Perinatal Mental Health and Obstetric Violence

Obstetric violence and perinatal mental health are deeply interconnected. Their impacts shape the experiences of women and pregnant people, early mother–baby bonding, and family dynamics, often leaving long-lasting emotional and psychosocial effects. 

This section aims to make these intersections visible and to examine them through comparative perspectives and with attention to the social determinants of perinatal mental health. We bring together research, training, care practices, and knowledge produced through activism, in support of respectful perinatal care.

Coordinators of this section

Universidad Nacional de Entre Ríos (Argentina)

María Fernanda González

National University of Entre Ríos | Perinatal Mental Health, Gender, Activism, and Obstetric Violence.

Carolina Farías

Universidad de la República (Uruguay)

Adjunct Professor in the Gender, Reproductive Health, and Sexualities Programme at the Institute of Health Psychology. She is also an Adjunct Professor at the Midwifery School of the Faculty of Medicine, Universidad de la República (Udelar).

Perinatal Mental Health and Obstetric Violence:
Towards a Dedicated Working Group within the IPOV Project

Obstetric violence and perinatal mental health constitute a key area of intersection that calls for dedicated attention within research, intervention, and training agendas. These issues are deeply intertwined and have lasting impacts not only on women and pregnant people, but also on their babies, families, and communities, influencing subjective experiences, early bonding, and care trajectories.

Within the IPOV project (International Platform on Obstetric Violence), which is oriented towards building global conceptual frameworks and strategies to address obstetric violence, we seek to develop this line of work in order to examine systematically its implications for perinatal mental health.

Through this section, we aim to map existing studies while also fostering dialogue between academic research, clinical practice, and knowledge generated through activism, incorporating an approach that is attentive to the psychosocial and emotional effects of violence in perinatal settings.

This line of work seeks to strengthen the production of situated and comparative knowledge, and to generate contributions that can engage with health-care provision and with collective strategies advanced by movements advocating for respectful perinatal care.

Project IPOV RESPECTFULCARE has received funding from the European Union’s HORIZON-MSCA-2022-Staff Exchange programme. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Executive Agency (REA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.

Disclaimer

Our selection of texts written by IPOV professionals:

Perinatal Mental Health and Obstetric Violence: Tensions, Impacts and Restorative Horizons

Obstetric violence and perinatal mental health are intertwined phenomena that have gained visibility within interdisciplinary research on human rights, gender and public health. Within the IPOV project (International Platform on Obstetric Violence), which seeks to develop global conceptual frameworks and strategies to address obstetric violence, it is crucial to explore how these experiences affect the psychological well-being of women, pregnant people, their babies and families, as well as the possible practices of reparation.
IPOV Respectful Care
November 15, 2025