Patient Engagement

Fertility Care

Studies have shown that a significant percentage of fertility patients have psychiatric disorders, with anxiety being the most common, followed by depression.

Only a small number of patients with mental health disorders are receiving psychological treatment. Additionally, many patients score in the clinical range for both depression and anxiety during their fertility treatment.

A notable percentage of individuals seeking fertility treatment may experience suicidal ideation (SI) or have attempted suicide.

Perinatal care demands follow-through, often during intense emotional distress. Research shows untreated perinatal depression, anxiety, and trauma symptoms are linked to reduced engagement and lower adherence to medical recommendations—especially in high-risk and medically complex situations.

Pregnancy and infant loss are also major psychological risk events. Even when staff are trying to be supportive, these moments are not always managed with the structure and follow-up patients need, increasing risk for severe trauma responses, including PTSD symptoms. Integrated mental health support improves continuity of care and medical outcomes.

Thoughtfully crafted to elevate what matters most.

Perinatal Care

The Poor Management of your patients’ emotions can result in:

  • Communication breakdowns across staff and with patients

  • Workflow disruption and reduced efficiency

  • Compassion fatigue and emotional exhaustion

  • Increased stress and burnout

  • Lower job satisfaction and reduced sense of meaning in work

  • Higher turnover and staffing instability

  • Moral distress and decreased confidence delivering difficult news

  • Boundary strain and emotional overextension

  • Increased conflict within teams and clinic culture strain

  • Higher risk of errors due to cognitive overload

  • Secondary traumatic stress, especially after loss or devastating outcomes

How Do We Support Your Patients:

• Evidence-Based Support Classes

Using a structured program based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). 

Completing The curriculum will equip patients with the skills needed to cope with stress, grief, anxiety, guilt, shame, despair, reproductive trauma, infertility and pregnancy loss.

• One-Stop Care Coordination: 

Patients can be referred by staff where trained professionals will assess their individual needs and direct them to the most suitable level of care, such as in-network psychiatry and individual clinical services. Barriers for class attendance can also be compassionately assessed. 

• Psychoeducation Classes

Patients and their partners will have access to psychoeducation classes at the beginning of treatment to build awareness of common mental health challenges and integrate support and practical tools into their care plan from the start.