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Depression and Stress in Cancer Patients: Understanding the Emotional Weight of a Difficult Journey

A cancer diagnosis brings more than physical challenges—it affects nearly every part of a person’s emotional, social, and psychological life. It is completely normal for cancer patients to experience sadness, fear, stress, and uncertainty. But for many individuals, these feelings can deepen into clinical depression or overwhelming anxiety, making treatment and daily functioning even harder. Depression in cancer patients is common, real, and highly treatable—and no one should feel ashamed for struggling during such a demanding time.

Cancer-related depression can look different from typical depression. Patients may feel exhausted even after rest, lose motivation for treatments, withdraw from loved ones, or experience persistent worry about the future. Stress may heighten physical symptoms, disrupt sleep, and make it harder to maintain a hopeful outlook. These emotional changes are not a sign of weakness—they are a natural response to a major life event and the uncertainty that comes with it.

The encouraging news is that effective treatments exist. Many cancer patients improve with a combination of therapymedication, and supportive care tailored to their medical needs. Antidepressants can safely be used alongside cancer treatments in most cases, and counseling methods such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), supportive therapy, and stress-management strategies help patients cope with fear, pain, and the emotional demands of treatment. Many patients also benefit from techniques such as mindfulness, sleep support, structured problem-solving, and building a strong network of emotional and spiritual support.

At Iroko Psychiatry, we understand the unique emotional burden carried by cancer patients and survivors. Our team provides sensitive, individualized mental health care that works in harmony with oncology treatment plans. Through telepsychiatry or in-person visits, we help patients manage depression, anxiety, insomnia, and treatment-related stress so they can approach their medical journey with greater strength and clarity. No one should face cancer alone—and emotional healing is just as important as physical recovery. We are here to support you every step of the way.

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Psychiatric Medications and Breastfeeding: What New Mothers Should Know

Many new mothers face a difficult dilemma: they want to continue breastfeeding, but they also need psychiatric medication to stay healthy, stable, and emotionally present for their baby. The good news is that for most women, breastfeeding and psychiatric treatment can safely coexist. With the right guidance, mothers can protect their mental health without giving up the benefits of breastfeeding.

Research shows that many antidepressants, mood stabilizers, and anxiety medications have been studied extensively in breastfeeding women. Medications like SSRIs (such as sertraline and paroxetine) are often considered first-line options because they produce extremely low levels in breast milk and have strong safety data. Other medications may be appropriate as well, depending on a mother’s medical history, current symptoms, and treatment goals. The key is individualized care—what is safe and effective for one mother may differ for another.

Mothers should also know that untreated mental health conditions carry risks for both mom and baby. Severe anxiety, depression, insomnia, or mood instability can impair bonding, lower milk supply, disrupt routines, and make the postpartum period far more challenging. In many cases, treating the mother’s mental health is the safest choice for the entire family. The goal is not medication vs. breastfeeding—it’s supporting both whenever possible.

If you are considering psychiatric medication while breastfeeding, here are some helpful tips:

Practical Tips for Mothers

  • Discuss all options with your psychiatrist early—even during pregnancy if possible.
  • Share your breastfeeding goals so your clinician can choose the safest, most compatible medication.
  • Monitor your baby’s sleep, feeding, and weight patterns, especially in the first two months.
  • Take medications after the longest sleep stretch, if recommended, to minimize infant exposure.
  • Avoid abruptly stopping medication—withdrawal can worsen anxiety or depression.
  • Keep your pediatrician in the loop, especially if your baby was premature or medically fragile.
  • Trust the process—most babies exposed to psychiatric medications through breast milk do very well.

At Iroko Psychiatry, we help mothers navigate these decisions with clarity and confidence. We review each patient’s medical history, discuss medication options that are compatible with breastfeeding, and provide careful monitoring throughout the postpartum period. Whether through telepsychiatry or in-person visits, our team prioritizes both maternal mental health and infant safety. Your well-being matters—and taking care of yourself is one of the most powerful ways to care for your baby.

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Understanding Postpartum Depression: What New Mothers Should Know

Postpartum depression (PPD) is far more common than many people realize. While it’s normal for new mothers to feel overwhelmed, emotional, or exhausted, PPD goes beyond the typical “baby blues.” It can involve persistent sadness, loss of interest in activities, difficulty bonding with the baby, irritability, guilt, or a sense of hopelessness. These symptoms can start during pregnancy or within the first year after childbirth, and they often make mothers feel as though they are failing—when in reality, they are experiencing a medical condition that deserves care and support.

PPD can affect any mother, regardless of age, background, or previous mental health history. Hormonal changes, lack of sleep, physical recovery after delivery, and emotional adjustments all play a role. Many women also struggle silently out of fear of being judged or misunderstood. It’s important to know that postpartum depression is not your fault. It does not mean you’re a bad mother, and it does not mean you don’t love your baby. It means your brain and body are under significant strain and need compassionate, evidence-based support.

Treatment for postpartum depression is highly effective. Many mothers benefit from a combination of therapy, medication, lifestyle adjustments, and structured emotional support. Therapies such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) can help reframe negative thoughts, while antidepressant medications—many compatible with breastfeeding—can restore balance and significantly improve mood, sleep, and energy. The earlier PPD is recognized and treated, the easier it is to recover and regain a sense of connection and confidence.

At Iroko Psychiatry, we specialize in understanding the emotional challenges that arise after childbirth and provide warm, non-judgmental support to mothers navigating postpartum depression. Through in-person and telepsychiatry visits, we offer personalized treatment plans, medication management when needed, and ongoing follow-up to ensure recovery is steady and sustainable. Our goal is simple: to help mothers heal, reconnect with themselves, and fully enjoy life with their families. You are not alone, and help is available.

