If postpartum care were designed around how recovery actually happens, it would look very different. Not rushed. Not minimal. Not limited to a single point in time. But structured. Continuous. Supportive.
Recovery as a Process, Not a Visit
Postpartum care should begin with a simple shift: Recovery is not an event. It is a process. That process unfolds over months, not weeks. Care should reflect that.
A Year of Connected Care
Instead of a single visit, postpartum care should extend through the first year. Not as constant intervention. But as consistent presence.
This could include:
• early check-ins in the first weeks after birth
• continued follow-up through the first several months
• access to care as new stages of recovery emerge
The goal is not more appointments. It is better timing.
Physical Recovery That Includes Rehabilitation
Postpartum care should address not just whether the body has healed, but how it functions. That includes:
• pelvic floor assessment and therapy
• core rehabilitation
• guidance on returning to movement and exercise
Recovery should not be left to chance. It should be supported.
Mental Health as Standard Care
Mental health support should be a routine part of postpartum care. Not something mothers have to seek out on their own. This includes:
• regular screening for anxiety and depression
• accessible support options
• normalization of mental health conversations
Because mental health is not separate from recovery. It is part of it.
Ongoing Monitoring for Physical Health
Postpartum care should also reflect ongoing physical risk. This includes:
• blood pressure monitoring
• screening for complications that can emerge later
• continued attention to symptoms beyond the early weeks
Care should align with when risk actually occurs.
Nutrition and Recovery Support
Recovery requires rebuilding. Postpartum care should include:
• guidance on nutrition and nutrient replenishment
• support for breastfeeding demands
• education on energy needs and recovery
Because healing is not just about time. It is about resources.
Support Beyond the Clinic
Care should not exist only within medical appointments. It should extend into the environments where recovery actually happens. This could include:
• home visits
• community-based support
• postpartum groups or networks
Because recovery happens in daily life — not just in a clinical setting.
A System That Sees the Mother
At its core, postpartum care should be built around one principle: The mother matters. Not just during pregnancy. Not just during birth. But throughout recovery.
What This Would Change
If postpartum care reflected the reality of recovery: Fewer women would feel alone. More issues would be addressed early. Recovery would be more supported — and more complete. The experience of postpartum would shift.
A Different Standard
We do not need to start from scratch. We need to build from what we already know. To create a system that: supports recovery, reflects reality, values mothers. Because postpartum care should not end when the baby is born. It should continue until the mother is supported in her recovery.