Mental health support for new parents

HELPING NEW PARENTS ACCESS MENTAL HEALTHCARE SERVICES... Better access to mental health support for new parents will soon be available with a planned investment and reform into community perinatal mental health teams across the state. Photo: Supplied

ONE in five women will experience a perinatal mental health concern between conception and the time their baby is 12 months old, with anxiety and depression the most common types of illness. For women who experience a perinatal mental health illness, up to one in eight of their partners will also experience a mental health condition.

Better access to mental health support for new parents will soon be available with a planned investment and reform into community perinatal mental health teams across the state.

With lockdowns and restrictions on women having visitors in hospital, the pandemic has placed even more stress on families. An investment of $6.89M will help meet the extra demand to ensure every new parent who needs support can get it quickly, and close to home.

So far this year, $20M has been put towards perinatal mental health services across the state, including $10M for six Parent Infant Units across Victoria for women with severe mental illness and their infants, and $7.2M for the Perinatal Emotional Health Program to deliver community, family-centred services.                

These services focus on parent-infant attachment up to the first year of the baby’s life, as well as helping other vital services to deliver perinatal mental health supports, including the Perinatal Anxiety and Depression Association.

The Royal Commission outlined the critical importance of perinatal mental health for parents with their infants, taking a family-centred approach. It also recommended people with lived experience of the mental health system are put at the heart of its reform – and this extra perinatal support will ensure those who have experienced mental health concerns as new parents can use their experiences to support other new families.

HELPING NEW PARENTS ACCESS MENTAL HEALTHCARE SERVICES… Better access to mental health support for new parents will soon be available with a planned investment and reform into community perinatal mental health teams across the state. Photo: Supplied