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Your Wellbeing

The baby has a whole medical team. You need care too, body and mind. This page is yours.

Your checkups Blues vs. PPD Urgent signs Recovery & self-care Get help now
At a glance

You have checkups too

Current guidance (ACOG): contact with your OB or midwife within the first 3 weeks postpartum (not the old "see you at 6 weeks"), and a full visit by 12 weeks, covering physical recovery, mood, feeding, contraception, and any chronic conditions. If your practice hasn't scheduled the early touchpoint, ask for it. ACOG (Committee Opinion 736)

Baby blues vs. postpartum depression

Baby blues (weepiness, mood swings, worry, exhaustion in the first days) hit a large share of new mothers and resolve on their own within days, two weeks at the outside. They're hormone-and-sleep-deprivation weather rather than a disorder. MedlinePlus CDC

Postpartum depression is different: more intense, lasting beyond two weeks, and it can start anytime in the first year. About 1 in 8 mothers report symptoms. Look for: excessive crying, anger, withdrawal from family, loss of interest in things you loved, sleep or appetite changes way beyond newborn logistics, feeling numb toward or doubting your ability to care for the baby, shame or hopelessness. CDC MedlinePlus

Two things every family should know: PPD is a medical condition, not a character flaw, and it's treatable. Therapy works, medication works (including options compatible with breastfeeding), and the earlier it's named, the shorter it runs. Partners: you will often see it before she does. See the dads' guide for what to watch and say.

Postpartum anxiety (racing intrusive worry, inability to sleep even when the baby sleeps, constant dread) is just as real and just as treatable; mention it at any visit, yours or the baby's. Pediatricians screen parents for exactly this.

Postpartum psychosis: rare, and a 911 emergency Confusion, hallucinations, paranoia, or dangerous behavior in the days-to-weeks after birth is a medical emergency: call 911 or go to the ER. It is rare, it is no one's fault, and it is treatable, but it cannot wait. MedlinePlus

Urgent physical warning signs, up to a year after birth

Seek medical care immediately for any of these (CDC "Hear Her" campaign): CDC

Say the sentence "I gave birth on [date]" to any medical professional you talk to in the first year. It changes what they check for, and the CDC built an entire campaign around getting patients and clinicians to say and hear it.

Recovery & caring for yourself

Idea credit: Healthy Parents Healthy Children (Alberta Health Services), whose postpartum self-care guidance is some of the most humane public-health writing anywhere: rest counts in 15-minute increments ("you might not get a whole night off, but if you can fit in 15 minutes for a shower, that's important"), recovery is graduated, and accepting help is a skill (no shame in it).

And the relationship: you're both underslept and someone's always holding a baby. The couples who fare best treat the load as shared-by-default, with shifts, explicit handoffs, and both partners competent at every job. The dads & partners guide is half about exactly this.

Get help now: the numbers

WhoContact
Crisis — any thoughts of self-harmCall or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) MedlinePlus
National Maternal Mental Health HotlineCall or text 1-833-TLC-MAMA (1-833-852-6262). Free, confidential, 24/7, English & Spanish HRSA
Postpartum Support International1-800-944-4773 (call or text). Non-crisis support, free online groups for moms and dads, peer mentors PSI
Emergency911 for postpartum psychosis signs or any danger