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Maternal mental health is central to improving health in Texas

On World Maternal Mental Health Day, EHF highlights why maternal mental health is a Priority for Change and how stronger systems, community connections, and access to care can better support mothers and families.

Maternal mental health is not a side issue. It’s central to the health of mothers, babies, and families across Texas.

May 6 is World Maternal Mental Health Day, a reminder that supporting mothers’ mental health is essential to improving health for families.

Too many women experience depression, anxiety, and other mental health challenges during and after pregnancy, often without the support they need. These challenges are shaped by more than clinical care. They’re tied to access, affordability, community support, and everyday non-medical conditions that influence health.

Maternal Health is one of EHF’s Priorities for Change because improving health outcomes means addressing the full picture. That’s also why EHF’s Impact Drivers include strengthening comprehensive care so mental health is part of routine maternal care, supporting community health workers who can connect mothers to trusted support, and improving connections to health insurance and benefits that make care possible.


It also means listening. Through our work to activate community voices, we hear directly from mothers about what they need and where systems fall short. And through partnerships across sectors beyond health, we help bring together the people and organizations who can turn those insights into real change.

Maternal mental health is about more than treatment. It’s about building systems that recognize, support, and respond to the many realities women face before, during, and after pregnancy.

 
You can find resources and more at https://wmmhday.org/

Maternal Health