Perinatal Mental Health Report

Reflecting our focus for this year of perinatal and maternal mental health, our research partners CEARCH provided us with another round of excellent research, this one focusing on the burden of perinatal mental health in LMICs. The full report is available here, with the executive summary below.

Executive Summary

Perinatal mental illness, primarily depression and anxiety, affects an estimated 10-20% of pregnant women and new mothers globally. It is linked to increased rates of stillbirth and preterm birth, and can impair the mother's ability to bond with and care for her child. It may cause developmental problems in the infant that persist into adulthood.

The burden is slightly higher in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), disproportionately affecting vulnerable and disadvantaged women. Although there is unmet need everywhere, low-income countries typically have 50x fewer mental health professionals per capita than high-income countries, and perinatal mental illness often goes completely ignored. This, and the lower cost of providing treatment in these countries, means that most of the promising opportunities are in LMICs.

Recent decades have seen significant improvement in Maternal and Neonatal Health (MNH) outcomes, but not in Perinatal Mental Health (PMH). We expect PMH to continue to grow as a share of the health burden in LMICs.

Layperson-delivered Interpersonal Group Therapy (IPT-G) is widely considered to be an effective way to scale-up access to mental health treatments in low-income countries, and probably has a role in tackling perinatal mental illness. There are also opportunities to improve physical and mental health in tandem, such as through Participatory Action and Learning (PLA) groups, which can bring communities together to share knowledge and to support mothers. When well-attended, these community interventions can avert maternal and infant deaths for around $1,000.

Interventions in this space face the challenge of reaching pregnant women and mothers who are often physically and socially marginalized. This can be done by:

  • Attaching to existing services like midwife care or anti-poverty programs to engage women in hard-to-reach places. Grant funding can help to scale up such approaches or fund studies on the effectiveness of new initiatives.

  • Utilizing technology. Internet access is spreading rapidly, increasing the feasibility of interventions like self-help apps or online psychotherapy. Apps and online courses can train health care workers to identify and treat perinatal mental illness. We are optimistic that well-directed grants could advance organizations in this space from concept to impact.

  • Preventing Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) through “edutainment” campaigns or by pushing for improved women’s property rights. This is a largely untested space which could prove to be a major lever in preventing perinatal mental illness.

There may be opportunities for small, high-impact research grants of $100k-$200k that contribute to the global effort to improve PMH. We are particularly excited to see:

  • Research on the effectiveness of new treatments

  • Efforts to determine the secondary effects of mental health interventions on child development and on maternal outcomes beyond mental health.

  • Analysis that informs future grantmaking by addressing some of our key uncertainties.


Overall, we anticipate that a grant portfolio to address perinatal mental illness would invest in LMIC-based projects, both scaling uptried-and-tested “safe bets” and taking more exploratory punts on young organizations that are pioneering new interventions. It may include targeted research grants that increase our understanding of how to address this urgent problem.

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Broad Mental Health Research Report