Menopause and Mental Health—Treatment Focus
Published in General & Internal Medicine, Pharmacy & Pharmacology, and Anatomy & Physiology
This Topical Collection in Archives of Women’s Mental Health spotlights the diagnosis and treatment of mental health problems across the menopausal transition, with an emphasis on hormonal approaches.
We welcome studies that clarify when, how, and for whom menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) improves depressive, anxiety, cognitive, and sleep symptoms; compare MHT with antidepressants and psychotherapies; and evaluate combination or augmentation strategies.
Priority areas include route and dosing (e.g., transdermal vs. oral), timing across peri- to postmenopause, safety and contraindications, shared decision-making, and patient-reported outcomes. We also encourage submissions on special populations (e.g., premature ovarian insufficiency, surgical menopause, severe mental illness, cardiometabolic comorbidities, breast cancer survivorship), mechanistic work linking hormonal dynamics to neurobiology, and implementation research across psychiatry, primary care, and gynecology.
We invite original research, reviews, systematic reviews, or short communications that advance equitable, evidence-based care for midlife mental health.
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Archives of Women's Mental Health
A comprehensive journal focusing on all aspects of women's mental health. AWMH is the official journal of Marcé Society, the North American Society for Psychosocial Obstetrics and Gynecology (NASPOG) and the International Association for Women's Mental Health (IAWMH).
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Severe Perinatal Psychopathology: From Pathophysiology to Clinical Practice
This special issue addresses critical gaps in our understanding of severe psychiatric disorders during the perinatal period, an interval characterized by substantial physiological changes and heightened emotional vulnerability.
Guest Editors
Dr. Vered Bar, Director, Chava Center, Reproductive Psychiatry Unit, Sheba Medical Center, Israel
Prof. Anat Talmon, Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Head Researcher, Chava Center, Reproductive Psychiatry Unit, Sheba Medical Center, Israel
Dr. Mariana Nieves Piazza, Hospital Bernardino Rivadavia, Argentina
While the global conversation surrounding maternal mental health has expanded significantly, the majority of research and public discourse focuses on mild-to-moderate anxiety and depressive disorders. Consequently, severe perinatal mental illness (SPMI)—including puerperal psychosis, bipolar disorder, severe major depression, and acute suicidality—remains an under-researched and underserved domain.
This Special Issue aims to address this disparity by consolidating high-impact research focused on the most acute end of the perinatal spectrum. We are seeking contributions that bridge the gap between biological mechanisms and clinical application, providing a robust evidence base for the management of severe psychopathology in pregnancy and the postpartum period.
Scope and Aims
We invite researchers and clinicians to submit original research articles, comprehensive reviews, and brief reports. We are particularly interested in manuscripts that move beyond general prevalence data to explore the complex interplay of biological risk, disease trajectory, and specialized intervention.
Topics of Interest
Submissions are encouraged to address the following key pillars:
* Etiology & Pathophysiology: Investigations into the neurobiological, hormonal, immunological, and genetic underpinnings of severe perinatal psychiatric episodes.
* Risk Factors & Stratification: Identification of clinical, psychosocial, and biological markers that predict new-onset severe illness or postpartum relapse in women with pre-existing psychiatric histories.
* Prevention: Strategies for prophylactic management, preconception counseling, and systems-based approaches to minimizing the risk of hospitalization.
* Treatment & Intervention: Evidence-based approaches to acute management, including psychopharmacology, electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), and specialized inpatient care models (e.g., Mother-Baby Units).
Publishing Model: Hybrid
Deadline: Dec 31, 2026
Embodied Distress in Women: Physical Manifestations of Psychological and Social Suffering
This special issue examines how women’s psychological and social distress is increasingly expressed through the body, including autoimmune disease, chronic illness, reproductive and perinatal conditions, somatic syndromes, chronic pain, and medically unexplained symptoms. It responds to a growing crisis in women’s health marked by rising autoimmune disease, chronic comorbidity, and persistent gender bias in diagnosis and care.
By synthesizing psychiatry, neuroscience, gynecology, psychosomatic medicine, and social science, this collection advances integrative models of assessment and treatment that move beyond mind–body dualism. It foregrounds women’s lived experience as essential clinical evidence, treating subjective bodily distress as meaningful, patterned, and biologically real
We invite original research, reviews, clinical case series, and theoretical contributions that address the intersections of women’s mental health, trauma, embodiment, and systemic illness, with the goal of advancing integrative, holistic models of assessment and treatment.
Publishing Model: Hybrid
Deadline: Dec 31, 2026
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An excellent, important and timely collection. Global contributions are encouraged