Postpartum Depression therapists in Beaufort, South Carolina SC
We are proud to feature top rated Postpartum Depression therapists in Beaufort. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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CBT Center
Psychologist, ABPP, A-CBT
The postpartum period is supposed to feel joyful, which makes it even harder when it doesn't. Postpartum depression and anxiety are incredibly common and very treatable, and there's no reason to white-knuckle through it. At The CBT Center, we work with new and expecting parents using evidence-based approaches that actually work, in a space that's warm, nonjudgmental, and completely free of "just enjoy every moment" energy.
20 Years Experience
Online in Beaufort, SC South Carolina
Andrea Meier, LLC | Holistic Wellness Collective
Licensed Professional Counselor, M.S., LPC, LAC
Lauren Hamrick, M.S. LPC-A specializes in supporting individuals and couples navigating conception, Infertility, perinatal and postpartum concerns, using holistic, integrative approaches to care.
20 Years Experience
Online in Beaufort, SC South Carolina
Dr. Megie Shean
Psychologist, PsyD
I work with women experiencing emotional distress related to childbirth —such as traumatic deliveries, medical interventions, intraoperative pain during cesarean, or perinatal loss—with sensitivity to how past sexual trauma can resurface during childbirth.
7 Years Experience
Online in Beaufort, SC South Carolina (Online Only)
Nour Counseling
Counselor/Therapist
Postpartum depression is often missed, minimized, or explained away as “just hormones” or part of the adjustment to parenthood. But for many people, it feels much heavier than that—disconnection, irritability, numbness, overwhelm, intrusive thoughts, or a sense that you’re not yourself. And all of this can be happening while you’re expected to care for a newborn, function on little sleep, and present like everything is okay. The pressure to feel grateful or happy can make it even harder to talk about what’s actually going on.
At Nour Counseling, we take postpartum experiences seriously. We help you understand what’s happening in your mind and body, while also supporting you in navigating the day-to-day reality of this stage. This includes building practical supports around rest, emotional regulation, and realistic expectations—not idealized versions of parenting that don’t hold up. We also make space for the cultural messages around motherhood, including what you’ve been taught it should look like and how that may be impacting your experience. This is not about pushing you to feel differently—it’s about helping you feel more supported, more grounded, and more connected to yourself as you move through this transition.
9 Years Experience
Online in Beaufort, SC South Carolina (Online Only)
Dr. Elizabeth Coldren
Psychologist, PSYD, PSYPACT
I work with mothers in the months and years after birth who feel “off” in ways that others don’t always see. Many of the mothers I see look like they are managing from the outside, while feeling anything but okay on the inside. You may love your baby and still feel overwhelmed, numb, irritable, or not at home in your own life.
Some have had medically complicated or frightening births, NICU stays, pregnancy or birth complications, or babies with ongoing medical needs. Others had births that looked fine from the outside, but something about the experience or the aftermath has left them feeling unlike themselves.
Postpartum experiences can include persistent sadness or emptiness; anxiety, racing thoughts, or a sense of dread that does not match what is happening; intrusive thoughts or images, including fears about something happening to your baby; replaying the birth or hospital stay and wondering if you did something wrong; irritability or feeling on edge with your baby, partner, or other children; difficulty sleeping, eating, or caring for yourself even when you technically have the chance; feeling disconnected from your baby, your body, or the person you used to be; shame or guilt that you are not enjoying this time the way you thought you would; and loneliness even when you are rarely alone.
For mothers whose babies had NICU stays or ongoing medical issues, there may also be ongoing vigilance and fear, medical trauma, and the sense that you never really got a chance to just be home with your baby. I have spent more than three decades sitting with women in the perinatal season, and I know how varied “postpartum” can be.
In our work together, we slow things down and make room for your full experience without judgment. Your birth story, your mood, your fears, and your exhaustion are all welcome here. From there, we explore small, realistic shifts that help you feel more anchored, supported, and less alone in this season of your life. You do not have to be in crisis to reach out, or to prove that you are “struggling enough.” Feeling off, unlike yourself, or quietly overwhelmed is enough.
26 Years Experience
Online in Beaufort, SC South Carolina
Postpartum Depression therapists in Beaufort, South Carolina Statistics
Postpartum Depression therapists in Beaufort, South Carolina average 15 years of experience and charge around $203 per session. 100% offer online sessions. The top treatment approaches are Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (80%), Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT) (47%), and Person-Centered Therapy (Rogerian) (44%).
Average years in practice
15 Years Experience
Average cost per session
$203
Accept insurance
55%
Offer sliding scale
44%
Gender ID
| 72% |
Female |
|
| 20% |
Male |
|
| 4% |
Non-Binary |
|
| 4% |
Gender Fluid |
|
Session Type
| 62% |
In Person and Online |
|
| 38% |
Online Only |
|
Top Treatment Approaches
| 80% | Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) |
| 47% | Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT) |
| 44% | Person-Centered Therapy (Rogerian) |
| 42% | Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) |
| 38% | Family Systems Therapy |
| 38% | Psychodynamic Therapy |
| 38% | Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) |
Ages Served
| 94% | Adult |
| 69% | Young Adult |
| 50% | Teen |
| 47% | Senior |
| 22% | Children |
Client Focus
| 63% | Women |
| 39% | LGBTQ+ |
| 31% | Black / African American |
| 28% | Jewish |
| 28% | Persons with Disabilities |