reveal patterns of manifestations of disturbed mental processes, then experimental psychological studies must answer the question: how the course (that is, the structure) of the mental processes themselves is disturbed.”

Of a number of psychopathological syndromes, the following are of greatest clinical importance (Bleicher, Kruk):

Schizophrenic or dissociative symptom complex (F20-F29) - consists of such personal-motivational disorders as a change in the structure of the hierarchy of motives, a violation of the purposefulness of thinking (reasoning, diversity, etc.); emotional-volitional disorders (flattening and dissociation of emotions, parabulia, etc.), changes in self-esteem and self-awareness (autism, alienation, etc.);

Psychopathic (personality-abnormal) symptom complex (F60-F69) - consists of emotional-volitional disorders, changes in the structure of the hierarchy of motives, inadequacy of the level of aspirations and self-esteem, disturbances in catathymic type thinking, impairments in forecasting and reliance on past experience (in the clinic - accentuated and psychopathic personality and psychogenic reactions caused largely by abnormal soil) (F43);

Organic (exo- and endogenous) (F00-F09) symptom complexes - consist of symptoms of decreased intelligence, disintegration of the system of previous knowledge and experience, impaired memory, attention, and the operational side of thinking; instability of emotions; reduction of critical abilities (in the clinic this corresponds to exogenous-organic brain lesions - cerebral atherosclerosis (I67.2); consequences of traumatic brain injuries (F06); substance abuse (F13-F19) and other diseases, as well as “endogenous-organic" disorders type of true epilepsy (G40), primary atrophic processes in the brain (G31);

Oligophrenic symptom complex (F70-F79) - consists of an inability to learn, form concepts, abstraction, deficit general information and knowledge, primitiveness and concreteness of thinking, increased suggestibility and emotional disorders.

You should also indicate the symptom complex of psychogenic disorganization, characteristic of reactive psychoses (F23).

Pathopsychological syndrome plays a significant role as a link in nosological and functional diagnostics.

Pathopsychology is a psychological science, and therefore its problems, prospects and achievements cannot be considered in isolation from the development and state of general psychology, psychological knowledge in general.

Dobryakov I.V. (Saint Petersburg)

Annotation. The article provides a definition of a new section of clinical (medical) psychology - perinatal psychology, describes its main features and tasks, shows the relevance of the development of perinatal psychology and the introduction of its achievements into practice.

Keywords: clinical (medical) psychology, perinatal, dyad, biopsychosocial approach.

At the beginning of the twentieth century V.M. Bekhterev, who combined the talent of an outstanding clinical psychiatrist, psychotherapist, and neurologist with deep knowledge in the field of morphology, psychology, and physiology, developed and introduced into practice a new scientific direction: psychoneurology. It meets modern requirements for comprehensive interdisciplinary study nervous system and the psyche of a healthy and sick person. In created by V.M. At the Bekhterev Research Institute, in addition to departments engaged in medical research in the field of neurology, psychiatry, and psychology, a social psychoneurology sector was formed in 1932. Thus, the concept of psychoneurology V.M. Bekhterev included biopsychosocial triad. At the institute, which bears his name after the death of its creator, treatment methods have been developed and continue to be improved, combining both biological and sociopsychological influences with a differentiated observation system. They are considered as a complex dynamic system of interconnected components (medical, psychological, social) aimed at restoring the patient’s personal and social status. Ideas by V.M. Bekhterev, despite the changing, often very difficult political situations, was successfully developed by his students and followers (E.S. Averbukh, L.I. Wasserman, R.Ya. Golant, M.M. Kabanov, B.D. Karvasarsky, A. A.F. Lazursky, A.E. Lichko, S.S. Mnukhin, V.N. Myasishchev, Y.V. Popov, T.Ya. Khvilivitsky, etc.).

Guided by his ideas, M.M. Kabanov formulated the principles of rehabilitation in psychoneurology:

The principle of unity of biological and psychosocial influences;

The principle of versatility of efforts and influences when implementing a rehabilitation program;

Partnership principle;

The principle of gradation (transition) of applied efforts, ongoing influences and activities.

Pioneering works of V.M. Bekhterev and his students made it possible to increase the efficiency of working with patients suffering from nervous and mental illnesses. The need to introduce such an approach into all areas of medicine was obvious. G. Engel played a major role in this, developing an approach called "biopsychosocial". He argued that the clinician needs to consider not only the biological, but also the psychological and social aspects of the disease. Only then will he be able to correctly understand the cause of the patient’s suffering, offer adequate treatment and win the patient’s trust. His holistic model became an alternative to the generally accepted biomedical approach that had reigned supreme in industrial societies since the mid-20th century. The speed of spread of Angel's ideas in various fields of medicine was different, which is associated with the specifics of understanding the mutual influence of psychological, biological and social factors, identifying patterns, theoretical justification and testing in practice.

