Reaching the Right Care: Migrant Women’s Experiences of Perinatal Mental Health Support in Australia

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Background: Migrant women experience disproportionately high rates of perinatal mental health difficulties, shaped by intersecting cultural, social, and systemic barriers. Despite the increasing role of digital technologies in healthcare delivery, their potential to support equitable perinatal mental health care remains underexplored and often fail to reflect the complex realities of migrant women’s lives. This study examined how migrant women in Australia navigate perinatal mental health care across clinical, community, and digital settings, and how digital tools interact with cultural, social, and structural factors to influence help-seeking and engagement. Methods: Qualitative data were collected through online focus groups and individual interviews with women from Chinese-, Arabic-, and Indian-language speaking backgrounds who had given birth in Australia. A semi-structured, culturally adapted interview guide explored women’s experiences of mental health support, barriers and facilitators to access, cultural beliefs, and the role of digital tools in finding/interpreting information. Interviews were conducted with interpreter support and analysed using reflexive thematic analysis to identify patterns across women’s narratives. Results: Three overarching themes, each with related subthemes, were developed: (1) Accessing Perinatal Care captured fragmented systems and difficulties navigating services that felt culturally unresponsive; (2) Cultural and Socio-Emotional Context of Mental Health reflected how stigma, traditional beliefs, and disrupted family networks shaped women’s emotional wellbeing, help-seeking, and comfort disclosing distress; and (3) Support Seeking illustrated how women turned to digital platforms for connection, and guidance but were constrained by language barriers, and varying levels of digital literacy and access. Conclusions: Migrant women navigate fragmented perinatal mental health pathways shaped by cultural, social, and structural barriers. Digital tools can support help-seeking, but only when designed to address cultural relevance, language needs, and digital inequities. Equity-focused, co-designed approaches are essential to ensure digital solutions genuinely enhance perinatal mental health care for migrant women.

Article activity feed