Perinatal Mental Health Grants in Australia: Funding Support for New Parents

Perinatal mental health — mental health during pregnancy and in the first year following birth — affects approximately 1 in 5 new mothers and 1 in 10 new fathers in Australia. Postnatal depression, perinatal anxiety, birth trauma, and infant mental health challenges are common, often undetected, and profoundly affect the whole family. Early identification and support prevents long-term harm to parent and child. Grant funding supports screening, treatment, peer support, and the community services that reach parents at their most vulnerable.

Perinatal mental health in Australia

Scale

  • Approximately 100,000 women experience perinatal depression or anxiety each year in Australia
  • 1 in 5 mothers and 1 in 10 fathers experience perinatal mental health challenges
  • Only 40% of cases are identified and treated
  • Perinatal mental health conditions are the leading cause of maternal mortality in Australia (suicide)
  • Infant mental health: the first 1,000 days (conception to age 2) are foundational for brain development

Conditions

  • Antenatal depression and anxiety (during pregnancy)
  • Postnatal depression (after birth — first year)
  • Perinatal anxiety disorders
  • Birth trauma and PTSD
  • Postpartum psychosis (rare but severe)
  • Perinatal grief (miscarriage, stillbirth, infant loss)
  • Paternal perinatal mental health

Barriers to help

  • Stigma (mothers "should" be happy)
  • Fear of judgment or child removal
  • Limited time (caring for newborn)
  • Rural and remote access
  • Cultural barriers (in CALD communities, disclosure is particularly stigmatised)
  • Workforce shortages in specialist perinatal services

Government perinatal mental health funding

National Perinatal Mental Health Guideline

Evidence-based guidelines for screening and management in primary care.

Better Access to Mental Health Care

Medicare rebates for psychological treatment including perinatal mental health.

Pregnancy and newborn health

State maternity services include some mental health screening (Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale widely used).

PANDA (Perinatal Anxiety and Depression Australia)

National helpline for perinatal mental health — government-funded through DSS.

Mental Health Australia

Advocacy and policy on perinatal mental health at national level.

Philanthropic perinatal mental health funders

PANDA (Perinatal Anxiety and Depression Australia)

The peak body for perinatal mental health:
- National helpline — free confidential support
- Professional training for GPs, midwives, maternal health nurses
- Public awareness campaigns
- Peer support programmes

Gidget Foundation Australia

Dedicated perinatal mental health organisation:
- Start Talking (telehealth for perinatal mental health)
- Clinical consultations
- Professional education

Miracle Babies Foundation

Support for families with premature or sick newborns (significant mental health component).

SANDS Australia

Support after stillbirth and neonatal death — grief and perinatal loss.

Bears of Hope

Pregnancy and infant loss support.

Philanthropy Australia members

Several family and health foundations fund perinatal mental health.

Types of funded perinatal mental health programmes

Screening and early identification

  • Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale training
  • Universal screening programmes in antenatal/postnatal care
  • GP training for perinatal mental health detection
  • Midwife and maternal child health nurse training

Telephone and digital support

  • PANDA National Helpline
  • Telehealth perinatal mental health (Gidget Start Talking)
  • Online support groups
  • App-based mood tracking and support
  • Text support programmes

Peer support

  • Peer support groups (connecting mothers who've experienced PND)
  • Volunteer befriending
  • Online community forums
  • Partner support groups (for fathers/partners affected)

Clinical treatment

  • Psychology and psychiatry for perinatal mental health
  • Perinatal mother-baby units (inpatient)
  • Group therapy programmes
  • Trauma-informed care for birth trauma
  • EMDR and trauma therapy for perinatal PTSD

Infant mental health

  • Parent-infant relationship therapy
  • Circle of Security and other attachment-based programmes
  • Watch Wait and Wonder
  • Child-parent psychotherapy

Paternal perinatal mental health

Often overlooked:
- Father-focused programmes (PANDA, Gidget)
- Peer support for new fathers
- Workplace support for new fathers

Perinatal grief and loss

  • Miscarriage and stillbirth support
  • SANDS bereavement support
  • Birth trauma counselling
  • Neonatal death support (NICU families)

CALD communities

  • Culturally appropriate perinatal mental health support
  • Translated resources
  • Bilingual peer support workers
  • Community education in language

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander perinatal health

  • Culturally safe perinatal care
  • Indigenous maternal health workers
  • Community-controlled perinatal support
  • Cultural healing approaches

Workforce development

  • GP training (detection and management)
  • Midwife training
  • Maternal and child health nurse training
  • Specialist perinatal mental health workforce development

The 1,000 days window

The period from conception to age 2 — the first 1,000 days — is the most sensitive period for brain development. Parental mental health during this period directly affects infant development:

  • Postnatal depression affects mother-infant attachment
  • Anxious parenting affects infant regulation
  • Trauma affects parenting sensitivity
  • Partner mental health affects co-parenting

Investments in perinatal mental health pay dividends across the child's developmental trajectory.

Grant application considerations

Universal screening

Universal perinatal mental health screening (not just postnatal) is evidence-based. Applications supporting routine screening in all antenatal and postnatal contacts are foundational.

Workforce gap

Australia has a critical shortage of perinatal mental health specialists. Applications building workforce capacity — training GPs, midwives, nurses — have broad impact.

Telehealth for access

Rural and remote parents have limited access to face-to-face perinatal mental health care. Applications delivering telehealth services extend reach to underserved populations.

Fathers and partners

Paternal perinatal mental health is significantly underfunded relative to need. Applications specifically addressing fathers and partners address a genuine gap.


Tahua's grants management platform supports perinatal mental health funders and parent support organisations — with programme participant tracking, recovery outcome measurement, service reach data, and the reporting tools that help perinatal mental health funders demonstrate their investment in the mental health of new parents and their babies.

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