The introduction of a biopsychosocial approach to obstetrics has met and continues to meet resistance from a number of doctors. Meanwhile, neglect of psychological and social factors has led and continues to lead to the currently recognized unconstructive features of providing assistance to pregnant women and women in labor. The most famous of them and previously widely practiced include a categorical ban on visits by relatives to women in maternity hospitals, separation of mother and child immediately after childbirth, etc. The urgent need to introduce a biopsychosocial approach into obstetric practice was the reason for the emergence of a new section of clinical (medical) psychology - perinatal psychology, which differs from its other sections in the features of its subject and the specifics of the range of phenomena studied.

Medical psychology- one of the main applied branches of psychological science, the purpose of which is to apply a variety of psychological knowledge in the field of medical activities (health care, disease prevention, diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitation), in medical research. In addition, the area of ​​interest of medical psychology includes the relationships that arise between all participants in the process of providing medical care. In the Russian Federation, in 2000, the Ministry of Education, by order No. 686, approved the specialty “clinical psychology” (022700). An accepted definition is that clinical psychology is a broad-profile specialty that is intersectoral in nature and involved in solving a set of problems in the healthcare system, public education and social assistance to the population. Medical psychology has especially close connections with psychotherapy and psychiatry.

The branch of medical (clinical) psychology is perinatal psychology, since at all stages of the reproductive function (conception, pregnancy, childbirth, baby care) a person needs medical examination, observation, and sometimes treatment. First of all, it is closely related to obstetrics, but no less important are its relationships with psychiatry And psychotherapy. In the process of conception, during pregnancy, in feeding and caring for a child, a person experiences strong both positive and negative emotions. Pregnancy, whether desired or not, as well as the birth of a child, are accompanied by heavy loads on all systems of a woman’s body, which can affect the state of her health, the development of the child, lead to asthenia, increased anxiety, the emergence of fears, and depressive experiences. Pregnancy and childbirth certainly entail changes in a woman’s attitude towards herself, towards others, in relation to the attitude of others towards her, that is, changes in her personality. There is also a change in the social status of the spouses who become mother and father. Thus, the appearance of a new member in the family inevitably leads to a restructuring of the family system and changes marital relationships. All of the above explains why during pregnancy and the birth of a child, the risk of the emergence or exacerbation of family problems, somatic and neuropsychic disorders in both spouses, but especially in the woman, sharply increases. At conception, the two organisms of mother and child begin to live a common life, forming a dyad. A woman’s entire body is radically restructured in order to optimally ensure the two of them can function together. For this purpose, an additional common organ is formed - the placenta. Dominant states that consistently arise in connection with reproductive function and replace each other in a woman’s body, determined by biological (primarily hormonal) changes, psychological and social factors, are called maternal dominant. Maternal dominance includes a physiological component and a psychological component. They are respectively determined by biological or mental changes that occur in a woman, aimed at bearing, and then at giving birth and nursing a child.

Gestational dominant(Latin: gestatio - pregnancy, dominans - dominant) ensures that all reactions of the body are directed towards creating optimal conditions for the development of the prenate. Psychological component of gestational dominance is a set of mental self-regulation mechanisms that are activated when pregnancy occurs and form behavioral stereotypes in a pregnant woman aimed at preserving gestation and creating conditions for the development of prenate. Features of the psychological component of gestational dominance are manifested in pregnancy-related changes in a woman’s system of relationships. We have identified five options for its formation: optimal, hypogestognosic, euphoric, anxious, depressive. The optimal option is favorable both for the course of pregnancy and childbirth, and for the formation of bonding after childbirth, for the development of the baby. Women who show signs of euphoric, hypogestognosic, anxious, euphoric variants of the psychological component of the gestational dominant need observation, since they may experience neuropsychic and somatic disorders, or the risk of their occurrence is increased. Options for the psychological component of the gestational dominant may change during pregnancy depending on the gestational age, the somatic state of the woman, the situation in the family, relationships with the doctor, etc. This makes it possible to correct the psychological component of the gestational dominant, sets specialists the task of conducting a screening psychological examination of pregnant women for early identification of those in need of medical and psychological help, and guides the specialist in what it should be expressed in.

Thus, pregnancy and childbirth are a critical situation for both parents, having all its characteristic features. After all, for parents, the gestation and birth of a child are events that can be dated and localized in time, accompanied by strong, persistent emotional reactions, requiring large expenses and a long time for adaptation. In this regard, professional psychoprophylactic work should be carried out with families expecting the birth of a child. Expectant parents should have access to psychological, psychotherapeutic, and sometimes psychiatric help. It is advisable for such work to be carried out by specialists in healthcare institutions (in perinatal centers, antenatal clinics, maternity homes, children's clinics), and not midwives and psychologists or simply enthusiasts without special clinical training at home or “in hobby groups”. This will ensure the professionalism of the assistance provided and the interaction of specialists.

Perinatal psychology can be defined as a section of clinical psychology involved in solving the psychological problems of providing obstetric-gynecological and perinatal care to the population. The very name “perinatal psychology,” which reflects its essence, contradicts generally accepted obstetric terminology. The word “perinatal” is of mixed Greek and Latin origin: peri- - around (Greek); natus - birth (lat.). In 1973, at the YII World Congress of FIGO (International Federation of Obstetricians and Gynecologists), the definition of the “perinatal period”, according to which it begins, was adopted and included in the international classification of the 10th revision (ICD-10). from 22 completed weeks (154 days) of pregnancy and ends 7 completed days after birth. In obstetrics, perinatal is also often considered to be the period lasting from the 28th week of a person’s intrauterine life to the 7th day of his life after birth. From the point of view of perinatal psychologists, the perinatal period includes the entire prenatal period, the birth itself and the first months after birth. This, in contrast to the understanding of the term by obstetricians, is more consistent with the etymological meaning of the concept and allows us to consider the birth of a child not as a separate event represented by a point on the time axis, but as a long process starting from conception and covering the entire prenatal period, the birth itself and the first months after birth Signs of the perinatal period are:

The presence of a symbiotic relationship between mother and child;

The child’s lack of self-awareness, that is, his inability to distinguish himself from the world around him, to build clear bodily and mental boundaries;

Lack of independence of the child’s psyche, its dependence on the characteristics of the mother’s mental functions.

The activities of a perinatal psychologist are aimed at increasing the mental resources and adaptive capabilities of women and men in the process of implementing the reproductive function, harmonizing family relationships, creating optimal conditions for the development of the prenate and the baby, and protecting the health of women and children.

Object research and psychological impact in perinatal psychology are dynamically developing dyadic systems: marital holon, “pregnant-prenate”, “mother-child”. That is, a perinatal psychologist works with dyads. The essence of the dyadic approach is that the husband and wife are considered as a dyad - the marital holon, and the pregnant woman and prenate, mother and baby, as components of one mother-child system. Within the framework of these systems, their elements interact, develop and acquire a new social status of mother, father, or child. The mother-child dyad is a subsystem of the family, and it is influenced by everything that happens in the family.

The perinatal dyad is a self-developing open structure with complex dynamics regulated by presumably simple, but as yet unknown algorithms of interactions both within the dyad itself and the dyad as a whole with the environment. The result of these processes is difficult to predict: during the perinatal period, the prenate, and then the baby, lives with the mother practically one life and the dynamic structure “surrounding world-mother-prenate” is especially sensitive to any fluctuations. The fact that a woman during the perinatal period becomes part of two dyads at the same time (in one as a wife, in the other as a mother) can lead to conflict situations. Timely detection of the possibility of this and preventing the conflict, helping to resolve it constructively are the tasks of a perinatal psychologist.

Subject The professional activities of a perinatal psychologist can be:

Development of mental processes in the early stages of ontogenesis;

Social and psychological phenomena that appear in women and men in connection with their reproductive function;

Psychological characteristics of relationships in a family expecting the birth of a child or having a small child;

Psychosomatic disorders associated with reproductive processes.

A perinatal psychologist performs a variety of activities: preventive, didactic, advisory, diagnostic, correctional, expert, rehabilitation, research and others.

In addition to the dyadic nature of the object of study, the features of perinatal psychology include the family nature of the problems that it studies; sequential change of tasks related to the stages of family life, stages of implementation of the reproductive function; psychoprophylactic orientation.

The following can be distinguished sections of perinatal psychology:

Psychology of conceiving a child;

Psychology of pregnancy (mother-prenate dyad);

Psychology of the early postnatal period (mother-child dyad);

Psychology of the influence of the course of the perinatal period on mental development in general and on personality development in particular;

Crisis perinatal psychologists (if there is a threat to the health, life of the mother and/or child, death).

Basic tasks of perinatal psychology can be formulated as follows.

1. Determination of the role of psychological (including family) factors in the processes of conception, pregnancy and childbirth; formation of the mother-child dyad; child development in infancy and early childhood.

