Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Service
    • Advertisement
    Wednesday, July 15
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    ABS Africa TV
    • Breaking News
    • Trending
    • Africa News
    • World News
    • Features
    • Technology
    • More
      • Sports
      • Politics
      • Culture
      • Lifestyle
      • Travel
      • Business
      • Environment
      • Legal
      • Health
      • Cameroon
      • Ambazonia
      • AfroSingles
      • Environ/Climate
      • Editorial
      • The Leak Magazine
    • Donate
    Subscription
    ABS Africa TV
    Home»Health»The Missing Specialty in Maternal Mental Health
    Health

    The Missing Specialty in Maternal Mental Health

    Justus AkaminBy Justus AkaminJuly 15, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    The Missing Specialty in Maternal Mental Health
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Post Views: 14
    • What Is Pregnancy?
    • Take our Authoritative Parenting Test
    • Find counselling near me

    Key points

    • The lack of a formal reproductive psychiatry subspecialty results in too few skilled practitioners.
    • Only about 500 reproductive psychiatrists are practicing in the United States today.
    • Efforts are underway to establish an accredited reproductive psychiatry fellowship.

    Awareness of perinatal and postpartum mental health issues is growing dramatically. Yet there remains no formal reproductive psychiatry certification for medical school residents. The lack of training means that only about 500 reproductive psychiatrists nationwide care for the roughly 800,000 women in the U.S. who experience maternal mental health complications each year.

    Approximately 13 percent of pregnant women take selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), but about 80 percent of women are prescribed these SSRIs by OB/GYNs, Dr. Maria Muzik, a professor of psychiatry and obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Michigan and the medical director of its Perinatal Psychiatry Clinic, told me recently in a sit-down interview. This lack of a formal reproductive psychiatry subspecialty means “[many psychiatrists] might have never heard about reproductive psychiatry,” Muzik said. “They might never have treated pregnant people adequately.” The result is a dangerous lack of specialized care.

    What Happens When Expertise Is Missing

    These statistics aren’t abstract to me. In 2020, trying to prepare for a potential pregnancy, I began a taper on a selective-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) associated with a small, increased risk of heart defects in a baby. My husband and I had consulted a reproductive psychiatrist about my medication regimen’s safety in pregnancy, but this specialist’s recommendations had gotten lost in the shuffle between her and my regular psychiatrist. I ended up communicating them to the latter according to memory. My psychiatrist told me that we’d start a taper on the SNRI—at a rate she thought safe, not what the specialist had suggested.

    Six to eight weeks later, I was a wreck: episodes of wild sobbing, deep depression, even suicidality. One day, as I was standing at the kitchen counter making dinner, my mind kept flashing to the safe upstairs, where I keep my medication—I knew it was unlocked. I pictured pouring pills into my hand, swallowing one after another after another. All I wanted to do was sleep forever.

    I couldn’t do this to my beloved husband. I walked into his home office, where he sat in front of his multiple screens, one of our rescue cats in his lap: “Babe, I think I need to check myself into a hospital.”

    I had experienced a care gap, a dangerous one. Even at the time, I understood that what had happened wasn’t simply a bad medication taper. It was what happens when highly specialized care is unavailable or poorly coordinated.

    The Problem With One-Size-Fits-All Advice

    Mothers with mental health issues are at higher risk for preterm delivery, preeclampsia, and low birth weight. Untreated depression in pregnancy is even associated with behavioral problems and developmental or social-emotional delays in children as they grow. Together, suicide and homicide are the leading causes of maternal mortality, with approximately one in 20 maternal deaths occurring by suicide.

    The statistics on pregnancy and depression illustrate the dangerous lack of specialized maternal mental health care. The number of peripartum women who take antidepressants is significant. Yet many women discontinue these medications during pregnancy: fully half, according to a 2024 study. Misconceptions about the safety of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and SNRIs abound among the public but also among healthcare professionals.

    • What Is Pregnancy?
    • Take our Authoritative Parenting Test
    • Find counselling near me

    I certainly thought I needed to stop many of my medications, convinced they’d hurt a baby. And perhaps the specialist had advised me to taper off the antidepressant. But perhaps she hadn’t. Perhaps she weighed the risks vs. the benefits, as skillful reproductive psychiatrists do, and decided that the dangers to me of discontinuing the antidepressant outweighed any small risk to a baby.

    This is the question Muzik asks herself in every case she treats: “I always ask, ‘Is the medicine effective and necessary?’ And then I ask myself, ‘What is the adverse effect of this medicine on the person, and in case of pregnancy, also on pregnancy outcomes and the [fetus]?’ And it has to be a right balance. It has to be, as we call it, appropriate risk-benefit ratio.”

    4 in 10 Mothers Report Feeling Unheard During Maternity Care

    Perinatal Mental Health Concerns Are Underreported

    Researchers don’t do gold standard studies on psychotropics in pregnancy: Randomized controlled trials would be unethical in cases of pregnant women. But case reports on psychiatric medication use in pregnancy have been widely gathered for decades, Muzik explained. And the data is largely in about antidepressants: “I would say that in general we can say we have now a reasonable amount of data suggesting that certain medicines, like antidepressants, if dosed appropriately [in serious depression], are beneficial and also safe,” Muzik said.

    Psychiatric Medication in Pregnancy Requires Specialized Care

    Despite this growing evidence of safety and efficacy, antidepressant and other psychiatric medication use must be monitored carefully in pregnancy. Pregnancy causes significant physiological changes that alter how medications are absorbed and metabolized. Some women might need higher dosing or dosing schedule changes.

