Reproductive Psychiatry
If your symptoms follow a pattern, it’s worth paying attention
If your mood, anxiety, or energy shifts consistently with your cycle, during pregnancy, postpartum, or along your fertility journey, you’re not imagining it—and you’re not alone.
As a reproductive psychiatrist, Dr. Shah focuses on understanding these patterns and treating them with precision.
What is Reproductive Psychiatry?
Reproductive psychiatry focuses on mental health symptoms that are linked to hormonal and reproductive changes across a woman’s life
These transitions include:
The menstrual cycle
Fertility treatment and pregnancy loss
Pregnancy and postpartum
Perimenopause and menopause
These phases can have a powerful effect on mood, thinking, energy, and overall wellbeing.
Many women assume these changes are a personal failing or something they should be able to “push through.” In reality, they are often driven by underlying biological shifts in the brain and endocrine (hormonal) system.
Women are about twice as likely as men to experience depression and anxiety disorders, and risk often increases during times of hormonal change.
If your hardest days consistently line up with your cycle, fertility journey, postpartum period, or midlife transition, that pattern matters.
This is where specialized care can help.
We work together to:
Identify patterns over time
Connect symptoms to hormonal changes
Assess for common associated conditions like ADHD or eating disorders.
Develop a treatment plan that fits your goals, values, and life circumstances
Menstrual-Cycle Related Symptoms
PMDD
For some women, mood and anxiety symptoms are closely tied to the menstrual cycle. You may notice predictable shifts in mood, energy, or functioning in the days or weeks before your period.
Common symptoms include:
Irritability or anger
Anxiety or feeling on edge
Depression or low mood
Fatigue or difficulty concentrating
Feeling overwhelmed or out of control
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A more severe form of cycle-related symptoms
Affects 3–8% of women of reproductive age
It’s not just “bad PMS.” It can significantly disrupt work, relationships, and daily life
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We clarify diagnosis by:
Tracking symptoms to identify your unique patterns
Reviewing psychiatric and medical history
Identifying hormonal sensitivity
Treatment may include:
Targeted medication strategies
Cycle-based treatment adjustments
Psychotherapy support
Lifestyle and sleep interventions
The goal is to reduce symptom intensity and help you feel more stable throughout the month.
Perimenopause
Perimenopause doesn’t look the same for everyone. For some women, the first signs are emotional rather than physical.
For women with a history of depression, anxiety, PMDD, or postpartum mood symptoms, this can be a higher-risk window for recurrence.
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Perimenopause is the transition leading up to menopause. It can begin as early as the late 30s or early 40s, though most women notice changes in their mid-40s.
This phase can last several years before periods stop completely.
What makes perimenopause challenging is that hormone levels—especially estrogen—don’t just decline. They fluctuate unpredictably, which can have a direct impact on brain function and mood.
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Common mental health symptoms include:
New or worsening anxiety
Depressed mood or loss of motivation
Irritability or shorter emotional bandwidth
Difficulty concentrating or “brain fog”
Sleep disruption (problems falling or staying asleep)
Feeling overwhelmed by things that used to feel manageable
You may also notice:
Symptoms that come and go unpredictably
Increased sensitivity to stress
Changes that feel out of proportion to what’s happening in your life
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Hormonal shifts during perimenopause affect brain systems involved in:
Mood regulation
Sleep
Focus and memory
Stress response
These changes are biological—not a reflection of willpower, resilience, or coping ability
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Perimenopause symptoms are often misattributed to stress, burnout, or aging alone.
A reproductive psychiatry approach looks at:
Timing of symptoms
Hormonal patterns
Your personal mental health history
This allows for more targeted, effective treatment.