2. Study of the influence of various diseases of a woman on her attitude towards conception, pregnancy, childbirth; formation of the mother-child dyad; mental development of the prenate/child.

3. Development of psychological research methods adequate for solving problems of perinatal psychology.

4. Creation of methods of early psychological intervention aimed at optimizing the course of the perinatal period and family functioning at the stages of conception, expecting a child and in the postpartum period.

5. Development of methods of psychological and psychotherapeutic assistance in situations of perinatal loss and the birth of a sick child.

6. Solution psychological problems arising in connection with the use modern technologies combating infertility (in vitro fertilization, surrogacy, etc.).

Perinatal psychology develops, therefore it has both permanent specific signs and transient signs that are a sign of the present time:

Dyadic nature of the object (the “pregnant-fetus” or “mother-child” system);

The family nature of the problems it is intended to solve;

Low level of awareness of patients in need of perinatal psychological and psychotherapeutic assistance about the possibility of receiving it;

The need to actively identify those in need of perinatal psychological and psychotherapeutic help, to motivate them to receive it;

Iatrogenic, psychogenic and didactogenic nature of a number of disorders that are an indication for the use of perinatal psychocorrection and psychotherapy;

Insufficient development of the legal framework for the provision of psychological and psychotherapeutic assistance in the event of perinatal losses;

Consecutive change of tasks of perinatal psychocorrection and psychotherapy related to the stages of family life, stages of reproductive function;

The need for close cooperation between a perinatal psychologist, psychotherapist and other specialists (obstetricians-gynecologists, neonatologists, neurologists, etc.);

Preference for short-term psychocorrectional and psychotherapeutic methods;

Lack of specific psychological tools and methodological developments in the field of perinatal psychology and psychotherapy;

Insufficient number of competent perinatal psychologists and psychotherapists;

Preventive orientation of PP and psychotherapy.

A specialist in the field of perinatal psychology needs to obtain special knowledge and master special techniques. This dictates the need to train such specialists in the psychology departments of universities, in the system of postgraduate psychological and medical education. Government agency, in which for the first time in our country training programs and plans for cycles of thematic improvement in the field of perinatal psychology, psychopathology and psychotherapy of psychologists, psychiatrists, psychotherapists, neonatologists were developed, the St. Petersburg medical Academy postgraduate education (now the North-Western State Medical University named after I.I. Mechnikov). The work was carried out and continues at the Department of Child Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Medical Psychology (Head of the Department - Doctor of Medical Sciences, Prof. E.G. Eidemiller).

The development and implementation of perinatal psychological counseling and psychotherapy, aimed at improving the mental state of pregnant women and women in labor, harmonizing relationships in families expecting the birth of a child and raising a baby, is one of the urgent, priority government tasks. Their solution will reduce the number of complications during pregnancy and childbirth, the number of newborns with neuropsychiatric disorders (including by reducing the use of medications).

Literature

1. Arshavsky I.A. The role of the gestational dominant as a factor determining the normal or abnormal development of the embryo // collection. Current issues in obstetrics and gynecology. - M.: 1957. - P. 320-333.

2. Batuev A.S., Sokolova L.V. The doctrine of dominance as theoretical basis formation of the “mother-child” system // Bulletin of Leningrad University, p. 3, 1994b. V. 2 (No. 10). - P. 85-102.

3. Batuev A.S. Psychophysiological nature of the dominant nature of motherhood // “Childhood stress - brain and behavior”: abstracts of scientific and practical reports. conf. - St. Petersburg: International. Foundation "Cultural Initiative", St. Petersburg State University, Russian Academy of Education, 1996. - P. 3-4.

4. Batuev A.S., Sokolova L.V. Biological and social in human nature // “Biosocial nature of motherhood and early childhood”, ed. A.S. Batueva. - St. Petersburg: St. Petersburg Publishing House. Univ., 2007. - P. 8-40.

5. Winnicott D.W. (Winnicott D.W.) Little children and their mothers / trans. from English - M.: Independent company "Class", 1998. - 80 p.

6. Dobryakov I.V. Perinatal family psychotherapy // “Child in modern world. Childhood and creativity": abstracts of reports. 7th International Conference. - St. Petersburg: UNESCO, Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation, ed. St. Petersburg State Technical University, 2000. - pp. 4-8.

7. Dobryakov I.V. Biopsychosocial approach in perinatal psychology // Bulletin of the Kyrgyz-Russian University: scientific journal. - KRSU, volume 7, no. 5, 2007. - pp. 36-38.

