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🍼Fourth Trimester

The fourth trimester is real. So is everything you're adjusting to.

Therapists in Fort Worth, Texas

"The baby is here and everyone celebrates β€” but nobody warned me how hard this part would be."
βœ“See a specialist this weekβœ“PMH-C Certified Therapistsβœ“Telehealth Β· see anyone from homeβœ“In-network in Texas
In network with
Blue Cross Blue Shield of TexasUnitedHealthcareAetnaCigna+9 more

No commitment. We'll confirm your coverage before your first session.

Virtual therapy for Fort Worth families

Fort Worth is not Dallas. People here are specific about that. The city has its own economy, its own identity, and its own version of the Texas postpartum experience that gets flattened when it gets lumped into DFW the way most national health resources lump it. The growth in Near Southside, Keller, Southlake, Mansfield, and Burleson has brought a wave of young families and professionals who moved here for the housing costs and the schools, and who are far from their own families without necessarily having set out to be. Fort Worth has strong roots in faith communities, Western culture, and the kind of toughness that doesn't put private struggles into public conversation. That cultural layer makes it genuinely harder to say you're struggling, and harder to ask for help. PMH-C certified perinatal mental health specialists are scarce in Fort Worth proper. Most practices funnel to the Dallas side of the Metroplex, which means an additional commute on I-30 or 820 that isn't nothing when you have a newborn. Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification and typically see Fort Worth-area clients within one week of intake, by secure video from wherever you have a quiet fifteen minutes. No Trinity River traffic. No I-30. We accept most major insurance plans, including Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, and United Healthcare, and verify your benefits before your first session.

Fort Worth neighborhoods: Near Southside Β· Sundance Square Β· Keller Β· Southlake Β· Mansfield Β· Burleson

You might benefit from therapy if…

  • βœ“You're in the first 3 months postpartum and you didn't expect it to feel like this
  • βœ“You're running on no sleep and people keep telling you to sleep when the baby sleeps as if that solves it
  • βœ“You're struggling with feeding, healing, or your relationship with your body
  • βœ“You feel isolated even when people are around
  • βœ“You don't know what's normal for this phase and what's a warning sign
  • βœ“You want support before things get worse, not after
Dr. Emily Guarnotta

Dr. Emily Guarnotta

Psychologist & Founder

From our founder

The fourth trimester is the phase I built Phoenix Health to serve. It's when you have the least time, the least sleep, and the most need, and the system was not set up for that. Virtual care that meets you where you are, with therapists who already know this terrain, is what makes the difference.

What therapy looks like

Therapy in the fourth trimester is usually paced to the realities of the first three months. Sessions are often shorter, more frequent, and more practical than they might be later. Most Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification and know exactly what to expect from this phase, which means they can quickly distinguish normal fourth-trimester intensity from the start of postpartum depression, anxiety, or OCD. Early sessions usually focus on validation and education, because so much of the suffering in this phase is amplified by not knowing what's typical. From there the work might include processing the birth, navigating relationship and family dynamics, managing the practical chaos, and screening for any clinical concerns that need more attention. Many clients work weekly through the first 12 weeks and then either move to less frequent sessions or shift focus as new issues emerge. The goal is to keep you from white-knuckling alone through a phase that benefits enormously from witness and guidance.

Our Fourth Trimester specialists in Fort Worth, Texas

Most Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification β€” the gold standard in perinatal mental health.

Real clients. Real relief.

What our clients say about their experience.

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

β€œ"I couldn't figure out why I felt so disconnected. I was doing everything right, the baby was healthy, everyone said I was doing great. My therapist helped me understand that the gap between how it looks and how it feels is exactly where postpartum struggles live. Once she named it, I could start addressing it."”

β€” first-time mom

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

β€œ"I thought I'd love being home with my baby. I was bored and lonely and exhausted in a way I hadn't expected, and then I felt guilty for not being grateful. My therapist helped me understand that the fourth trimester isn't just about the baby. It's also about what happens to you, physically, hormonally, socially, in those first months."”

β€” stay-at-home mom

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

β€œ"Nobody told me that baby blues resolving and feeling okay are not the same thing. Six weeks out I was functional. Four months out I realized I hadn't felt like myself in months and wasn't sure I knew what that meant anymore. My therapist helped me figure out the difference between adjusting and struggling, and helped me get support before it got harder."”

