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Creator resource: How trauma spans generations

The Center for Health Communication works to create toolkits and briefings that help content creators spread evidence-based health information on social media. The information provided is meant to be educational and is not a substitute for medical advice. This page was last updated on 11/22/24.

Key statistics


Understand the research

The impact of mental health disorders can span across generations

  • People are more vulnerable to mental health problems during pregnancy.
  • A 2022 study in Maternal Child Health Journal suggests that cross-generational mental health impacts from mother to baby may be due to lack of economic resources and adequate healthcare disrupting caregiving behavior.
  • Maternal hair samples show chronic stress can lead to challenges in their children’s ability to regulate behavior, emotion, and cognition.
Content resources:
Hashtags:
  • #MaternalMentalHealth, #EndTheStigma, #PostpartumSupport, #HSPHCreatorsSummit

Maternal depression & trauma can affect a child’s psychological development & mental health

  • Maternal depression is linked to psychological & developmental disturbances in infants, children, and adolescents, including negative impacts on sleep, gross motor skills, and delayed emotional/language development.
  • The Covid-19 pandemic & associated lockdowns caused excess stress on expectant mothers. In some cases, that stress led to an increased risk of PTSD after birth. While not definitive, children born to these mothers could experience a heightened risk for negative mental health outcomes in the future.
Content resources:
Audience Call to Action:
Hashtags:
  • #ChildDevelopment, #MaternalDepression, #HSPHCreatorsSummit

Mothers deserve more support throughout pregnancy and postpartum, and marginalized communities are disproportionately affected

  • Mental health, cultural, and economic support must extend throughout mothers’ lives to ensure that all pregnant or postpartum people get the right care at the right time.
  • Maternal mental health is intersectional.
  • Black and Latina women in the United States have higher rates of depression and anxiety during pregnancy as well as access to poorer quality obstetric and gynecologic care than their nonLatina White counterparts.
  • Birth is not a “normal” process for everyone. It’s important for mothers to advocate for their mental and physical wellbeing as systemic expectations of motherhood can be damaging.
Content resources:
Audience Call to Action:
Hashtags:
  • #ImprovingMentalHealthcare, #MaternityCare, #Intersectionality, #HSPHCreatorsSummit

Additional resources

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