
Finding a Therapist Who Understands Both ADHD and Perinatal Mental Health
Written by
Phoenix Health Editorial Team
Expert health information, double-checked for accuracy and written to be helpful.
Last updated
Written by
Phoenix Health Editorial Team
Expert health information, double-checked for accuracy and written to be helpful.
Last updated
Why This Intersection Is Underserved
Perinatal mental health , the specialty focused on mental health during pregnancy and the postpartum period , has grown significantly as a field over the past two decades. ADHD treatment for adults has similarly expanded. But the overlap between these two domains remains thinly served. A clinician who specializes in postpartum depression may have limited training in ADHD. A clinician who specializes in ADHD may have limited experience with the hormonal, relational, and identity shifts of the perinatal period. Finding someone who holds both is genuinely difficult, and most women in this situation end up in care that addresses one dimension while the other goes unmet.
The practical consequence is that women with ADHD in the perinatal period often receive treatment that helps partially and then plateaus, or they cycle through providers without finding one who accurately identifies and addresses the full picture. Understanding what to look for , and what questions to ask before committing to a therapeutic relationship , can significantly reduce the time spent in mismatched care.
What to Look for in a Provider
At a minimum, you are looking for a clinician who has substantive training or experience in both domains: perinatal mental health and ADHD in adult women. On the perinatal side, formal credentialing through Postpartum Support International (such as the PMH-C certification) is a meaningful indicator of specialized training. On the ADHD side, look for clinicians who have explicit experience adult ADHD, and particularly with ADHD presentations in women , which, as discussed, differ meaningfully from the more commonly depicted hyperactive presentation in young males.
Beyond credentials, look for a who has a genuinely strength-based orientation toward ADHD , not one who frames the entire condition as a deficit to be managed, but one who can hold the complexity of how ADHD interacts with identity, relationships, and parenting in ways that include both challenges and genuine assets. This orientation tends to produce better therapeutic relationships and better outcomes for the ADHD clients who need honest, non-shaming engagement with their neurology.
Therapeutic Modalities That Work for This Combination
Certain therapeutic modalities have particularly strong evidence or clinical fit for the combination of ADHD and perinatal mental health challenges. Dialectical Behavior (DBT) was developed in part for populations with significant emotional dysregulation , which is a core feature of ADHD , and its skills-based approach to distress tolerance, interpersonal effectiveness, and emotion regulation maps directly onto common ADHD-related struggles. DBT skills can be taught in individual without requiring the full intensive DBT program.
Acceptance and Commitment (ACT) addresses the shame and psychological inflexibility that often accompany late ADHD diagnosis and the repeated perceived failures of the perinatal period. Its emphasis on values-based action rather than symptom elimination is particularly well-suited to ADHD, where the goal is not to think differently about the neurology but to build a life that works with it. CBT adapted for ADHD , which emphasizes behavioral strategies, external structure, and practical problem-solving alongside cognitive work , is also well-supported.
Questions to Ask a Potential Therapist
Before committing to a therapeutic relationship, it is worth asking directly about a prospective therapist's experience and approach. Useful questions include: Have you worked with women who have ADHD and are also navigating postpartum or perinatal mental health challenges? How do you think about the relationship between ADHD and postpartum anxiety or depression when both are present? What therapeutic approaches do you use for ADHD-related emotional dysregulation? Are you familiar with rejection sensitive dysphoria?
The quality of the answers matters, but so the quality of the engagement. A therapist who responds with genuine curiosity, who asks follow-up questions about your specific situation, and who demonstrates comfort with complexity is a better sign than one who gives technically correct but formulaic answers. You are looking for a real therapeutic alliance, not just credentials , and the initial consultation is valuable data about whether that alliance is possible.
Telehealth as an Access Equalizer
Telehealth has dramatically changed access to specialized mental health care, and this is particularly significant for women navigating treatment options and perinatal mental health. The intersection of these two specialties is uncommon enough that geographically constrained searches , looking only for clinicians within driving distance , frequently turn up nothing useful. Telehealth removes that constraint, opening access to the full national pool of clinicians who hold both areas of competency.
For postpartum and early parenting women specifically, telehealth removes additional barriers: the logistical complexity of arranging childcare for an in-person appointment, the physical exhaustion of leaving the house during a demanding caregiving period, and the scheduling flexibility required when nap schedules and infant needs are unpredictable. Therapy from home, at a time that works around a baby's schedule, is not a lesser version of care , for many women with ADHD, the reduced logistical friction actually makes consistent engagement in treatment more achievable.
Phoenix Health's Approach
At Phoenix Health, our therapists specialize in perinatal mental health and hold competency in the neurodevelopmental and emotional complexity that ADHD brings to the perinatal experience. Many of our clinicians hold PMH-C certification through Postpartum Support International, reflecting specialized training in the full range of perinatal mental health presentations , including those that co-occur with ADHD. We see clients via telehealth across the states we are licensed in, which means specialized care is accessible regardless of your geographic location.
If you are navigating ADHD in the postpartum period , whether newly diagnosed, long-diagnosed, or still unsure what is happening , and you are looking for a therapist who can hold the full picture without defaulting to a generic postpartum treatment approach, we would welcome the conversation. A free consultation is available to help you understand whether our approach is a good fit for where you are.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Ask two specific questions: first, how much of your practice involves ADHD in adults and parents? Second, are you familiar with how ADHD symptoms shift during pregnancy and postpartum? A therapist who understands both will be able to answer concretely. If you hear 'I work with ADHD in children' or a vague answer about general anxiety, keep looking. The intersection of ADHD and perinatal mental health is specific enough that experience in both matters.
- You don't have to choose. A good perinatal therapist who also works with ADHD will address both simultaneously, because they're connected. ADHD executive function challenges and postpartum depression or anxiety often interact, and treatment that ignores one while addressing the other tends to be less effective. Look for someone who can hold both, rather than someone who specializes in one and treats the other as secondary.
- Stimulant medication for ADHD has implications for pregnancy and breastfeeding that require a conversation with a prescriber familiar with perinatal pharmacology. Some people continue stimulants through pregnancy under medical guidance; others discontinue. Off medication, ADHD symptoms often intensify postpartum, which affects the type of therapeutic support that's most useful. Make sure your therapist and prescriber are communicating, especially if you're managing both conditions concurrently.
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