bloom.
Seeking maternity & child-health partners

The check-in call that arrives before she has to ask.

Gentle, proactive support for new mothers — across the whole first year.

Bloom is a warm voice on the phone in the weeks and months after birth — listening for how a new mother is really coping, and quietly flagging anything that should reach her care team sooner. Every concern is reviewed by people. Bloom supports midwives, child-health nurses and GPs. It never replaces them.

The gap between appointments

Up to one in five mothers experiences perinatal depression or anxiety1 — and much of it is never seen.

The early months after birth are exhausting and isolating. Routine appointments are spaced weeks apart, and many mothers find it hard to put difficult feelings into words on a busy clinic day — or to reach out at all when they are struggling. Around one in ten fathers and partners struggle too.2

And the system's attention fades exactly when it shouldn't. Universal contact — midwife visits, the six-week check — largely drops away after about eight weeks,3 yet in one large study, 57% of mothers with depressive symptoms at nine to ten months had shown no symptoms at the usual two-to-six-month screen.4 Late-emerging distress is the norm, not the exception. That quiet stretch — months two to twelve — is the gap Bloom exists to cover.

1 in 5

Australian mothers experience perinatal depression or anxiety1

~1 in 10

fathers and partners are affected too2

57%

of late-year symptom cases showed nothing at the standard early screen4

$877M

estimated annual cost of perinatal depression & anxiety to Australia5

How it works

A warm conversation that quietly does careful work.

A gentle voice call

Bloom phones at the times that matter most in the postnatal year for an unhurried, human-feeling chat. Mothers talk freely, in their own words, without filling in a form. Bloom asks about her first — not just the baby.

Conversational screening informed by the EPDS

The conversation is structured around the wellbeing themes of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale6 — the screening tool recommended for repeated use through pregnancy and the postnatal year by Australia's national perinatal mental-health guideline.7 Bloom listens for those signals naturally. It is a screening support tool, not a diagnosis.

Flags for clinician review

When Bloom notices signs that warrant a closer look, it surfaces a clear, plain-language summary to the care team for a clinician to review and decide on next steps. People — not the AI — make the clinical calls.

Engineered escalation — humans in the loop

Higher-concern check-ins are priority-flagged to the partner service's on-call clinician, and a mother in genuine distress is warmly guided to immediate human help on the call. This path is built, tested and rehearsed — not left to chance.

The journey

Four moments across the first year.

One check-in misses what the next one catches — that's why national guidance recommends screening more than once.7 Each Bloom call has its own job.

Week 2

Settling in

A first, trust-building call in the rawest weeks. Bloom gently notices early distress signals, sleep, support at home — and how her partner is travelling. Nothing is scored.

Care team sees
A Green / Amber / Red wellbeing signal with a short plain-language summary.

Week 6

The full check-in

The primary conversation, timed with the six-week check. All ten EPDS wellbeing themes explored naturally — never read out as a questionnaire.

Care team sees
A Low / Moderate / High signal tier for review, with suggested follow-up pathways. Any mention of self-harm is priority-flagged to a human immediately, whatever the tier.

Month 3

The one the system usually misses

After the six-week check, routine contact drops away3 — while more than half of late-year cases are still to emerge.4 Bloom checks in again and compares against Week 6, listening for "I was fine before, but now…".

Care team sees
The same signal tiers, plus a trajectory view: better, steady, or newly emerging concern since Week 6.

Months 6 · 9 · 12 — optional

Staying alongside

For services that want it, lighter continuation calls across the rest of the first year — because symptoms persist well beyond the early months for many families.8

Care team sees
Continuity: the same mother, the same history, one evolving picture instead of isolated snapshots.

The evidence, briefly

Designed from the research, honest about what's proven.

Why proactive calls

In a randomised trial of 701 mothers, proactive telephone peer support roughly halved the risk of postnatal depression at twelve weeks.9 Bloom's cadence is modelled on those human telephone-support protocols. Bloom itself is a support-and-connection tool informed by that evidence — it is not a treatment, and we treat evaluation as ongoing.

Why more than once

57% of mothers with depressive symptoms late in the first year had shown none at the standard early screen.4 Australia's NHMRC-approved perinatal guideline recommends repeated screening — and now includes partners.7 Bloom's whole design is repetition with memory.

Why the gap is real

An estimated four in five Australian perinatal parents who need mental-health support don't receive professional care,10 against a national psychology workforce shortfall of 57%.11 Screening has improved; capacity hasn't. Bloom extends reach without pretending to be the treatment.

