Postpartum depression doesn't only affect mothers. Up to 10% of fathers experience it too. And partners of all genders struggle with sleep loss, relationship strain, and feeling useless. The postpartum service market research shows that partners are the fastest‑growing target population, with services like couples counseling, new dad support groups, and even “partner doulas” emerging.
What do partners need? Practical skills (how to soothe a crying baby, how to support breastfeeding without being intrusive) and emotional validation. The postpartum service market trends highlight that online services (virtual support groups, apps) are the dominant delivery mode for partners, because they're convenient and less intimidating than in‑person therapy.
But there's a gap: most services are still mother‑centric. If you're a partner, you have to actively seek out resources. That's changing slowly, as companies like Maven Clinic and Postpartum Support International launch partner‑specific programs.
The message: partners, your feelings are valid. Ask for help. And employers, consider covering partner mental health services in your parental leave benefits. It takes a village — and the village includes dads, non‑birthing parents, and co‑parents.