Postpartum Mood Changes — Emotional Instability After Childbirth
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The baby is beautiful, but the tears keep coming
About 80% of new mothers experience temporary postpartum mood changes (the "baby blues"). Most recover naturally within 2 weeks, but in some cases the symptoms progress to postpartum depression. With sleep deprivation, breastfeeding stress, and the change in roles all overlapping, mothers may experience tearfulness, anxiety, exhaustion, and even emotional numbness toward the baby.
Korean medicine diagnosis: Dual Deficiency of Qi and Blood (氣血兩虛) + Liver Stagnation (肝鬱)
Childbirth is an event that depletes qi and blood on a large scale. When emotional stress is layered on top, the Liver (肝) also becomes stagnant.
- Blood deficiency (血虛): Bleeding and breastfeeding leave blood insufficient → the Heart lacks blood, leading to anxiety and insomnia
- Qi deficiency (氣虛): Physical reserves are exhausted → fatigue and lack of motivation
- Liver stagnation (肝鬱): Suppressed emotions → irritability, tearfulness, and a stuffy chest
Treatment prescriptions
- Modified Danggui-Jakyak-san (當歸芍藥散): A representative postpartum formula that nourishes blood and gently soothes the Liver
- Gami Soyo-san (加味逍遙散): For cases with strong stagnation and heat sensations
- Acupuncture: Baihui (GV20) — lifts yang qi and clears the mind; Sanyinjiao (SP6) — replenishes qi and blood; Taichong (LR3) — frees Liver qi
What to know about postpartum mood
- Postpartum depression is not a matter of willpower — it is a biological phenomenon caused by hormones and physical depletion
- Herbal prescriptions safe to use while breastfeeding are available (always consult a Korean medicine doctor)
- In severe cases (urges of self-harm, inability to care for the baby), immediate referral to a psychiatrist is necessary