Questions? Call or text anytime ๐Ÿ“ž 818-446-9627

Birth Workers & Doulas

20 articles

Supporting clients through PMADs, birth trauma, and the handoff to clinical care.

Perinatal Mental Health for Doulas and Birth Workers: A Complete Practice Guide

Read article โ†’
A person at a table with a warm drink, looking forward with a calm, open expression, representing the themes of "How Doulas Can Recognize PMAD Symptoms in Their Clients".

How Doulas Can Recognize PMAD Symptoms in Their Clients

Doulas see clients during some of the highest-risk weeks for PMAD onset. Practical symptom recognition guidance for labor and postpartum doulas โ€” what to look for, what to ask, and when to refer.

Read article โ†’
A parent leaning against a doorframe with closed eyes, a moment of stillness in a lived-in home, representing the themes of "Vicarious Trauma and Burnout in Birth Workers: Prevention and Support".

Vicarious Trauma and Burnout in Birth Workers: Prevention and Support

Birth workers are regularly exposed to traumatic births, postpartum crises, and perinatal loss. A clinical overview of vicarious trauma, occupational burnout, and sustainable practice for doulas and childbirth educators.

Read article โ†’
A parent on a couch, infant nestled on their chest, both still and quiet, representing the themes of "Postpartum Mental Health in Your Clients: What Doulas and Childbirth Educators Should Know".

Postpartum Mental Health in Your Clients: What Doulas and Childbirth Educators Should Know

Doulas and childbirth educators encounter PMAD symptoms regularly. This guide covers prevalence, risk factors, and why birth workers are positioned to help.

Read article โ†’
A parent on a couch, infant nestled on their chest, both still and quiet, representing the themes of "How Doulas Can Identify Signs of Postpartum Depression and Anxiety in Clients".

How Doulas Can Identify Signs of Postpartum Depression and Anxiety in Clients

Practical signs doulas can observe in postpartum clients, including PPD, PPA, birth trauma, and OCD presentations, with guidance on what warrants a referral.

Read article โ†’
A pregnant woman sitting in a hospital waiting area with a calm, grounded expression, soft indoor light, representing the themes of "Postpartum Mental Health in NICU Families: Signs and Support".

Postpartum Mental Health in NICU Families: Signs and Support

NICU parents face two to three times the PPD risk of full-term families. Covers PMAD signs specific to NICU stays and how doulas and NICU staff can refer.

Read article โ†’
A figure near a window in a quiet domestic interior, unhurried and still, representing the themes of "Supporting Perinatal Mental Health as a Birth Worker".

Supporting Perinatal Mental Health as a Birth Worker

Birth workers are often the first professionals to recognize when a client is struggling. A complete guide to PMAD identification, scope-of-practice referral, client communication, and birth worker self-care for doulas, childbirth educators, and postpartum support providers.

Read article โ†’
A quiet interior scene โ€” soft light, a plant, a chair, a sense of calm presence, representing the themes of "Referring Clients to Mental Health Support: A Doula's Guide".

Referring Clients to Mental Health Support: A Doula's Guide

The referral conversation is where doula support and mental health care connect. Scripts, logistics, and client communication strategies for making warm referrals from within your professional scope.

Read article โ†’
A person at a table with a warm drink, looking forward with a calm, open expression, representing the themes of "Birth Trauma: How to Support Clients Without Overstepping".

Birth Trauma: How to Support Clients Without Overstepping

Doulas and birth workers are frequently present for traumatic births and are often the first support person a client turns to afterward. A scope-of-practice guide to supporting clients through birth trauma while staying within appropriate professional boundaries.

Read article โ†’
A figure near a window in a quiet domestic interior, unhurried and still, representing the themes of "Childbirth Educator Guide to Normalizing Mental Health Conversations".

Childbirth Educator Guide to Normalizing Mental Health Conversations

Childbirth educators reach families before the high-risk postpartum window. Practical guidance on integrating perinatal mental health content into classes, destigmatizing help-seeking, and creating referral pathways for participants who need support.

