A compassionate, evidence-based approach to care
There is a version of new parenthood that gets a lot of airtime. The one where everything is hard but also beautiful, where the love is overwhelming in the best way, where the exhaustion is real but manageable, where the person on the other side of it is recognizably themselves. That version exists. But it is not the only version, and for a significant number of people, it is not the one they are living.
For many women and birthing people, the perinatal period, which includes pregnancy and the months following birth, brings a level of emotional difficulty that they were not prepared for and that nobody around them seems to fully understand. The anxiety that makes it impossible to sleep even when the baby is sleeping. The sadness that does not lift. The intrusive thoughts that feel frightening and shameful to admit. The disconnection from a baby they expected to feel immediately bonded to. The loss of a sense of self that happened so gradually it was hard to notice until it was significant. The grief of an experience that did not go the way they had hoped or imagined.
These experiences are common, they are clinical, and they are treatable. They are not a reflection of how much someone loves their child or how capable a parent they are. They are signs that the perinatal period has placed demands on a person’s mental health that deserve real support, not reassurance that it will pass.
At Vantage Mental Health, we work with women, birthing people, and their partners across Minnesota who are navigating the emotional complexity of this season of life. We offer in-person care at our clinics in Stillwater, Edina, and St. Anthony, with telehealth available throughout Minnesota for those who need flexibility during this demanding time.
Understanding Perinatal or Maternal Mental Health
Perinatal mental health refers to the emotional and psychological wellbeing of people during pregnancy and in the period following birth, typically considered to extend through the first year postpartum, though the effects of perinatal mental health conditions can persist well beyond that timeframe if left unaddressed.
Postpartum depression is the most widely recognized perinatal mental health condition, but it is far from the only one, and the term itself is often used too narrowly. The full spectrum of perinatal mood and anxiety disorders includes conditions that begin during pregnancy as well as after birth, and encompasses anxiety, OCD, PTSD, and psychosis in addition to depression. The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, one of the most commonly used screening tools, specifically includes anxiety items because anxiety is at least as prevalent as depression in the perinatal period, and often more so.
Approximately one in five women experience a perinatal mood or anxiety disorder, making this the most common complication of pregnancy and childbirth. Despite that prevalence, these conditions remain significantly underdiagnosed and undertreated. Many people do not disclose what they are experiencing because they are afraid of being judged as bad mothers, because they do not recognize their symptoms as clinical, or because they have been told that what they are feeling is normal and will pass.
Some of it is normal. The baby blues, characterized by mood fluctuations, tearfulness, and emotional sensitivity in the first two weeks postpartum, affect the majority of new parents and typically resolve on their own as hormone levels stabilize. What distinguishes a perinatal mood or anxiety disorder is persistence, intensity, and functional impairment. When symptoms do not resolve, when they interfere with the ability to care for the baby or oneself, when they feel consuming rather than manageable, that is when professional support is needed and effective.
Pregnancy loss, including miscarriage, stillbirth, and termination for medical reasons, also falls within the scope of perinatal mental health and carries its own particular grief that is frequently minimized or invisible in the broader culture. The loss of a pregnancy is a real loss, and the people who experience it deserve real support.
What Perinatal or Maternal Mental Health Concerns Can Look Like
Perinatal mental health conditions do not always look the way people expect. Postpartum depression in particular is frequently not the tearful, visibly sad presentation that most people picture. It often looks like numbness, irritability, disconnection, or a relentless anxiety that will not quiet.
Some of the ways perinatal mental health concerns commonly present include:
- Persistent sadness, emptiness, or a feeling that something is wrong that does not lift after the first two weeks postpartum
- Anxiety that feels constant, uncontrollable, or significantly worse than anything experienced before pregnancy
- Intrusive thoughts about harm coming to the baby, including thoughts that feel frightening and ego-dystonic, meaning they are unwanted and deeply distressing rather than reflecting any actual desire or intention
- Difficulty bonding with the baby or a persistent feeling of disconnection or emotional flatness
- Panic attacks during pregnancy or postpartum
- Obsessive thoughts or compulsive checking behaviors related to the baby's safety or health
- Rage or irritability that feels out of proportion and that may be more prominent than sadness
- Difficulty sleeping even when the opportunity is there, beyond what is explained by the baby's schedule
- Intrusive memories or avoidance related to a traumatic birth experience
- A loss of sense of self, of identity, of who you are outside of this new role
- Grief following pregnancy loss, fertility challenges, or a birth experience that did not go as hoped
- Fear of being alone with the baby, or conversely, a desperate need to not be separated from them
That last point deserves the same direct acknowledgment it did on the men’s mental health page. Thoughts of suicide or self-harm in the perinatal period are more common than most people realize, they are a medical concern that warrants immediate support, and they do not make someone a bad parent. They make someone a person who is suffering and who needs help. If you are having those thoughts, please reach out.
