June 3, 2025

U.S. moms say their mental health is getting worse

Dr. Kara Zivin discusses new research from Perinatal Mental Health Services and Policy Program’s collaborator Dr. Lindsay Admon with Science News

link to the original article

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During the perinatal period — the time surrounding childbirth — the risk for developing mental health disorders increases for moms. “Mental health conditions are actually a leading component of maternal morbidity and mortality,” says Kara Zivin, a health policy researcher at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. In 2020, at 22.5 percent, mental health conditions topped the list of causes of pregnancy-related deaths up to one year post-partum, according to data from more than 500 such deaths in 38 states.

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And after birth, many moms experiencing mental health symptoms don’t necessarily get diagnosed, many who get diagnosed don’t necessarily get treated and many who get treated may not get effective treatment, Zivin says. “It’s not necessarily surprising that there are struggles with mental health that are persisting.”

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Another key support for maternal health in the United States is the government-sponsored health insurance program Medicaid, which covers about 4 in 10 births. Nearly every state has expanded Medicaid postpartum coverage from 60 days after birth to a full year. Republican members of Congress are proposing massive cuts to the program. Zivin is concerned about potential changes to Medicaid and what that could mean for mothers covered by the program.

For the new study on the mental health of U.S. moms, researchers analyzed data from the annual National Survey of Children’s Health, which asks about children’s and caregivers’ health. The study sample included female biological or adoptive parents who rated their mental health on a four-point scale. Self-reported measures are important for uncovering mental health problems that may not have been diagnosed, Tabb Dina says. The decline in excellent mental health occurred as good mental health rose from 19 to 26 percent.

The study wasn’t designed to look at the reasons why moms report worsening mental health. “Women have so many competing demands: of family, of work, lack of universal childcare, lack of parental leave, economic conditions. There are so many pressures on families,” Zivin says. But more work is needed to understand what has contributed to the trend the study reports, such as whether demands on families have changed over time and the effect of growing awareness of mental health issues, she says.

Mental health disorders can put both moms’ and children’s health at risk. But Zivin says the message shouldn’t be that if a mom has a mental health condition “then your child is doomed to have a bad life. I think that’s where early intervention and appropriate intervention is important.” And going forward, “to not lose sight of the mother just because she’s not pregnant anymore.”

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