Leading Postpartum Depression Blog Launches First Daily Support Service for Mothers Who Suffer

Postpartum Progress, the most widely-read blog on PPD, launches the nation's first daily support service for women with postpartum depression. Daily Hope will offer messages from the top experts on perinatal mood and anxiety disorders.

Postpartum Progress (www.postpartumprogress.com), the most widely-read blog in the United States on postpartum depression, announced today the launch of a new service that will help pregnant and new mothers get through the difficulty of perinatal mood and anxiety disorders.

Daily Hope is the nation's first-of-its-kind support service featuring once daily emails to mothers with postpartum depression, postpartum anxiety, postpartum OCD and antenatal depression or anxiety. Beginning Monday, January 17th, this free service will provide encouragement from survivors, the country's top perinatal mental health specialists and authors of the leading books on perinatal mood and anxiety disorders and parenting.

Many of the nearly one million women who suffer each year do not have access to perinatal mental health specialists or PPD support groups where they live. Daily hope will bring the experts to them.

"I hear from thousands of mothers across the country and around the world who say that having someone to lean on who deeply understands can contribute a great deal to their recovery process," said Katherine Stone, founder of Postpartum Progress and survivor of postpartum OCD. "Daily Hope will be a great way to use technology to offer mothers encouragement from the nation's most trusted experts on their illnesses, no matter where they live or what kind of insurance they have. The more support we can provide to women with postpartum depression, the better, because the sooner they recover, the less likely it is that they and their babies will be negatively affected over the long term."

Contributors to Daily Hope include, among others:
* Karen Kleiman, MSW, author of "This Isn't What I Expected: Overcoming Postpartum Depression"
* Adrienne Griffen, founder of Postpartum Support Virginia
* Ann Dunnewold, author of "Life Will Never Be the Same: The Real Mom's Postpartum Survival Guide" and "Even June Cleaver Would Forget the Juice Box"
* Marlene Freeman, MD, MGH Center for Women's Mental Health & Harvard University
* Pamela Weigartz, author of "The Pregnancy & Postpartum Anxiety Workbook"
* Susan Stone, LCSW, former president of Postpartum Support International
* "Aunt Becky," author of the blog Mommy Wants Vodka and survivor of antenatal depression
* Janice Croze, founder of 5MinutesforMom.com and survivor of postpartum depression

Women interested in signing up to participate should go to the Postpartum Progress website to subscribe to Daily Hope.

Postpartum Progress, founded in 2004, provides the most comprehensive, in-depth and accessible information available on perinatal mental illness for pregnant women and new mothers. Having already helped more than 350,000 women and healthcare providers, Postpartum Progress offers an unflinching look at getting through postpartum depression, postpartum anxiety, postpartum OCD, postpartum psychosis, and antenatal depression & anxiety. Postpartum Progress has been named as one of the top 10 depression blogs on the web by Psych Central, the winner of Fit Pregnancy's Best of the Web Awards in the Advice category, and was a runner-up in Parenting's Must-Read Moms and Scholastic Parent & Child's Best Parenting Blogs Awards. It has been featured on Babble, ParentDish, Cafe Mom, Health.com and many other parenting websites. Postpartum Progress was founded by Katherine Stone, who was named a WebMD Health Hero in 2008 and won the Bloganthropy Award in 2010 for her advocacy work for pregnant and new mothers with maternal mental illness.

Postpartum Progress the blog and Daily Hope are both offered by Postpartum Progress Inc., a newly-formed non-profit organization dedicated to vastly improving the amount of services and support available to women with perinatal mood and anxiety disorders.

About Postpartum Progress

Postpartum Progress
6560 Eli Davis Rd.
Cumming, GA
30040

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