Read article โ†’
A woman resting in a bed with white linens, soft morning light through a window, expression peaceful, representing the themes of "Supporting Clients Through High-Risk Pregnancies and NICU Stays".

Supporting Clients Through High-Risk Pregnancies and NICU Stays

Doulas who work with high-risk pregnancies and NICU families navigate an elevated PMAD risk landscape. Practical guidance on recognition, scope-appropriate support, and referral for one of birth work's most emotionally complex client populations.

Read article โ†’
A mother sitting on the edge of a bed in morning light, infant asleep nearby in a bassinet, representing the themes of "Postpartum Doula Care for Clients Experiencing PPD or PPA".

Postpartum Doula Care for Clients Experiencing PPD or PPA

A practical guide to providing effective postpartum doula support when a client has been diagnosed with postpartum depression or anxiety โ€” including how to adapt your support, communicate with the client's care team, and stay within your professional scope.

Read article โ†’
A new mother in a rocking chair in a softly lit nursery, cradling her infant, representing the themes of "When and How to Refer Doula Clients to Postpartum Mental Health Support".

When and How to Refer Doula Clients to Postpartum Mental Health Support

When to suggest mental health support and what to say: a practical referral guide for doulas, including how to handle client resistance and what to do after.

Read article โ†’
A pregnant person on a garden bench, gentle morning light, looking forward, representing the themes of "Prenatal PMAD Risk Signs for Doulas and Childbirth Educators".

Prenatal PMAD Risk Signs for Doulas and Childbirth Educators

The prenatal window is when PMAD risk accumulates. This guide covers prenatal risk factors doulas and childbirth educators can observe and when to refer.

Read article โ†’
A figure near a window in a quiet domestic interior, unhurried and still, representing the themes of "Perinatal Mental Health: A Guide for Childbirth Educators".

Perinatal Mental Health: A Guide for Childbirth Educators

CBEs meet clients before the postpartum period. This guide covers what to add to curriculum, how to notice distress in class participants, and when to refer.

Read article โ†’
A new mother in a rocking chair in a softly lit nursery, cradling her infant, representing the themes of "Why Birth Workers Miss Postpartum Mental Health Distress".

Why Birth Workers Miss Postpartum Mental Health Distress

Birth workers miss PMAD distress for four reasons: competence masking, normalization habit, scope conflict, and non-obvious presentations like PPA or OCD.

Read article โ†’
A parent on a couch, infant nestled on their chest, both still and quiet, representing the themes of "How Doulas Can Build a Referral Process for Postpartum Mental Health Support".

How Doulas Can Build a Referral Process for Postpartum Mental Health Support

Most referrals fail at handoff. This guide helps doulas build a referral list, make warm handoffs, follow up, and get clients connected to postpartum care.

Read article โ†’
Two people at a window, one standing behind the other with gentle hands on their shoulders, representing the themes of "What to Look for in a Perinatal Mental Health Referral Partner: A Birth Worker's Guide".

What to Look for in a Perinatal Mental Health Referral Partner: A Birth Worker's Guide

Birth workers transfer trust when they refer clients. This guide covers PMH-C, telehealth, insurance, and response time for evaluating referral practices.

Read article โ†’
A person at a table with a warm drink, looking forward with a calm, open expression, representing the themes of "Why Doulas Refer Clients to Phoenix Health for Perinatal Mental Health Care".

Why Doulas Refer Clients to Phoenix Health for Perinatal Mental Health Care

Doulas see emotional distress that falls outside their scope. Phoenix Health provides PMH-C certified telehealth therapy for perinatal clients in all 50 states.

Read article โ†’
A person at a table with a warm drink, looking forward with a calm, open expression, representing the themes of "Why Childbirth Educators Refer to Phoenix Health for Perinatal Mental Health".

Why Childbirth Educators Refer to Phoenix Health for Perinatal Mental Health

Childbirth educators encounter prenatal anxiety and birth fear in class. Phoenix Health offers PMH-C certified perinatal therapy via telehealth in all 50 states.

Read article โ†’

Ready to refer a patient?

Phoenix Health connects your patients with PMH-C certified therapists, covered by insurance.