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🀱Weaning & Breastfeeding Depression

Weaning & Breastfeeding Depression therapy covered by Tricare

"Nobody told me that stopping breastfeeding could send me into the worst depression of my life."

Prolactin and oxytocin drop sharply when breastfeeding ends β€” for many people, that hormonal shift triggers a significant mood crash.

βœ“See a specialist this weekβœ“PMH-C Certified Therapistsβœ“Telehealth Β· see anyone from homeβœ“Accepts Tricare
In network with
TRICARE+9 more

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

Using your Tricare benefits

Phoenix Health is in-network with TRICARE in South Carolina, serving active duty families, veterans, and military retirees. TRICARE mental health coverage is one of the stronger behavioral health benefits available. The program recognizes the significant mental health toll of military service, deployment, and the unique challenges facing military families and spouses. Our PMH-C certified therapists treat postpartum depression, perinatal anxiety, and birth trauma, conditions that TRICARE covers through outpatient therapy. TRICARE Prime and TRICARE Select are the most common plan types for families in SC. Prime requires referrals through your Primary Care Manager, while Select allows more flexibility in choosing providers. Phoenix Health participates in TRICARE East, which covers South Carolina. Before scheduling, we confirm your specific TRICARE plan and check whether a referral is needed from your PCM. For TRICARE Prime members, starting with a referral from your PCM or calling the TRICARE nurse advice line can help streamline the process. For TRICARE Select members, you can typically schedule directly. All TRICARE plans have cost-sharing that depends on whether you're active duty, reserve component, or a retiree. We walk through this with you at intake.

βœ“ In-network coverage

Your benefits apply directly β€” no superbills or out-of-network claims.

βœ“ Benefits verified upfront

We confirm your copay and deductible before your first session, at no charge.

βœ“ Telehealth covered

Your plan covers virtual sessions at the same rate as in-person specialist visits.

You might benefit from therapy if…

  • βœ“Your mood dropped significantly around the time you stopped or reduced breastfeeding
  • βœ“You're experiencing depression or anxiety that feels different from anything before β€” and it arrived after months of doing okay
  • βœ“You feel guilty about stopping breastfeeding, or guilty about continuing it, or guilty about the emotions either direction is bringing up
  • βœ“You're dreading stopping and can't figure out if it's about the baby or about your own mood
  • βœ“You've been breastfeeding for the mental health benefit and you're scared of what will happen when you stop
  • βœ“Your OB or pediatrician told you weaning was straightforward and didn't prepare you for this
Dr. Emily Guarnotta

Dr. Emily Guarnotta

Psychologist & Founder

From our founder

Weaning depression catches people off guard because it comes after months of managing. You've made it through the acute postpartum window. You think you're okay. Then you stop nursing and the floor drops. I see people who spent weeks convinced something catastrophic was happening to them before they made the connection to weaning. When we name it, the shame lifts a little. Then we treat it.

What therapy looks like

Therapy for weaning depression starts with understanding the hormonal picture and normalizing it. Many Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification, which means they understand that the postpartum period extends well past the first weeks, and that hormonal changes around weaning are a legitimate clinical driver of mood shifts. Early sessions typically focus on separating the hormonal component from the psychological one. How much of this is body chemistry β€” the prolactin and oxytocin drop β€” and how much is grief about the weaning relationship itself, guilt about the decision, or an underlying depression that breastfeeding had been biochemically buffering? The answer shapes the treatment plan. For the hormonal component, your therapist may coordinate with your OB or prescriber around supportive options. For the psychological piece, the work often includes grief therapy, addressing guilt and identity shifts, and CBT for the thought patterns that depression and anxiety amplify. Most clients begin to see meaningful improvement within 6 to 12 weeks once the hormonal picture stabilizes and the emotional work begins.

Our Weaning & Breastfeeding Depression specialists who accept Tricare

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€œMy emergency C-section left me with nightmares and panic attacks. I couldn't talk about the birth without shaking. Therapy helped me process the trauma and reclaim my story. I'm pregnant again now, and I actually feel ready.”