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Treatment is individualized and depends on your symptoms, medical history, and preferences. Options may include:
Medication management
Antidepressants or anti-anxiety medications when appropriate
Sleep-focused treatments if insomnia is an issue
Hormone-based approaches
For some women, hormone therapy (such as estrogen) may help stabilize mood and reduce symptoms
Coordination with your gynecologist or primary care provider when needed
ADHD considerations
Hormonal changes can worsen attention, focus, and executive functioning
Evaluation for ADHD may be appropriate if symptoms become more impairing
Lifestyle and behavioral strategies
Sleep stabilization
Stress reduction
Structured routines to support cognitive function
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You may benefit from an evaluation if:
Your mood or anxiety has changed in your 40s
Symptoms feel new, unpredictable, or harder to manage
Sleep disruption is affecting daily functioning
You feel “not like yourself” without a clear reason
Get Support
If you’re experiencing menstrual cycle-related changes, you’re not alone—and you don’t have to wait until symptoms become severe to seek care.
Perinatal Mental Health
Pregnancy & Postpartum
You can love your baby and still feel unlike yourself
Pregnancy and the postpartum period are major transitions—physically, emotionally, and hormonally. It’s common to feel overwhelmed, anxious, or disconnected during this time. This does not mean you are failing. It means your system is under significant strain.
About 1 in 7 women experience depression during pregnancy or in the first year after childbirth. Many more experience anxiety, panic, irritability, or intrusive thoughts. These conditions are treatable, and early support can make a meaningful difference.
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Several factors often interact:
Rapid hormonal changes
Sleep deprivation
Physical recovery from childbirth
Increased responsibilities and identity shifts
Limited support
These can contribute to:
Depression
Anxiety
Panic symptoms
Irritability or rage
In rare cases, postpartum psychosis (which requires urgent care)
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Leading medical guidelines, including from the American College of Obstetrics & Gynecology (ACOG), recommend that psychiatric medications should not be stopped or avoided solely due to pregnancy or breastfeeding.
Treatment during pregnancy and the postpartum period can feel complicated. Many patients worry about the effects of medication—but untreated symptoms also carry real risks for both parent and baby.
Decisions around feeding your baby are deeply personal—and often come with strong emotions and external pressure. Our approach includes thoughtful consideration of breastfeeding, formula feeding, or a combination, depending on what is best for your mental health, your baby, and your overall situation.
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A collaborative approach. Together we will:
Review your history and current symptoms
Review how medications may pass into fetal circulation or breastmilk
Discuss available safety data in a clear, practical terms
Help you weigh trade-offs without pressure or judgment
Support whatever treatment approach aligns with your needs and values
Treatment may include:
Medication management
Psychotherapy
Coordination with your OB/GYN or care team
Practical strategies for sleep, support, and daily functioning
Your mental health is a central part of your baby’s wellbeing. Supporting you means supporting both of you. With the right care, this period can feel more stable, manageable, and meaningful.
Fertility & Loss
A complex and often isolating experience
Fertility challenges and pregnancy loss can be emotionally intense and unpredictable.
Many women describe:
Cycles of hope and disappointment
Loss of control over their body
Anxiety around treatment outcomes
Grief that feels difficult to explain to others
These experiences are common—and they deserve support.
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Fertility treatments can place ongoing stress on both body and mind.
Hormonal medications, medical procedures, and uncertainty can contribute to:
Anxiety
Mood changes
Sleep disruption
Relationship strain
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Loss—whether early or later—can bring grief, guilt, anger, or numbness.
There is no single “right” way to respond. What matters is having space to process the experience and support as you move forward.
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Support is both validating and practical.
We focus on:
Understanding your emotional experience
Reducing anxiety and depressive symptoms
Supporting decision-making during treatment
Helping you navigate next steps, whatever they may be
Treatment may include:
Medication when appropriate
Psychotherapy support
Coordination with reproductive endocrinologists or OB providers
A Different Approach to Women’s Mental Health
Reproductive psychiatry recognizes that timing matters.
Instead of treating symptoms in isolation, we look at:
When symptoms occur
What biological transitions are happening
How your environment and support system interact with those changes
This leads to more precise, effective care.
Get Support
If your symptoms feel tied to your cycle, pregnancy, fertility journey, or midlife transition, specialized care can help you make sense of what’s happening—and feel more like yourself again.