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Understanding Postpartum OCD: What New Mothers Need to Know

Bringing a new baby into the world is often described as joyful, transformative, and deeply emotional. But for many new mothers, the postpartum period also brings unexpected mental health challenges that are frightening, confusing, and difficult to talk about. One of these conditions is Postpartum Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (Postpartum OCD)—a form of OCD that appears during pregnancy or after childbirth and is much more common than most people realize.

Postpartum OCD is not a sign of being a bad mother. It is not a predictor of harming your baby. And it is not something you caused. It is a treatable medical condition, and with the right support, women recover fully.

What Is Postpartum OCD?

Postpartum OCD involves intrusive, unwanted, and distressing thoughts—often about accidental or intentional harm befalling the baby. These thoughts feel terrifying and out of character. Mothers may become overwhelmed by:

Common Intrusive Thoughts

  • “What if I drop the baby?”
  • “What if I accidentally suffocate the baby while sleeping?”
  • “What if I lose control and hurt the baby?”
  • “What if I contaminate the baby with germs?”

These thoughts are ego-dystonic, meaning they go against your actual desires, values, and intentions. Mothers with postpartum OCD are typically very nurturing, cautious, and deeply bonded to their babies—yet the thoughts feel intrusive and unwanted.

Compulsions: The Behaviors That Follow

Many mothers try to neutralize or suppress these thoughts through repetitive behaviors, such as:

  • Excessive checking (breathing, temperature, safety)
  • Cleaning or handwashing repeatedly
  • Avoiding being alone with the baby
  • Removing objects they fear could cause harm
  • Constantly seeking reassurance

These behaviors temporarily reduce anxiety but reinforce the cycle over time.

Why Does Postpartum OCD Happen?

Postpartum OCD stems from a combination of:

  • Hormonal shifts
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Stress of caregiving
  • Personal or family history of anxiety/OCD
  • Perfectionism or high responsibility traits

It is a medical condition—not a failure of character or motherhood.

How Is Postpartum OCD Different From Psychosis?

This distinction is crucial:

  • Postpartum OCD: Unwanted, intrusive thoughts the mother finds terrifying and inconsistent with her identity. She has insight and feels guilt and anxiety.
  • Postpartum Psychosis: Loss of reality, delusions, hallucinations, and impaired judgment.

Most women with intrusive thoughts never harm their babies—because the thoughts are unwanted and cause distress.

Treatment: Highly Effective and Compassion-Centered

Postpartum OCD is very treatable, and early support leads to faster recovery.

Common treatments include:

1. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Featuring Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP)—the gold standard for OCD.

2. Medication

SSRIs have strong evidence and are considered safe for many breastfeeding mothers.

3. Sleep Support

Improving rest is often essential for symptom reduction.

4. Partner and Family Education

Understanding the condition reduces shame and builds a supportive environment.

When to Seek Help

Reach out to a mental health professional if you notice:

  • Intrusive thoughts that distress or frighten you
  • Avoiding caregiving activities because of fear
  • Repetitive behaviors that disrupt daily routines
  • Intense guilt, shame, or fear of being alone with the baby

You deserve care that is compassionate, judgment-free, and knowledgeable about postpartum conditions.

How Iroko Psychiatry Can Help

At Iroko Psychiatry, we specialize in recognizing and treating postpartum OCD with respect, confidentiality, and evidence-based care. We know how isolating these experiences can feel, and we work closely with mothers to restore confidence, reduce distress, and support healthy bonding with their babies—whether through in-person visits or telepsychiatry.

You are not alone, and you can get better.

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Managing Postpartum Depression with Anxiety

The period following childbirth can be a time of intense emotional change, and for many women it isn’t just the “baby blues.” Up to one in five—or possibly more—new mothers experience persistent and troubling anxiety. While some worry is natural, postpartum anxiety becomes a clinical concern when symptoms such as intrusive thoughts, excessive concern for the baby’s safety, restlessness, sleep disruption, and a sense of dread interfere with daily life and caregiving. Distressingly, this anxiety often appears alongside postpartum depression, meaning clinicians must routinely consider both mood and anxiety symptoms together rather than in isolation.

In managing such complex cases, evidence strongly supports an integrated, measurement-guided strategy. First-line pharmacotherapy typically involves selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) because they address both depressive and anxiety symptoms. Clinical trials demonstrate that mothers with combined mood and anxiety concerns respond well to SSRIs—sometimes in tandem with cognitive behavioral therapy. For patients who do not sufficiently improve, serotonin‐norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) can be considered, especially when anxiety symptoms are prominent. In severe cases—with debilitating insomnia, panic, obsessive stresses, or intrusive baby-related fears—a short‐term adjunctive benzodiazepine may provide vital sleep relief and symptom stabilization while the antidepressant takes effect.

Recent innovations also include rapid-acting agents that target both mood and anxiety symptoms in the postpartum period more directly. Importantly, early and repeated screening is critical: validated tools like the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) should be paired with perinatal anxiety measures such as the PASS or the GAD-7. Screening should occur not only at the first postpartum visit but also during well-child checks at 1-, 2-, 4-, and 6-months. For mild to moderate cases, psychotherapy remains foundational—cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness-based approaches, and structured interventions can be highly effective and low-risk, particularly when used early.

At Iroko Psychiatry, our approach to postpartum mood and anxiety disorders is proactive, holistic, and personalized. We prioritize early identification, use measurement tools to track progress, and tailor our care plans to both the mother’s and infant’s needs. Whether delivered via telepsychiatry or in-clinic visits, our goal is the same: to ensure new mothers receive compassionate, comprehensive care, reduce the risk of chronic illness, and restore their ability to engage with their lives and families fully.