β€” expecting mom of 1

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

β€œI had intrusive thoughts that terrified me. I was too ashamed to tell anyone, even my partner. My therapist explained postpartum OCD and helped me understand I wasn't dangerous. The intrusive thoughts are 90% gone now. I wish I'd reached out sooner.”

β€” mom of 2

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

β€œAfter three failed IVF rounds, I was told to just stay positive. My therapist was the first person who acknowledged the grief, the anger, and the exhaustion, and helped me process what I had been through. I finally felt seen.”

β€” hopeful mom

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

β€œI had a healthy pregnancy and I managed postpartum okay. Then I weaned at nine months and crashed harder than I ever had in my life. I didn't connect it to the weaning for weeks. My therapist connected the dots in the first session. Being understood was the first step.”

β€” Katie, weaning at 9 months

In-network with
Tricare.

Most clients pay less than $20 per session.

Accepted Insurance Networks

TRICARE
Aetna
Blue Cross Blue Shield
UnitedHealthcare
Cigna

Your rights under federal parity law

Under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA), your insurer cannot impose more restrictive limits on mental health coverage than on comparable medical or surgical benefits.

See full coverage map β†’

Ready to start Weaning & Breastfeeding Depression 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

  • They share some symptoms, but the cause is different. Postpartum depression is typically driven by the dramatic hormone drop immediately after birth. Weaning depression is driven by a later hormonal shift when prolactin and oxytocin drop as breastfeeding ends. They can look similar on the surface, but the timeline and treatment approach differ enough that it's worth naming the difference.
  • Possibly, especially if the depression started around the time you weaned. Some people experience a slow-building crash rather than an immediate one. If you were managing well before weaning and the shift began around that time, weaning is worth considering as a driver even if it's been several months.
  • Gradual weaning β€” over weeks or months rather than days β€” is often recommended by lactation consultants and clinicians as a way to allow your hormones to adjust more slowly. There's no guarantee it will prevent a mood crash, but it's generally considered gentler on the body. That said, gradual weaning isn't always possible, and if you're already in a depression, the priority is treatment.
  • Yes, and it's very common. The end of the breastfeeding relationship is a real transition β€” for the connection it provided, for the hormonal state it sustained, and for the identity it gave you. You can want to stop and still grieve it. Those two things aren't in conflict.
  • You're not imagining it. Weaning depression is documented in the literature and well-understood by perinatal specialists, though it's not universally known to generalists. If your provider dismissed the connection, that's a gap in their perinatal training, not evidence that what you're experiencing isn't real.
  • Most Tricare plans cover telehealth behavioral health sessions at the same rate as in-person care under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act. Phoenix Health verifies your specific plan benefits before your first session. Your out-of-pocket cost typically depends on your deductible and copay structure.
  • 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.

From the Phoenix Health resource center

Articles and guides about weaning & breastfeeding depression

Understanding Weaning Breastfeeding Anxiety: Causes, Symptoms, and Support

Feeling anxious, weepy, or unlike yourself while weaning? Learn why weaning triggers anxiety, the hormones behind it, and what actually helps.

Read article β†’

Feeling Depressed After Stopping Breastfeeding? Here's Why.

You've been counting down to this moment for months. Freedom from pumping schedules. Your body back. Sleep that doesn't revolve around feeding windows. But three weeks after your last nursing session, you're crying in the Target parking lot over absolutely nothing, feeling like a stranger in your ow…

Read article β†’

Breastfeeding and Mental Health: The Complete Guide

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 crash after weaning
is real.
And it's treatable.

Weaning depression is driven by a hormonal shift, not a personal failure. With the right support, most people recover.

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

Learning resources

🀱Read our Weaning & Breastfeeding Depression guides β†’

Often goes alongside

🌧Postpartum DepressionπŸ”„Hormonal HealthπŸ’­Postpartum Anxiety