What We Heard: Top Priorities for Advancing Perinatal Mental Health in Canada
Earlier this year, we proposed to facilitate the development of a sector-wide strategic plan for addressing perinatal mental health – starting with an initial stakeholder survey to help inform a high-level framework of goals, principles and priorities that stakeholders can rally around. Here are the key findings from the survey.
Proceedings Report: 2023 National Perinatal Mental Health Policy Symposium
On November 22nd, 2023, we brought together over 70 government representatives and key stakeholders for Canada's first Perinatal Mental Health Policy Symposium.
Investing in perinatal mental health as a strategy for improving population-level mental health
Opening remarks from our Executive Chair, Lauren McCain, at Daymark’s National Perinatal Mental Health Policy Symposium on November 22nd, 2023.
A Collaborative Approach to Perinatal Mental Health Policy Formulation
The Daymark Foundation is looking to play a coordinating and facilitative role in surfacing, formulating and communicating key policy priorities in perinatal mental health to provincial and territorial governments.
Daymark’s Theory of Change for Perinatal Mental Health
The Daymark Foundation is committed to advancing population-level perinatal mental health in Canada over the next 10 years. Over the course of 2022, we spent time identifying the broader goals and outcomes we need to work toward, the strategies required by a broad range of stakeholders, and the role we think we could play in improving perinatal mental health. This post outlines our field-wide theory of change for perinatal health and the strategic pillars that the Daymark Foundation will prioritize.
Meet the Doula Fund Design Team
The Daymark Foundation is initiating steps towards the creation of a multi-year doula mutual aid fund to support Black, Indigenous and 2SLGBTQ+ Communities.
Daymark Foundation response to the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care’s ‘Recommendation on instrument-based screening for depression during pregnancy and the postpartum period’
This recommendation was based on the false assumption that usual care during the pregnancy and postpartum period includes inquiry and attention to mental health and well-being.