8. Dobryakov I.V. Perinatal psychology. - St. Petersburg: Peter, 2010. - 272 p.

9. Dobryakov I.V., Molchanova E.S. Perinatal psychology and fractal geometry: searching for analogies. - Bulletin of KRSU. - 2008. - T. 8. - No. 4. - P. 143-147.

10. Dobryakov I.V., Malashonkova E.A. Stages of formation of the marital holon and the Laya complex // Proceedings of the symposium " Man's health as a problem of psychoanalytic, psychotherapeutic, sociological research" (02/17/2011). - M., 2011. - pp. 33-34.

11. Dobryakov I.V., Nikolskaya I.M. Clinical family psychology and perinatal psychology as sections of medical (clinical) psychology // Social and clinical psychiatry, 2011. - T. 21, No. 2. - P. 104-108.

12. Kabanov M.M. The concept of rehabilitation is the leading direction of activity of the Psychoneurological Institute named after. V.M. Bekhtereva // Rehabilitation therapy and rehabilitation of patients with nervous and mental illnesses: Proceedings of the conference November 23-24, 1982 - L., 1982. - P. 5-15.

13. Kabanov M.M. Psychosocial rehabilitation and social psychiatry. - St. Petersburg, 1998. - 256 p.

14. Karvasarsky B.D. Clinical psychology: textbook / ed. B.D. Karvasarsky. - St. Petersburg: Peter, 2002. - 960 p.

15. Craig G. (Craig G.) Developmental psychology: 7th international edition. - St. Petersburg: Publishing house. "Peter", 2000. - 992 p.

16. Mukhamedrakhimov R.Zh. Mother and baby: psychological interaction. - St. Petersburg: Publishing house. St. Petersburg State University, 1999. - 288 p.

17. Neznanov M.A., Akimenko A.A., Kotsyubinsky A.P. School V.M. Bekhterev: from psychoneurology to the biopsychosocial paradigm. - St. Petersburg: VVM, 2007. - 248 p.

18. Ukhtomsky A.A. Dominant. - St. Petersburg: Peter, 2002. - 448 p.

19. Filippova G.G. Psychology of motherhood and early ontogenesis. - M.: Life and Thought. 1999. - 192 p.

20. Shabalov N.P. Neonatology, T. 1. - St. Petersburg: Special literature, 1995. - 495 p.

21. Eidemiller E.G., Dobryakov I.V., Nikolskaya I.M. Family diagnosis and family psychotherapy. - St. Petersburg: Rech, 2003. - 337 p.

22. encyclopedic Dictionary medical terms: in 3 volumes / ch. ed. B.V. Petrovsky / T. 2. - M.: Soviet encyclopedia, 1983. - 448 p.

23. Baumann U., Laireiter A.-R. Individualdiagnostik interpersonaler Beziehungen. // In K. Pavlik & M. Amelang (Hrsg.) Ensyklopadie der Psychologie: Grundlagen und Methoden der Differentiellen Psychologie. - Göttingen: Hogrefe, 1995. - Band. 1. - S. 609-643.

24. Dowrick C., May C., Bundred P. The Biopsychosocial Model of General Practice: Rhetoric or Reality // British Journal of General Practice. 1996. Vol. 46. ​​- P. 105-107.

25. Engel G. The need for a new medical model: A challenge for biomedicine // Science. 1977. No. 196. - P. 129-136.

26. Engel G.L. The clinical application of the biopsychosocial model // The American Journal of Psychiatry. May 1980. Vol. 137. P. - 535-544.

27. Field T.M. (1984) Early interactions between infants and their postpartum depressed mothers. Infant Behavior and Development 7. - pp. 517-522.

28. Filipp S.H. (Hrsg.) Kritische Lebensereignisse. - Weinheim: Belts Psychologie Verlags Union, 1990, (2. Aufl.). - S. 92-103.

29. Lebovici S. La theorie de l’attachment et la psychanalyse contemporaine // Psychiatrie de l’enfant, XXXIY, 2, 1991. - pp. 387-412.

30. Stern D.N. (1977) The first relationship: Mother and infant. Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press. // Affect attunement // Frontiers of infant psychiatry. - Vol. 2, New York, Basic Books, 1984. - pp. 74-85.

UDC 159.922.7-053.31

Dobryakov I.V. Perinatal psychology - a new section of clinical (medical) psychology [Electronic resource] // Medical psychology in Russia: electronic. scientific magazine - 2012. - N 5 (16)..mm.yyyy).

All elements of the description are necessary and comply with GOST R 7.0.5-2008 “Bibliographic reference” (entered into force on 01/01/2009). Date of access [in the format day-month-year = hh.mm.yyyy] - the date when you accessed the document and it was available.