UNC Collaborative for Maternal & Infant Health

UNC Collaborative for Maternal & Infant Health

Improving the health of North Carolina's women and infants

Menu
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Overview
    • Our Team
    • Collaborations & Partnerships
    • Internships
    • Newsletters
    • Legacy
    • Donate
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
    • Close
  • Key Services
    • Family-Centered Care
      • Care Coordination
      • Referrals to UNC
      • Special Infant Care Clinic
      • Prenatal Diagnosis and Fetal Therapy
      • Perinatal Loss
      • Clinic Partners
    • Technical Assistance
      • Preconception Health
      • Tobacco Resources
      • Data Services
    • Close
  • Patient Education Materials
  • Resources for Practice
    • OB Algorithms
    • UNC Internal Protocols
    • 17P (Progesterone)
    • UNC Lactation Program
    • CCNC PMH Care Pathways
    • NICU Clinical Guidelines
    • Trisomy 13 and Trisomy 18
    • Close
  • State and National Programs
    • National Preconception Health & Health Care Initiative (PCHHC)
    • Child Fatality Task Force / NC Perinatal Plan
    • NC 17P Project
    • You Quit, Two Quit
    • Safe Infant Sleep
    • Perinatal/Neonatal Outreach Coordination (PNOC) project
    • Collaborative Improvement and Innovation Network on Infant Mortality (IM CoIIN)
    • Every Woman Southeast
    • The North Carolina Perinatal Health and Incarceration Working Group
    • Close
  • Research
    • 4th Trimester Project
    • Bowes Cefalo Research Award
    • Care4Moms
    • Close
  • Search

Moms deserve better care in the 4th Trimester

January 20, 2016 by Alison Stuebe

Posted at NICHQ.org on January 20, 2016, by Alison Stuebe

200x200_social_alison-stuebeIn the weeks following childbirth, mothers must adapt to plunging hormones, recover from birth and learn how to feed and care for a new infant. Amid these challenges, moms receive minimal support from the healthcare system. Postpartum visits are typically scheduled four to six weeks after birth, leaving moms to cope on their own for more than a month. In 1975, childbirth educator Shelia Kitzinger argued that moms need more in the weeks following birth:

“There is a fourth trimester to pregnancy, and we neglect it at our peril. It is a transitional period of approximately three months after birth, particularly marked after first babies, when many women are emotionally highly vulnerable, when they experience confusion and recurrent despair, and during which anxiety is normal and states of reactive depression commonplace.”

Read More

Related

Filed Under: 4th Trimester Project, Uncategorized

Subscribe to Updates

Featured

UPDATED: UNC Health Inpatient Visitor Restrictions

Effective September 21: UNC Medical Center Inpatient Visitor Restrictions Visiting hours 9 a.m. – 9 p.m. Adult inpatients will be allowed 1 visitor during the day (9 a.m. – 9 p.m.) and 1 visitor at night (9 p.m. – 9 a.m.) COVID-19 positive patients will continue to have no visitors (except for laboring women, who… Read More →

Contact Us

Room 216 MacNider
Campus Box 7181
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7181

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Find Us

Info on visiting UNC Hospitals

Support Us

Donate Now

Connect With Us

  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2021 UNC Center for Maternal & Infant Health · All Rights Reserved · Website by Tomatillo Design