In both her professional and personal life, Dr. Jennifer Payne has seen firsthand the stigma of mental illness.
A professor in the University of Virginia School of Medicineâs psychiatry department, Payne has devoted her career to treating a psychiatric illness that is common during and after pregnancy.
Additionally, her daughter, Amanda, fell ill with schizoaffective disorder at age 15.
Now Payne has made a startling discovery. Her research into depression and pregnancy, she hopes, could help remove the stigma of mental illness once and for all.
A Blood Test for Mental Illness?
Postpartum depression, severe depression after giving birth, is the most common complication of pregnancy. When missed and left untreated, PPD not only threatens the motherâs life and wellbeing, but can significantly impair a childâs development.
Payneâs research is laying the groundwork for a time when a blood test could be used to detect PPD. Doctors now use blood tests for gestational diabetes; this test would work the same way.
Payneâs discovery isnât just a professional achievement. Itâs important to her as a mother.
âWhat is totally exciting as a psychiatrist and the mother of a child with mental illness is what this research does to the stigma associated with psychiatric illness,â she said. âIf we have a blood test for psychiatric illness that we can then prevent, that turns a lot of people on their heads. It dispels the false idea that you just need to pull up your socks and itâs not real.â
Speaking Out to Fight Stigma
As a leading researcher in her field, Payne has published many articles in academic journals. But sheâs so passionate about shedding light on mental illness as a common and treatable medical condition that she wrote a very personal account of her experience with mental illness in the journal .
When her daughter was hospitalized, people told Payne she was âbrave.â She writes: âNobody would have called me brave if my daughter had a brain tumor.
âApparently, it takes courage to reveal to your colleagues, even to your psychiatric colleagues, that your child is mentally ill â as if a serious mental illness in a child or relative is something to be hidden, not discussed.â

