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Postpartum Psychosis: How to Get Help and What Recovery Looks Like

Written by

Phoenix Health Editorial Team

Expert health information, double-checked for accuracy and written to be helpful.

Last updated

The prognosis for postpartum psychosis with proper treatment is good. That sentence belongs at the top because it's often the last thing families hear, buried under fear, stigma, and urgency β€” and it's the most important thing to know.

Postpartum psychosis is serious, it escalates fast, and it requires immediate medical attention. It is also, in the vast majority of cases, fully treatable. Most people recover completely. Getting help quickly is the single biggest factor in how quickly and completely that happens.

If you or someone you love is in crisis right now, don't keep reading. Call an OB, a midwife, or 988 (Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, call or text). If there is any concern about immediate safety, call 911 or go to the emergency room.

Why Postpartum Psychosis Requires Acute Care

Postpartum psychosis is not a condition that can be managed with outpatient therapy alone, at least not in the acute phase. This is not a reflection of severity of character or the degree of illness. It reflects what the condition is: a neurobiological crisis involving a break from reality, usually precipitated by extreme hormonal disruption in the days after birth.

The appropriate level of care for severe postpartum psychosis is inpatient psychiatric stabilization. This is not a shameful outcome. It's the right medical response to a medical emergency, the same way a cardiac event requires cardiac care.

Inpatient or intensive outpatient care provides:

  • 24-hour monitoring during the most unstable phase
  • Medication management (mood stabilizers and/or antipsychotics, titrated to response)
  • A safe environment during a period when the person's judgment about safety may be compromised
  • The beginning of psychoeducation for the person and their family

Some people with milder presentations are managed in intensive outpatient programs rather than full inpatient admission. The clinical picture and safety assessment determine the appropriate level of care.

What Treatment Involves

Medication. Medication is central to the acute treatment of postpartum psychosis. Mood stabilizers and antipsychotic medications are the primary tools. A psychiatrist manages this. The goal in the acute phase is stabilization β€” reducing psychotic symptoms and restoring sleep and basic functioning. Medication decisions take into account breastfeeding status, specific symptoms, and individual history.

Monitoring. During the acute phase, close monitoring is necessary because symptoms can fluctuate, and the risk of harm is real during this period. This is part of why inpatient care is appropriate for severe cases.

Therapy (in the recovery phase). Therapy is not typically the primary tool during acute psychosis. Once stabilization has occurred, therapy becomes central to recovery. Processing the experience, rebuilding confidence in parenting, addressing fear about recurrence, and working through the trauma of the episode are all appropriate therapy goals.

For the Family Member or Partner

Frequently, it is a partner or family member who seeks help first β€” because the person experiencing psychosis may not have insight into what's happening. This is expected and normal.

If you are the family member:

You are not overreacting. If you have seen behavior that feels frightening, strange, or completely unlike the person you know β€” call. The consequences of underreacting are far worse than the consequences of getting help the person turns out not to need.

What to do: Call the OB or midwife and describe the symptoms. If symptoms are severe or safety is an immediate concern, go to the emergency room. Say: "My partner gave birth [X days/weeks ago] and I'm concerned about postpartum psychosis. Symptoms include [describe]."

What not to do: Try to reason with delusional thinking. Delusional beliefs feel completely real to the person holding them. Arguing or trying to logically disprove them usually doesn't work and can increase agitation. The goal is to get to medical care.

Your own wellbeing matters. Watching someone you love go through postpartum psychosis is traumatic. Seeking your own support β€” through therapy or peer support β€” is not selfish. It's necessary.

The Stigma Barrier

Postpartum psychosis carries heavy stigma, partly because of high-profile cases that have been sensationalized in media coverage. The cultural image of postpartum psychosis is the worst possible outcome. The reality of most cases is very different.

Postpartum psychosis is a medical condition caused by extreme neurobiological disruption. It is not caused by weakness, by being a bad mother, or by psychological inadequacy. It is not a reflection of how much someone wanted their baby or how prepared they were for motherhood.

The shame and fear that surround seeking help are among the biggest barriers to getting treatment quickly. They are also the barriers with the highest stakes. Stigma delays treatment. Delayed treatment leads to worse outcomes.

A psychiatrist who specializes in perinatal mental health has seen many cases. The person experiencing psychosis is not a monster. They are a parent whose brain is experiencing a neurological crisis that responds to treatment.

What Recovery Looks Like

Recovery from postpartum psychosis varies, but for most people it follows a general arc:

Acute phase (days to weeks): Stabilization on medication, return of sleep, gradual decrease in psychotic symptoms. Disorientation and confusion often begin to clear within days of starting appropriate medication.

Early recovery (weeks to a few months): Returning awareness of what happened during the acute episode. This can be distressing β€” people often describe horror at the memory of what they said or believed. Therapy begins to be useful here.

Ongoing recovery (months): Processing the experience, rebuilding confidence in parenting, gradual medication management decisions. Many people are eventually able to taper off medication under psychiatric supervision, though this is a careful, monitored process.

Most people who receive adequate treatment recover fully. Functioning returns to pre-episode baseline. Parenting continues. Life continues.

Risk of Recurrence

This is a real concern that deserves honest information. People who have had postpartum psychosis have an elevated risk of another episode in a future pregnancy. The risk is particularly elevated β€” roughly 25 to 50 percent β€” in people with a bipolar disorder diagnosis or family history of bipolar disorder.

This does not mean future pregnancies are off the table. It means they require careful planning. A psychiatrist and therapist can help develop a monitoring and prevention plan for future pregnancies, including discussion of prophylactic medication in the immediate postpartum period.

Knowing your risk going into a pregnancy is very different from discovering a crisis after birth. Planning is possible, and it makes a difference.

For information on what early warning signs look like, see our article on [early warning signs of postpartum psychosis](/resourcecenter/what-is-postpartum-psychosis/). For information on risk factors and how to plan, see our guide on [postpartum psychosis risk factors](/resourcecenter/postpartum-psychosis-risk-factors/).

The therapists at Phoenix Health work with families navigating recovery from postpartum psychosis and planning for the future. Learn more about [therapy for postpartum psychosis](/therapy/postpartum-psychosis/).

Frequently Asked Questions

  • In many cases, yes, at least during the acute inpatient phase. This is painful but is based on safety: during active psychosis, unsupervised care of a newborn is not safe, and the person's primary need is stabilization. Some specialized mother-baby units exist that allow supervised contact with the baby during treatment. Separation is temporary. Recovery allows return to caregiving.

  • This depends on the specific medications used and is a decision made with the treating psychiatrist. Some mood stabilizers and antipsychotics have more safety data for breastfeeding than others. In some cases, breastfeeding may need to pause. The psychiatrist will factor this into medication decisions if breastfeeding is important to you.

  • This varies by case and is managed by a psychiatrist. Most people are not on medication indefinitely after a single episode of postpartum psychosis. The timeline for tapering depends on stability, history, and risk factors. Do not stop medication without psychiatric guidance, as this is when relapse risk is highest.

  • Yes, very common. Many people describe horror and shame at looking back on what they believed or said during the acute episode. Processing the experience of psychosis is a legitimate therapy goal in the recovery phase. It is not unusual to need substantial support to come to terms with what happened.

  • For most people who recover, no. The episode is a crisis, not a defining condition. With proper treatment and support, people return to normal functioning including parenting. Ongoing therapy and, in some cases, ongoing psychiatric support are part of making that possible.

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