Read the full evidence summary →

Who Bloom is for

Built to sit alongside the people already caring for new mothers.

Maternity services

Extend postnatal contact beyond the discharge day and the six-week check.

Child & maternal health nurses

Add a light-touch check-in between home visits, with clear summaries when something needs attention.

GPs & primary care

Surface emerging concerns earlier so postnatal reviews are better informed.

Perinatal programs

Reach more mothers consistently across a cohort, without stretching the team thinner.

Safety, privacy & what Bloom is not

Careful by design, in a domain where care matters most.

A screening support tool — not a medical device

Bloom does not diagnose depression or anxiety and is not a diagnostic or medical device. It screens, listens and flags for a clinician to review. Clinical decisions always rest with qualified people.

Genuine distress goes to human help — by design

Bloom is not a crisis service. Independent testing has shown generic AI chatbots routinely mishandle moments of crisis12 — which is exactly why Bloom's escalation path is engineered and rehearsed: urgent concerns are priority-flagged to a human on call, and a mother in distress is pointed to PANDA, Lifeline 13 11 14, or 000 in an emergency.

Data handling

Data is stored in AWS Sydney (Australia). AI processing currently runs in the United States (Anthropic and Hume), with zero-data-retention in progress. We never train on customer data.

Security posture

Essential Eight Maturity Level 3 controls implemented. ISO 27001:2022 aligned, with certification in progress. Built on Claude and Hume EVI.

If you or someone you know needs support now: PANDA 1300 726 306 · ForWhen 1300 242 322 · Lifeline 13 11 14 · In an emergency call 000.

Pilot · in discussion

Let's bring gentler postnatal care within reach.

Bloom is in pilot, and we're in discussion with maternity services, child-health programs and perinatal teams who want to support mothers between appointments. If that's you, we'd welcome the conversation.

andrew@careplans.io

Sources

  1. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Perinatal depression: data from the 2010 Australian National Infant Feeding Survey (2012). The most recent national prevalence collection; widely cited as "up to 1 in 5", though the underlying data is from 2010.
  2. Rao et al., meta-analytic estimates of paternal perinatal depression (~10%; J Affect Disord and successors); echoed for Australia by AIHW and the Productivity Commission.
  3. Routine universal postnatal contact in Australia concentrates in the first ~8 weeks (midwifery visits, 6-week GP/MCH checks); coverage data: AIHW perinatal mental-health screening reporting.
  4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Preventing Chronic Disease (2023): among women with depressive symptoms at 9–10 months postpartum, 57% reported no symptoms at 2–6 months.
  5. PwC Consulting for the Gidget Foundation, The cost of perinatal depression and anxiety in Australia (2019): A$877 million in the first year following birth.
  6. Cox J.L., Holden J.M., Sagovsky R. (1987). Detection of postnatal depression: development of the 10-item Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale. British Journal of Psychiatry, 150, 782–786.
  7. Centre of Perinatal Excellence (COPE), Mental Health Care in the Perinatal Period: Australian Clinical Practice Guideline (2023; NHMRC-approved). Recommends repeated EPDS screening through pregnancy and the postnatal year, psychosocial assessment, and screening of fathers and non-birthing partners.
  8. Hellyer et al. (2025), pooled prevalence of maternal depressive symptoms ~15–16% in the second postpartum year and ~19% beyond 24 months.
  9. Dennis C-L. et al. (2009). Effect of peer support on prevention of postnatal depression among high-risk women: multisite randomised controlled trial. BMJ, 338:a3064 — 14% vs 25% at 12 weeks; RR 0.54 (95% CI 0.38–0.76). An Australian replication (DAISY, N=1,060) is in progress.
  10. Estimated; Productivity Commission and sector analyses suggest most Australian perinatal parents needing mental-health support receive no professional care.
  11. Australian psychology workforce shortfall estimated at 57% of projected demand (2025 national health-workforce analyses); roughly one in three psychologists are closed to new clients.
  12. 2026 independent evaluation of 29 mental-health chatbots found none responded adequately to suicidal messaging (Scienceline, 2026, reporting peer-reviewed testing). Bloom's design assumes AI alone is not safe for crisis moments.

Full citations, study details and evidence grading: bloom.careplans.io/research. Statistics describe population research, not Bloom's own outcomes; Bloom's effectiveness is under evaluation.