    Pregnancies in cases of more serious mental health issues, such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, require a high level of specialized psychiatric and obstetric care, but also sometimes wraparound social and family case-management. In this area, Muzik is also a leader: She has developed the Strong Roots Curricula, group-based interventions for parents that include perinatal dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), attachment-based parenting psychoeducation, and enhanced social support designed to address trauma-induced barriers to healthy parenting.

    The Consequences of an Inadequate System

    The human cost of the current reproductive psychiatrist shortage is the failure to address these complex needs. Medical professionals untrained in reproductive psychiatry sometimes encourage abrupt discontinuation of psychiatric medications, perhaps even all that a woman takes, as an OB/GYN once advised me. Women sometimes receive conflicting advice as they cycle through appointments: The OB/GYN says one thing, the psychiatrist another, the general practitioner a third.

    Relapses, hospitalizations, and even suicide result from the lack of integrated, accessible, and competent reproductive psychiatric care in the United States today.

    A Path Forward for Maternal Mental Health

    A solution is taking shape, however—a national effort to create a formal reproductive psychiatry subspecialty. Leaders from across the country, including Muzik and led by Dr. Lauren M. Osborne at Weill Cornell Medicine, have formed a task force to establish a year-long, accredited fellowship in the field that would be a part of every residency program across the country. If the effort is successful, psychiatrists sitting for their board exams will also be able to test in a reproductive psychiatry specialty add-on and become formally certified in maternal mental health care, a medical advance that would address the dire shortage of reproductive psychiatrists. The result would be a highly skilled reproductive psychiatry workforce that, in the end, could better care for me and the countless women like me.

    If you or someone you love is contemplating suicide, seek help immediately. For help 24/7 dial 988 for the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, or reach out to the Crisis Text Line by texting TALK to 741741. To find a therapist near you, visitthe Psychology Today Therapy Directory.

    Maternal Mental Health Leadership Alliance. “Perinatal Psychiatry Access Programs Are Addressing the Gap in Maternal Mental Health Care.” April 25, 2024. https://www.mmhla.org/articles/perinatal-psychiatry-access-programsnbsp-closing-the-gap-in-maternal-mental-health-care.

    Field T. Prenatal Depression Risk Factors, Developmental Effects and Interventions: A Review. J Pregnancy Child Health. 2017 Feb;4(1):301. doi: 10.4172/2376-127X.1000301. Epub 2017 Feb 27. PMID: 28702506; PMCID: PMC5502770.

    Suicide Attempts During Pregnancy and the Postpartum Period: Incidence and Risk Factors. January 20, 2026. https://womensmentalhealth.org/posts/suicide-attempts-in-pregnancy-and-postpartum-risk-factors/.

    Dupuis M, Weir KR, Vidonscky Lüthold R, Panchaud A, Baggio S. Social determinants of antidepressant continuation during pregnancy in the USA: findings from the ABCD cohort study. Arch Womens Ment Health. 2024 Dec;27(6):1011-1018. doi: 10.1007/s00737-024-01470-0. Epub 2024 May 14. PMID: 38740587; PMCID: PMC11579052.

    Pinheiro EA, Stika CS. Drugs in pregnancy: Pharmacologic and physiologic changes that affect clinical care. Semin Perinatol. 2020 Apr;44(3):151221. doi: 10.1016/j.semperi.2020.151221. Epub 2020 Jan 25. PMID: 32115202; PMCID: PMC8195457.

    Health Maternal Mental missing Specialty
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Justus Akamin
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Puri Prepares for Jagannath Rath Yatra with Multi

    July 15, 2026

    When democracy needs restraint

    July 15, 2026

    US Ebola Travel Screening Congo Africa

    July 15, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Search
    Latest Post

    Social media ban looming for Europe’s children

    July 15, 2026

    Nigerians finish in top 25 at East Africa Swing golf…

    July 15, 2026

    Cancer kills 26,000 a day, WHO exposes deadly rich-poor survival gap

    July 15, 2026

    Kasese Police Probe Mob Killing of Suspected Thief

    July 15, 2026

    Etihad Airways Ignites a New African Aviation Era With Powerful Fastjet Zimbabwe Partnership Expanding Global Connections, Tourism Growth and Seamless Travel Across Borders

    July 15, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    ABS TV and ABS Network News is a leading Pan-African 24/7 broadcasting network delivering nonstop news, talk shows, lifestyle programs, and digital media content worldwide through Satellite, Streaming Platforms, and Roku TV.
     
    Based in the United States, we connect Africa to the world while empowering creators, journalists, and brands through innovative media and broadcasting services.
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp Instagram

    Our Picks

    Africa News

    Social media ban looming for Europe’s children

    Features

    Nigerians finish in top 25 at East Africa Swing golf…

    Trending

    Cancer kills 26,000 a day, WHO exposes deadly rich-poor survival gap

    Most Popular

    Breaking News

    Kasese Police Probe Mob Killing of Suspected Thief

    Travel

    Etihad Airways Ignites a New African Aviation Era With Powerful Fastjet Zimbabwe Partnership Expanding Global Connections, Tourism Growth and Seamless Travel Across Borders

    Environment

    Climate change is getting worse, but financing faces challenges

    © 2026 Copyright. All Rights Reserved by ABSAFRICATV
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Services

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.