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πŸ”Perinatal OCD & Intrusive Thoughts

Perinatal OCD & Intrusive Thoughts therapy β€” covered by Oxford Health Plans

"I keep having thoughts I'm terrified to say out loud. I'd never act on them."

Up to 3–5% of new mothers experience postpartum OCD β€” intrusive thoughts that feel unbearable to carry.

βœ“See a specialist this weekβœ“PMH-C Certified Therapistsβœ“Telehealth β€” see anyone from homeβœ“Accepts Oxford Health Plans

No commitment. We'll confirm your coverage before your first session.

Oxford Health Plans

Using your Oxford Health Plans benefits

Phoenix Health is in-network with Oxford Health Plans, which is a United Healthcare company operating primarily in the Northeast β€” particularly New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut. Oxford plans are common with employer-sponsored insurance in the New York metro area. If your card says Oxford Health Plans or Oxford Health, you're on a United Healthcare network and your benefits are administered through UHC's infrastructure. Oxford plans typically cover outpatient mental health therapy at a specialist copay after your deductible, and telehealth is covered at parity with in-person sessions. Because Oxford operates under the UHC umbrella, some Oxford plans also route behavioral health through Optum β€” if you see Optum mentioned in your benefits, your mental health claims are processed through Optum's network even though your primary card says Oxford. Before your first session, we verify your specific Oxford plan benefits, check your deductible status, and confirm whether prior authorization is required. Sessions are FSA and HSA eligible. If you want to verify your coverage directly, call the member services number on your Oxford card or log into the United Healthcare member portal, which consolidates UHC and Oxford benefit information.

βœ“ In-network coverage

Your benefits apply directly β€” no superbills or out-of-network claims.

βœ“ Benefits verified upfront

We confirm your copay and deductible before your first session, at no charge.

βœ“ Telehealth covered

Your plan covers virtual sessions at the same rate as in-person specialist visits.

Our Perinatal OCD & Intrusive Thoughts specialists who accept Oxford Health Plans

All Phoenix Health therapists hold or are working toward PMH-C certification β€” the gold standard in perinatal mental health.

Real clients. Real relief.

What our clients say about their experience.

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β€œI couldn't leave the house without checking the stove five times. Couldn't hand my daughter to anyone without a spiral of what-ifs. I thought I was going crazy. My therapist helped me understand what OCD actually is β€” not just being tidy, but a loop my brain got stuck in β€” and gave me tools to break the cycle. I'm not ruled by it anymore.”

β€” mom of 2

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β€œI kept having thoughts of accidentally hurting my baby during bath time. I was convinced that meant I was dangerous, and I almost didn't tell anyone. My therapist explained that intrusive thoughts are the opposite of what you want β€” they show up because you love him and your mind is trying to protect him. That reframe saved me.”

β€” mom of 1

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

β€œMy emergency C-section left me with nightmares and panic attacks. I couldn't talk about the birth without shaking. Therapy helped me process the trauma and reclaim my story. I'm pregnant again now, and I actually feel ready.”

β€” expecting mom of 1

Oxford HealthAetnaBlue Cross Blue ShieldUnitedHealthcareCignaAnthem

How your Oxford Health Plans coverage works

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We verify your benefits

Before your first session, we check your specific plan to confirm coverage and estimate your out-of-pocket cost.

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Standard copay after deductible

Most clients pay a specialist copay ($20–$60 depending on plan) once their deductible is met.

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FSA and HSA eligible

Therapy sessions qualify as a medical expense β€” you can pay with pre-tax FSA or HSA dollars.

See full coverage map β†’

Questions about your Oxford Health Plans coverage? We're happy to help β€” reach out before your first session.

Your rights under federal parity law

Under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA), your insurer cannot impose more restrictive limits on mental health coverage than on comparable medical or surgical benefits β€” no lower visit limits and no higher cost-sharing for therapy than for specialist medical care.

If you're denied coverage, you have the right to appeal and to request a written explanation of the denial criteria.

Questions to ask your insurer:

  1. Is outpatient mental health covered by my plan?
  2. What is my specialist copay and my current deductible status?
  3. Are there any waiting periods before mental health benefits begin?
  4. Is telehealth covered at the same rate as in-person therapy?
  5. Does my plan have a visit limit on mental health services?

How it works

1

Book your free call

No commitment, no paperwork. Just a short call to tell us what you're going through and confirm we're the right fit.

2

Get matched

We pair you with the right specialist for your state and situation β€” and confirm your coverage before you commit.

3

Start your first session

Meet your therapist from home β€” no commute, no waiting room. Weekly or biweekly, adjusted to your life.

Common questions

  • Intrusive thoughts are unwanted, disturbing thoughts that appear without warning β€” often violent or sexual in nature. In postpartum OCD, these typically involve harm coming to the baby. The key distinction: people with postpartum OCD are horrified by these thoughts and would never act on them. The thoughts are ego-dystonic (unwanted) β€” the opposite of intent.
  • No. Research is consistent: parents who have intrusive thoughts about harming their baby are not at risk of acting on them. The presence of the thoughts, and the distress they cause, is a sign of anxiety β€” not danger. Effective treatment is available.
  • Most Oxford Health Plans plans cover telehealth behavioral health sessions at the same rate as in-person care under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act. Phoenix Health verifies your specific plan benefits before your first session. Your out-of-pocket cost typically depends on your deductible and copay structure.
  • PMH-C (Perinatal Mental Health Certification) is awarded by Postpartum Support International (PSI) to clinicians who have completed advanced training in perinatal mental health β€” covering postpartum depression, anxiety, OCD, birth trauma, and related conditions. It represents the gold standard of specialization in this field.
  • If you're struggling β€” with your mood, your thoughts, your relationship, or just how you're coping β€” that's enough of a reason to talk to someone. You don't need a diagnosis. A free consultation is a low-commitment first step.

Trusted by leading voices in perinatal health

Parents.comPostpartum Support InternationalHealthlineHuffPostFatherlyChoosing Therapy

Ready to talk about perinatal ocd & intrusive thoughts?

A free 15-minute call is the best place to start β€” no paperwork, no commitment. We'll confirm your coverage and match you with the right therapist.

βœ“ No commitmentβœ“ We verify your insurance

Read more about Perinatal OCD & Intrusive Thoughts

How to Talk to Someone About Your Postpartum OCD

Telling someone about postpartum OCD is harder than most mental health disclosures because of the thought content involved. Here's how to start the conversation with your partner, doctor, or a therapist.

Read article β†’

Why It's Hard to Get Help for Postpartum OCD (And How to Get Past It)

Most people with postpartum OCD wait months before seeking help, often because of fear, shame, or not knowing effective treatment exists. Here are the real barriers and how to move past them.

Read article β†’

Am I Having Intrusive Thoughts or Something Worse?

If you're horrified by thoughts of harm coming to your baby, that horror is the key sign. Here's how to tell the difference between postpartum OCD intrusive thoughts and something that needs immediate help.

Read article β†’

Learning resources

πŸ”Read our Perinatal OCD & Intrusive Thoughts guides β†’

Often goes alongside

πŸ’­Postpartum Anxiety🌧Postpartum DepressionπŸ’”Birth Trauma