What to Expect From Treatment
The first session is a place to tell the truth about how things have actually been, not the version that sounds manageable, not the one that reassures everyone that you are fine. The one that is actually true. For many people who come in for perinatal mental health support, that is the first time they have been able to do that, and it matters more than it might seem.
Your therapist will want to understand your full picture, your history, your pregnancy and birth experience if relevant, what has been happening since, what support you have at home, what feels most overwhelming right now, and what you are hoping to find in this space. They will also ask directly about thoughts of self-harm or suicide, not because they expect the worst, but because those questions need to be asked and answered honestly for good care to happen.
Treatment for perinatal mental health concerns draws on several approaches with strong evidence bases. Interpersonal therapy, which focuses on the relationship changes, role transitions, and grief that the perinatal period so often involves, is one of the most well-researched treatments for perinatal depression specifically. Cognitive behavioral therapy helps identify and challenge the thought patterns that drive perinatal anxiety and depression, including the perfectionism, catastrophizing, and self-blame that are particularly common in new parents. EMDR and trauma-focused approaches address birth trauma and pregnancy loss in a way that reduces the intrusive symptoms and emotional reactivity that can persist long after the event. For people experiencing postpartum OCD, exposure and response prevention is the most evidence-based approach and can be highly effective when delivered by a therapist who understands the specific way OCD presents in the perinatal context.
Medication is sometimes part of perinatal mental health treatment, and when it is, coordination between your therapist and your prescribing provider is an important part of the care. Decisions about medication during pregnancy and breastfeeding involve specific clinical considerations, and those conversations are held with care and without pressure toward any particular outcome. At Vantage, we support integrated care when that is what is needed.
Partners and support people are sometimes included in sessions when that is clinically useful, particularly when the adjustment to parenthood is affecting the relationship or when the partner is navigating their own perinatal mental health concerns.
The Benefits of Perinatal Mental Health Support
Perinatal mental health treatment is not just about the person seeking care. The research makes clear that it affects the whole family system.
- Protects the wellbeing of both parent and child. Untreated perinatal mental health conditions affect not only the parent but also infant development, attachment, and long-term child outcomes. Effective treatment during this window produces benefits that extend far beyond the immediate presenting symptoms, representing one of the highest-impact interventions available in terms of reach.
- Grounded in robust clinical evidence. Interpersonal therapy for perinatal depression, CBT for perinatal anxiety, ERP for postpartum OCD, and trauma-focused approaches for birth trauma all have substantial research support. Perinatal mental health is a well-developed clinical specialty with clear evidence-based protocols, and treatment works.
- Reduces shame and restores a sense of self. One of the most consistent things people describe after effective perinatal mental health treatment is not just symptom reduction but a restoration of their sense of themselves as a capable person and parent. The shame that so often accompanies these struggles is one of their most painful features, and it responds to the right kind of support.
- Strengthens the parent-infant relationship. Perinatal depression and anxiety can interfere with attunement and bonding in ways that create real distress for parents. Treatment that addresses those symptoms allows parents to be more present, more responsive, and more able to enjoy their relationship with their child, which matters deeply for both of them.
Who This Treatment May Be Right For
- Are pregnant and experiencing anxiety, depression, or significant emotional distress that is affecting daily functioning or the ability to care for themselves
- Are postpartum and find that what they are feeling does not resemble the baby blues, has not resolved after the first two weeks, or has intensified rather than improved over time
- Are experiencing intrusive thoughts about their baby that feel frightening and shameful and have not been able to tell anyone about them
- Have been through a traumatic birth experience and find that they are still being affected by it in ways they did not expect
- Have experienced pregnancy loss, miscarriage, stillbirth, or termination for medical reasons and want a space to grieve that loss fully and without minimization
- Are struggling with the loss of identity that often accompanies the transition to parenthood and are not sure who they are in this new chapter
- Are a partner of someone experiencing perinatal mental health difficulties and want support for their own adjustment or to better understand how to help
- Went through a difficult perinatal period that was never fully addressed and find that it is still affecting them, even years later
- Are navigating fertility challenges, pregnancy after loss, or a high-risk pregnancy and are carrying more fear and grief than the people around them seem to understand
- Simply want support from someone who understands the specific emotional landscape of this season of life and will not minimize what they are going through
Ready to Take the Next Step?
This season of life is hard enough without carrying it alone, and you deserve support that actually understands what you are going through. Our team works with women, birthing people, and their partners across Minnesota, with in-person appointments available in Stillwater, Edina, and St. Anthony, and telehealth throughout the state including Northeast Minneapolis, Roseville, and the broader Twin Cities metro. Telehealth is available specifically because we understand that getting to an office with a newborn, or while pregnant, or while managing the demands of early parenthood, is genuinely difficult. We will meet you where you are, in every sense of that phrase.