Women’s Mental Health

Women's Mental Health — Psychiatric Care Built Around Your Experience

Women are diagnosed with depression at nearly twice the rate of men. Women’s ADHD is missed for decades because the research was built around boys. Perimenopause can trigger a psychiatric crisis that most providers do not recognize or treat. Postpartum mental health affects one in seven new mothers.

At Ample Grace Psychiatry, women’s mental health is not a specialty we added. It is the foundation we built on. Dr. Osadolor specializes in the conditions that disproportionately affect women — and the hormonal and life-stage factors that change how those conditions present and how they should be treated.

Telehealth across Minnesota · No referral needed
ADHD In Women

ADHD in Women — The Diagnosis That Was Missed for Decades

ADHD research was conducted almost entirely on young boys for most of its history. The diagnostic criteria reflected that. So when girls had ADHD it looked different — daydreaming, emotional sensitivity, people-pleasing, working twice as hard as everyone else just to keep up. It was diagnosed as anxiety, depression, a personality trait, or nothing at all.

Those girls grew into women who spent their entire lives compensating. High-functioning from the outside. Quietly exhausted on the inside. Now in their 30s, 40s, and 50s they are finally getting answers. Dr. Osadolor specializes in adult ADHD evaluation and the specific presentation of ADHD in women — including women whose symptoms were dismissed or misattributed for decades.

  • Late diagnosis ADHD evaluation for adults 18 and older
  • ADHD evaluation for women who have previously been diagnosed only with anxiety or depression
  • Medication management for women whose ADHD symptoms have changed with hormonal shifts
Perimenopause And Mental Health

Perimenopause and Psychiatric Health — What Most Providers Miss

Estrogen supports dopamine regulation in the brain — the same pathway that affects mood, focus, and emotional stability. When estrogen begins declining during perimenopause — typically in the early to mid 40s — the psychiatric effects can be significant and are frequently misattributed to general anxiety or depression.

For women with ADHD, this transition can feel like a sudden collapse of every coping strategy that worked for decades. Medication that managed symptoms for years may stop working. Cognitive fog, emotional dysregulation, and insomnia worsen. Many women are told this is just menopause and it will pass. It is not just menopause. It is neurology. And it responds to treatment.

  • Mood instability, irritability, and new-onset depression during perimenopause
  • ADHD symptoms worsening during hormonal transition
  • Cognitive fog, memory changes, and concentration difficulties
  • Insomnia and sleep disruption related to hormonal and psychiatric factors
  • Coordination with your OB-GYN on hormone therapy when appropriate
Postpartum And Perinatal Mental Health

Postpartum and Perinatal Psychiatric Care

Postpartum depression affects approximately one in seven new mothers and is significantly underdiagnosed. Perinatal anxiety — during pregnancy and after birth — is even more common. Many women are screened for postpartum depression by their OB-GYN and referred for psychiatric care but find nowhere to go.

Dr. Osadolor provides psychiatric evaluation and medication management for postpartum depression, perinatal anxiety, and mood changes during and after pregnancy. Medication choices are guided by safety during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Coordination with your obstetric provider is standard practice.

  • Postpartum depression evaluation and medication management
  • Perinatal anxiety — during pregnancy and after birth
  • Zuranolone (Zurzuvae) — the first FDA-approved oral medication specifically for postpartum depression
  • Medication safety guidance for breastfeeding patients
PTSD In Women

Postpartum and Perinatal Psychiatric Care

Women experience PTSD at nearly three times the rate of men, yet are frequently undertreated or misdiagnosed. Interpersonal trauma, birth trauma, sexual assault, and domestic violence are among the most common triggers. Dr. Osadolor provides medication management for PTSD and trauma-related conditions, coordinated with referrals to trauma-focused therapy where appropriate.
Final

You have been managing long enough. You deserve a provider who gets it.

Women’s mental health is not a checklist. It is a full clinical picture that requires a provider who understands the hormonal, developmental, and relational factors that shape how psychiatric conditions present and progress in women. That is what we build here — one appointment at a time.
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