Jess
And from the psychological side, how do women typically find you after a loss, and where does the system lose them?
Dr. Zucker
I work in private practice, so I can’t necessarily speak to broad system-wide trends, but I can share what I see in the consultation room day in and day out. People are referred to me through several avenues—through their OB-GYN, reproductive endocrinologists, acupuncturists, a trusted friend, through my articles or books, or through someone in their support network. There’s no one linear approach to healing in the aftermath of pregnancy loss. Some people reach out immediately after the loss occurs. Others come months or even years later when something else, like a new pregnancy or a different life transition, reignites their grief.
What I hear most often is some variation of: “What did I do to deserve this?” That self-blame can take so many forms: Did I want this too much? Did I not want it enough? Was it that sip of wine before I knew I was pregnant? Was it that orgasm I had while I was pregnant? Is this payback for something I did in my youth? People go through an enormous array of what ifs, which can slide into body hatred and a resounding sense of “What’s wrong with me?” That’s where shame spirals tend to start: Is this my fault? Is there something fundamentally wrong with me?
Therapy is an ideal place to process the myriad feelings that can arise, including (but not limited to) grief, confusion, and anger. It’s also a space to explore the roots of shame and self-blame, understand how this loss connects to earlier experiences of grief or trauma, reflect on relationships—with their body, their mother, motherhood in general. Some people feel they need five sessions to move through the acute grief of a stillbirth, for example, whereas others opt to stay in therapy for years because the loss touches deep, longstanding patterns or earlier trauma. There’s no one timeline. There’s no right or wrong way.
A major systemic issue that surrounds (specialized) psychotherapy is accessibility: waitlists, cost, cultural stigma around therapy, and the simple question of “Am I allowed to seek help for this?” “Is my pain ‘bad’ enough that it requires addressing in a professional setting?” These very real factors make it easier for people to fall through the cracks and therefore endure their suffering without the help of a trained professional. It’s troubling that approximately one in four pregnancies results in loss, but this ubiquitous topic somehow remains taboo, shrouded in silence by culture. The hush-hush zeitgeist adds to the confounding feelings that too many women feel they should just power through on their own.
Jess
I want to build on that. Pregnancy loss affects roughly 1 in 4 pregnancies, yet many people still experience it in silence. Why do you think it is so under-discussed?
Dr. Henkel
From a medical standpoint, reproductive loss is very common. If I’m caring for someone who hopes to build a family of 2.2 children, I fully expect that we may walk through a loss together at some point. Clinically, that doesn’t feel unusual, but for patients, it can be shocking. Part of the disconnect is generational. When our mothers were having children, pregnancy tests were less sensitive, so many early losses were never formally diagnosed.
Ultrasound technology was not what it is today, so we were catching fewer losses. That means many of us grew up without hearing about our mothers’ miscarriages, even if they had them. We didn’t have a framework for understanding loss as a common part of family building. So in exam rooms, we do talk about loss, but at a population level, people still don’t realize how common it is. I think that gap in awareness contributes to the isolation.
Dr. Zucker
I agree that medically it may be discussed more than it used to be. Culturally, though, it’s still not something people talk about as casually as what they’re making for dinner, and given how common it is, it could be that normalized.
One noteworthy contributing factor is the “12-week rule” that has been in place for as long as I can remember. It essentially robs women of feeling like they can sink into the feelings that they experience, should they have a loss. It’s sort of a set up. This idea that you can’t share your good news in case it becomes bad news, because if it becomes bad news, then you don't have to share it at all. This framework sets people up to experience their losses siloed in silence. They’re encouraged to keep their joy quiet, and if that joy becomes grief they don’t feel entitled to share that either.
I believe people should have the opportunity to talk about both. Their joy, and any other feelings they might experience, early in pregnancy, and their grief, and any other feelings they might experience, if the pregnancy ends. Even with the statistics, there’s still a cultural pressure to speak in hushed tones about pregnancy loss, which reinforces shame and isolation instead of connection.
Jess
Let’s talk about what actually happens in the visit where the loss is diagnosed. What kinds of conversations do women wish they could have with their providers?
Dr. Henkel
In the moment of loss, people are often expected to make a series of significant decisions very quickly. Whether to have a procedure, or pursue genetic testing, or if they want to pursue cremation or burial. All of this happens when they’re already in shock and grieving. Many of these decisions are time-sensitive, and patients are overwhelmed. Instead of having space to ask their own questions, they’re often just responding to ours. It’s usually only after everything is over that the questions surface: Why did this happen to me? What did I do? How do I prevent this from happening again? I try to name those questions explicitly when I meet someone, and to emphasize that in the vast majority of cases, this is not caused by anything they did or didn’t do. But I think those questions are what keep people up at night in the weeks that follow.
Dr. Zucker
In the therapy setting, those same questions show up in more subtle and nuanced emotional language. People ask, Did I do something to deserve this? What does this mean for my future? Will I ever have a baby? Therapy is not about giving people guarantees, none of us can do that. It’s about creating space to feel the depth of the grief, to explore any and all feelings, including shame and self-blame, and to look at how this loss fits into the larger story of their life.
Often, a loss resurfaces earlier grief: the death of a loved one, a difficult childhood, past traumas. So while we’re talking about this loss, we’re also making room for all the loss that came before and was not necessarily processed until now.
Jess
On the OB-GYN side, how do you think about the “handoff” from medical care to emotional support—and where does it break down?
Dr. Henkel
One of the biggest challenges is finding therapists who specialize in perinatal mental health and pregnancy loss. That kind of subspecialty training is still relatively rare, and those who have it often have very long waitlists. When you’re in grief, waiting six weeks to see someone can feel impossible. That’s one major place where people fall off the path. By the time there’s an opening, the crisis moment has passed, and they may not have the energy or clarity to re-seek help.
Another challenge is structural. We see patients for such a short amount of time, they aren't necessarily ready to accept help or might not identify a need yet. And then when they have identified a need, the clinical encounter is passed.
And then there’s the blur of the experience itself. I’ve had patients tell me later that they don’t even remember which doctor took care of them during their loss. So when they eventually realize, “I do need help,” they may have no idea who to reach back out to.
All of that makes it very easy for people to slip through the cracks between medical care and mental health support.
Jess
You’ve shared research with us that stable mental health can positively influence outcomes in future pregnancies. How do you talk to patients about mental health care as part of preparing for another pregnancy?
Dr. Henkel
I usually bring this up when someone is in a preconception space, thinking about or actively planning another pregnancy.
I frame mental health the same way I do any other part of preconception care. For example, if someone has diabetes, we talk about getting their hemoglobin A1C into the best possible range before conception to support a healthy pregnancy. I apply that same logic to mental health: The more optimized your mental health is before conceiving, the more supported you are throughout pregnancy. People are often very willing to start new exercise routines, change their diet, and make all kinds of lifestyle shifts when they want to conceive. I remind them that one of the most impactful things they can do is also work on their mental health, whether that’s therapy, support groups, or other forms of care.
Normalizing mental health as just another part of taking care of themselves tends to be well-received, especially when we talk about it alongside physical health rather than as something separate.
Jess
How can Lavela help clinicians by taking some of that emotional care burden off the medical system, while still maintaining trust and clinical integrity?
Dr. Henkel
It’s incredibly hard as a clinician to sit with someone who is acutely grieving, know they need specialized care, and then tell them the earliest opening is six weeks away.
I also know that I’m not a therapist. I can validate, I can educate, but I don’t have the time or training to walk someone through the entire arc of their grief in a clinic visit. What excites me about Lavela is fast access to support—shortening that gap between the moment someone realizes they need help and the moment they actually receive it.