The Good Mental Health Project launched a Perinatal Mental Health Campaign during Maternal Mental Health Week (4 – 10 May 2026) shaped around the Five Ways to Wellbeing. Posting throughout the week and beyond, the campaign explores how the Five Ways to Wellbeing can support mental health and wellbeing during pregnancy and early parenthood.
Each theme is shared through a range of supportive content, including a short blog, myths vs reality posts, “did you know?” facts, to share key information, gentle daily wellbeing reminders, and simple calls to action that invite wellbeing reflection.
You will also find a wealth of links to trusted support and helpful local and national resources.
Everything is designed to be relatable, compassionate, and accessible; supporting parents to pause, reflect, and engage with wellbeing in ways that feel realistic and supportive.
Why focus on Perinatal Mental Health?
We focus on perinatal mental health because it recognises that mental health during pregnancy and the first year after birth affects everyone involved; mothers, fathers, partners, babies, and wider family networks. While Maternal Mental Health Awareness Week rightly highlights the experiences of mothers, the perinatal period is a shared transition, and emotional wellbeing within this time is relational and interconnected.
By marking perinatal mental health alongside the national awareness week, we aim to widen the conversation, acknowledge all caregivers, and highlight that supporting the mental health of one person supports the wellbeing of the whole family, including the baby.
We know that around one in five women experience mental health difficulties during pregnancy or postnatally. Research also suggests that 5–10% of fathers experience perinatal depression and up to 15% experience anxiety, yet paternal mental health is often overlooked and under supported. In reality, many more parents are not reflected in these statistics due to stigma, barriers to access, or not feeling able to seek help.
Perinatal Mental Health matters because:
- Early experiences shape long‑term wellbeing
- Mental health impacts bonding, confidence, and relationships
- Early support can prevent crisis
- Parents deserve care and understanding, not judgement
We do this work because preventative support saves lives. It reduces distress, reduces crisis, and helps parents stay well during one of the most significant transitions in life.
Perinatal mental health is still surrounded by silence and stigma, meaning many parents struggle alone until difficulties feel overwhelming and even still many fear that reaching out for help means they are ‘not a good parent’ or ‘failing.’ Too often, support is only accessed once someone has reached crisis point, rather than earlier, when gentle intervention can make a meaningful difference.
This campaign reflects The Good Mental Health Project’s wider commitment to prevention and building wellbeing aware communities, where mental health is understood, talked about, and supported across all stages of life.
By starting early, we help parents feel seen, supported, and better equipped; strengthening wellbeing not just for individuals, but for families and communities.
Support and Resources
Connect
Connect with baby
- Talking to bump: Talking to your bump – what are the benefits? – BBC Tiny Happy People
- Connecting with baby through play: Look, Say, Sing, Play – Brain-building tips | NSPCC
Connect with partners
- Family Foundations – Raise York
- Advice for partners during pregnancy – Best Start in Life – NHS
- Supporting Your Partner During Pregnancy | Tommy’s
- Relationships – Raise York
- Family Matters York – Family Matters York
- Looking after your relationship as new parents – IHV
Connection for Dads
- The Essential Guide for New Dads
- Menfulness
- Dad Matters
- Support for Dads – PANDAS Foundation UK
- Yorkey Dads
Connect with professionals
- Perinatal and Infant mental health – Raise York
- Talking Therapies
- York Hospital Maternity Services
- York Mind
Connect with others
- Peanut – Find Friends and Support
- Activities and services – Raise York
- Mums Meet Up – Support & Friendship For Mums
- Community Events for Mums | Local Groups & Meet-Ups – The Mum Club
- Gather&Co – Events for mums – Harrogate, York
New Mothers Support – York Medical Group
Local guidance and links to mother-and-baby support resources across York.
Website: https://www.yorkmedicalgroup.co.uk/new-mothers-support/
Mothers’ Union – York Diocese
A long-standing community of women offering fellowship, gatherings, and family-focused support.
Be Active
Take Notice
Apps
- Mental Health App for Meditation & Sleep – Headspace
- Calm – The #1 App for Meditation and Sleep
- Insight Timer — The #1 Free Meditation and Sleep App
The Thriving with Nature guide is produced by WWF-UK and the Mental Health Foundation. Packed with inspiration and information, the guide will help you connect with nature throughout the year.
Keep Learning
Give
To others – Kyra Women’s Project – Helping Women in & Around York
To yourself – York Women’s Counselling
Ready for Parenthood
City of York Council, North Yorkshire Council, York and Scarborough Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, and YorSexualHealth have joined forces to launch ‘Ready for Parenthood’
A new regional campaign designed to help women feel informed, supported, and confident from pre-conception through to birth and beyond.
The campaign focuses on three simple themes that make a big difference to health and wellbeing during early parenthood:
- What we put in our bodies – eating well, staying hydrated, and stopping smoking and drinking alcohol
- How we move – building movement into everyday life in safe, enjoyable ways
- How we feel – prioritising emotional wellbeing, healthy relationships, connection and support
Campaign Blogs
Mental Health Awareness Week 2026 – Action: for yourself, for someone else, for all of us!
Action: for yourself, for someone else, for all of us! This week (11 - 17 May) is Mental Health Awareness Week - a week-long campaign that takes place every year in May. The campaign highlights the importance of good mental health, challenges stigma and promotes...
Day 5: Give – Why giving matters for Perinatal Mental Health
The perinatal period is a time of constant giving. You give your time, your energy, your attention, and your care round the clock. At times, it can feel as though you have given your whole self; your body, your mind, your social life; the life you once knew. Because...
Day 4: Keep Learning – Why learning matters for perinatal mental health
When we think about learning, we often picture formal settings; being back at school, enrolling on a course, or completing a class. While these are all valuable forms of learning, learning during the perinatal period often looks much broader, gentler, and more subtle....
Day 3: Take Notice – Why taking notice matters for Perinatal Mental Health
Today is World Maternal Mental Health Day. Through The Good Mental Health Project's Perinatal Mental Health Campaign, we're joining organisations across the world to raise awareness of maternal mental health. The perinatal period is often thought as of all-consuming;...
Day 2: Be Active – Why being active matters for Perinatal Mental Health
During pregnancy, birth, and early parenthood, movement can play an important role in supporting mental wellbeing. Gentle activity can help regulate mood, reduce stress, and support sleep, while for some people it can also help rebuild trust with their body following...
Day 1: Connect – Why connection matters for Perinatal Mental Health
The perinatal period (pregnancy, birth, and early parenthood) can be one of the most connected and yet loneliest times in life. Relationships change, identities shift, and many parents find themselves feeling isolated and alone; even when they are surrounded by...
Perinatal Mental Health Campaign launched during Maternal Mental Health Week 4 – 10 May
This week (4 - 10 May) is Maternal Mental Health Awareness Week - a week-long campaign dedicated to talking about mental health problems before, during and after pregnancy. Today, The Good Mental Health Project has launched a Perinatal Mental Health Campaign shaped...







