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April 20, 2026

Women’s mental health

Understanding specific challenges in order to provide better support

Women’s mental health deserves specific attention, not because there is only one way to experience it, but because certain biological, social and cultural stages can have a particular influence on women’s emotional balance. Puberty, the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, postpartum and menopause are associated with hormonal and life changes that can modulate mood, sleep, anxiety and the capacity for adaptation. In addition, factors such as mental load, social pressure and gender bias in healthcare continue to significantly affect the experience of many women.

At Aliantis Sitges, we understand women’s mental health from an integrative perspective, where the body, emotions, personal history and social context are part of the same process. Good support does not only mean intervening when a symptom appears, but also understanding the ground on which that symptom develops.

In this article, we explore some of the main challenges that can affect women’s mental health and why comprehensive, sensitive and respectful care can make a real difference.

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Why does women’s mental health require a specific perspective?

Mental health does not exist in a vacuum. It is influenced by biology, personal history, relationships, environment and daily demands. For many women, certain experiences recur with particular frequency: hormonal changes throughout life, caregiving demands, pressure around body image, self-expectation, inequalities in the distribution of responsibilities and, at times, healthcare that does not always listen to or correctly interpret what is happening.

Talking about women’s mental health does not mean reducing women to their hormones or assuming that all women experience the same difficulties. It means recognizing that specific vulnerabilities exist and deserve to be understood without stereotypes or oversimplifications.

Hormonal changes and life stages

Throughout life, many women go through moments when the body changes intensely and continuously. These changes do not explain everything that happens emotionally on their own, but they can influence stress sensitivity, sleep, mood and the way each stage is experienced.

Puberty and adolescence

Puberty is a stage of profound reorganization. The body, identity, relationship with body image, social life and self-perception all change. During this period, anxiety, irritability, body shame, insecurity or greater emotional sensitivity may appear. Supporting this stage well is important so that the first experiences related to the cycle, the body and sexuality are not lived through fear or disconnection.

Menstrual cycle, PMS and PMDD

Emotional symptoms associated with the menstrual cycle are common. Premenstrual syndrome can include irritability, fatigue, emotional lability or difficulty concentrating. In a smaller proportion of women, the picture can be much more intense and correspond to premenstrual dysphoric disorder, a recognized condition that can clearly interfere with daily life. ACOG notes that PMDD affects approximately 5% of women of reproductive age.

When these symptoms are systematically trivialized, many women end up normalizing suffering that deserves attention and support.

Pregnancy and postpartum

Pregnancy is not always experienced only through joy. It can bring excitement, but also fear, insecurity, vulnerability, fatigue and emotional changes that are difficult to name. During the postpartum period, the physical, hormonal and life impact can be even more intense. The WHO states that, worldwide, around 10% of women during pregnancy and 13% after childbirth experience a mental disorder, mainly depression.

This reminds us that perinatal emotional support is not an extra, but an essential part of care.

Perimenopause and menopause

Perimenopause and menopause are not only biological processes. They can be accompanied by sleep disturbances, irritability, mood changes, increased anxiety, a feeling of disorientation or loss of bodily reference points. The Office on Women’s Health notes that sleep problems, mood changes, anxiety or depression can appear at this stage, and that many women do not feel “like themselves” during the menopausal transition.

Reducing this stage to “hot flashes and hormones” leaves out an important part of many women’s emotional experience.

Mental load and daily pressure

Mental health is also affected when daily life requires constant, invisible attention that is difficult to distribute. Many women simultaneously hold together family organization, domestic logistics, work, care management and the planning of multiple tasks that are not always recognized as real effort.

A fatigue that is not always visible

Mental load is not expressed only as a lack of time. It can also appear as difficulty switching off, a feeling of saturation, irritability, insomnia, guilt or persistent exhaustion. It is not always visible from the outside, but it can take up a large part of one’s inner space.

When caring for everything leaves self-care aside

Many women find it difficult to prioritize their own health because they feel there is always something more urgent to take care of. When this logic is sustained over time, it can erode available energy, increase distress and even make it harder to access help.

Body image, expectations and social pressure

In addition to daily load, there is often constant pressure around image, performance and the “right” way to be in the world. Be competent, be productive, be a good mother, be desirable, be calm, manage everything. When these demands accumulate, the psychological impact can be considerable.

Constant comparison

Comparison is not new, but today it finds a permanent amplifier in digital environments. Many women are exposed to models of success, motherhood, body or wellbeing that seem unattainable and generate a constant feeling of insufficiency.

The link with self-esteem

When one’s own gaze becomes too conditioned by external validation, self-esteem becomes more fragile. This can translate into anxiety, sadness, body disconnection, hypercontrol or a more difficult relationship with food, image or rest.

Gender bias in healthcare

The way a woman is listened to when she consults for emotional or physical distress also influences her mental health. The WHO has pointed out that gender bias in research, service design and clinical practice has contributed to diagnostic delays, inappropriate treatments and lower quality of care in women’s health.

When suffering is minimized

Many women have heard during consultations that they are “too sensitive”, that “it is all stress” or that their symptoms “are normal”. Sometimes this happens with physical pain; at other times, with emotional symptoms. The result is often frustration, loneliness and loss of trust in the healthcare system.

Listening well is also part of treatment

High-quality listening does not replace treatment, but it profoundly changes the experience of care. Feeling taken seriously, understood and supported can reduce the sense of threat, facilitate adherence and open a safer space for recovery.

What can help support mental health day to day?

There is no single formula, but there are pillars that can better support emotional balance when adapted to each life stage and each personal reality.

Movement, sleep and more regulated rhythms

Regular physical activity, sufficient rest and a certain stability in daily rhythms can have a positive impact on mood, anxiety and the capacity for recovery. These pillars do not “solve” everything, but they do build more favourable ground.

Nutrition and emotional wellbeing

Nutrition does not replace psychological support when it is needed, but it can be part of a broader care approach. Maintaining sufficient, balanced and adapted nutrition helps support energy, regulation and general wellbeing.

Spaces of support and accompaniment

Being able to talk, ask for help and feel supported changes many things. Sometimes the first relief comes when a woman stops feeling that she “should be able to handle everything alone”. Psychotherapy, support groups, spaces for dialogue or respectful professional support can offer real support.

Aliantis’ approach to women’s mental health

At Aliantis Sitges, we understand women’s mental health through a multidisciplinary approach that is sensitive to each stage of life. We know that it is not only about intervening on a symptom, but about understanding the context in which that distress appears and is maintained.

An integrative perspective

Psychology plays a central role, but it can also be useful to coordinate care with physiotherapy, osteopathy or nutrition when the case requires it. Chronic pain, fatigue, sleep disturbances, hormonal changes, body tension and emotional distress often intertwine and deserve a coherent response.

A safe space to understand and support

Our aim is to offer a space where every woman can feel listened to, validated and supported without judgment. Sometimes the first step is not to “do more”, but to better understand what is happening and give it meaning.

At Aliantis Sitges, we support women’s mental health with respect and depth

Women’s mental health can no longer be treated as a secondary issue. Hormonal fluctuations, mental load, social pressure and bias in healthcare are realities that deserve recognition and appropriate approaches.

At Aliantis, we believe that caring for mental health also means caring for each woman’s dignity, autonomy and balance. Providing good support means truly listening, understanding without oversimplifying and offering care adapted to each personal story.

Because sometimes beginning to take care of oneself is not the end of the process. It is simply the beginning.

FAQ about women’s mental health

Because certain biological and social stages, such as the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, postpartum, menopause or mental load, can have a particular influence on emotional balance.
Persistent sadness, intense anxiety, a feeling of inability to cope, emotional disconnection, irritability or difficulty enjoying the bond with the baby are some signs that should be assessed with a professional.
Yes. Perimenopause and menopause can be associated with sleep disturbances, irritability, anxiety, mood changes or a feeling of loss of stability.
Talking about it, sharing responsibilities, setting boundaries, resting better and seeking professional support when necessary can help reduce its impact.
Aliantis offers an integrative approach that can combine psychology, physiotherapy, osteopathy and nutrition to support women’s mental health from a global and personalized perspective.

This blog article does not aim to generate new knowledge; it is based on the reading of scientific publications, blog articles and other texts.

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