β€” new mom

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

β€œI cried through the first three weeks. My therapist did a session with me on day 18, told me what was likely the baby blues, what to watch for, and how to take care of myself. That hour bought me months of clarity.”

β€” Allie, 1 month postpartum

Expert care.
Covered in Texas.

  • βœ“Aetna (incl. CVS Health, First Health, & Meritain)
  • βœ“BCBS (incl. Anthem, Blue Cross, Blue Shield, & state plans)
  • βœ“Cigna / Evernorth
  • βœ“United Healthcare (UHC) / Optum (incl. UBH, UMR, Surest, Oscar, & Oxford)

Most clients pay less than $20 per session.

Accepted Insurance Networks

Aetna
Blue Cross Blue Shield
UnitedHealthcare
Cigna
Anthem
+9 more

Ready to start Fourth Trimester therapy? Here’s how it works.

The whole process takes about 5 minutes. We handle insurance β€” you just show up.

  1. 1

    Book your free call

    A quick 15-minute chat to hear what you're going through, answer your questions, and make sure we're a great fit for your needs. No cost, no commitment.

  2. 2

    Get matched

    We'll pair you with the right specialist for your specific situation. We'll also check your insurance, so you know your exact cost per session before moving forward.

  3. 3

    Start your first session

    Meet your therapist from the comfort of home. No commute, no waiting rooms, no judgment. Most clients notice a real difference within just 2 to 3 sessions.

No commitment Β· Most insurance accepted Β· Available this week

Common questions

  • As soon as you want support. Many clients start in pregnancy specifically so they have someone in place by the time the baby arrives, but starting at week 2 or week 6 or week 10 are all fine. The earlier, the more time the support has to help.
  • A perinatal-trained therapist can usually tell in one session. Some heaviness in the first weeks is expected. Sustained sadness, anxiety, numbness, or hopelessness past the 2 to 3 week mark is a different picture and worth treating. The screening itself is reassuring either way.
  • Phoenix Health is virtual, so you don't go anywhere. Many clients do sessions in pajamas, on a couch, sometimes with the baby on them. Your therapist will work with the conditions you actually have, not the ones you wish you had.
  • You don't need anyone else's permission to get support. The fact that you're asking is a good signal. Many partners come around once they see the benefit, but you don't have to wait for that to start.
  • Yes. Phoenix Health provides telehealth therapy to residents of Texas. Sessions are conducted via secure video from your home, office, or anywhere private β€” no commute required. All Phoenix Health therapists are licensed and authorized to practice in Texas.
  • PMH-C (Perinatal Mental Health Certification) is awarded by Postpartum Support International (PSI) to clinicians who have completed advanced training in perinatal mental health β€” covering postpartum depression, anxiety, OCD, birth trauma, and related conditions. It represents the gold standard of specialization in this field.
  • If you're struggling β€” with your mood, your thoughts, your relationship, or just how you're coping β€” that's enough of a reason to talk to someone. You don't need a diagnosis. A free consultation is a low-commitment first step.

From the Phoenix Health resource center

Articles and guides about fourth trimester

How to Find Mental Health Support During the Fourth Trimester

The fourth trimester is the period most people are least prepared for and least supported through. Knowing what kinds of support exist, who they're for, and how to access them β€” while running on no sleep with a newborn β€” is what this guide is for.

Read article β†’

Breastfeeding and Mental Health: The Complete Guide

Read article β†’

Stopping Breastfeeding Guilt: You're Not Failing Your Baby

The last feed happens, or the last pump session, or the day you run out of frozen milk β€” and something you didn't expect arrives alongside the relief: grief. And guilt. And the question of whether you failed. This is what actually happens when breastfeeding ends, and how to find your footing.

Read article β†’

Trusted by leading voices in parenting and mental health

OBs, doulas, and pediatricians refer their patients to us because we specialize in maternal mental health.

  • Parents.com
  • Postpartum Support International
  • Healthline
  • HuffPost
  • Fatherly
  • Choosing Therapy

The sooner you start,
the sooner you'll
feel like yourself again.

You've been surviving. It's time to start healing.

No commitment Β· Covered by insurance Β· Available this week

Learning resources

🍼Read our Fourth Trimester guides β†’

Often goes alongside

🌧Postpartum DepressionπŸ’­Postpartum AnxietyπŸ’‘Relationships & CouplesπŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘ΆPaternal Mental Health