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LIFTS Magazine Archives - Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies: the Montana Coalition

HMHB-MT 2025 Year in Review

By Community, Uncategorized

As we look back on 2025, we do so with deep gratitude. This year reminded us again and again that meaningful change happens through partnership, listening, storytelling, and shared commitment. Every milestone reached was shaped by the dedication of families, advocates, providers, Tribal partners, policymakers, and organizations across the state who continue to show up for Montana families by supporting mothers and babies from pregnancy through age three.

Advancing Doula Licensure and Access to Care in Montana

In 2025, HMHB worked collaboratively with statewide partners, policymakers, doulas, birthworkers, The Montana Doula Collaborative and others invested in maternal health to pass legislation licensing doula practice in Montana. This important step paves the way for Medicaid reimbursement for doula services and expands access to doula care for families across the state, particularly those in rural and Indigenous communities.

Following the passage of the bill, we spent the remainder of the year working closely with the Montana Department of Labor and Industry to support thoughtful and intentional rulemaking for the doula workforce. We are deeply grateful to the many doulas and partners who contributed their expertise, time, and lived experience throughout this process.

Creating Doula Training

In collaboration with Montana doulas and birthworkers, we developed a training program for individuals seeking doula licensure. This learning management system supports training, education, and workforce development efforts across a variety of subject matter. The training is available at no cost to Montanans and will launch for public access in January 2026.

Supporting Indigenous Birthwork and Native American Initiatives

This year, we took early steps to grow the Native American Initiatives team into its own fiscally sponsored project within HMHB, focusing on Indigenous birthwork. While we look forward to sharing more about this work in the coming year, we are deeply proud of the collective efforts and momentum to support Indigenous birthwork in Montana, led by Dr. Amy Stiffarm and the Native American Initiatives team.

Throughout the year, the Native American Initiatives team continued building community within the Indigenous Birthworkers Network, supported family care spaces at powwows, and worked alongside partners to share newly created Indigenous Birth Preference Guides that support culturally grounded care.

In December, Dr. Amy Stiffarm and HMHB Executive Director, Stephanie Morton,  presented on allyship and organization building at the national BUILD Conference in Los Angeles, California. We are grateful for the opportunity to share Montana based work and allyship on a national stage.

Mother and young daughter embraceCovering the Essentials

By November 30, 2025, our Essentials Program had reached 560 families across 29 counties and seven Tribal Nations, distributing 458 car seats and 315 safe sleep kits. These tangible supports not only protect babies, they help strengthen trust and connect families to the local systems of care that help them thrive.

Expanding the LIFTS Umbrella

In 2025, we rebranded the MotherLove Podcast into the LIFTS Podcast. By leveraging the trusted LIFTS brand, we aim to reach more listeners and continue amplifying the voices of Montana families and advocates.

This year marked the release of the fifth annual LIFTS Magazine, centering stories of lived experience from families across Montana. We remain humbled by the willingness of families to share their stories and by the power of showing when help helps. More than 14,000 copies of the magazine were distributed statewide.

We also worked to enhance the LIFTS Online Resource Guide to improve usability and ensure it functions well for all users. This work was guided by feedback from families and providers who rely on LIFTS every day.

Continuing Work to Destigmatize of Perinatal Substance Use Disorders

We continued strengthening the Look Closer campaign, a public health effort focused on decreasing negative bias surrounding perinatal substance use disorders and increasing kindness and compassion to support recovery. In 2025, we refreshed the campaign so that all artwork and models reflect real Montana moms and babies, alongside authentic Montana landscapes. It is our hope that this updated imagery allows the campaign to feel more personal, relatable, and rooted in the communities it is meant to serve. 

photo of a woman holding her baby in front of a barn

Connecting the Perinatal Mental Health Workforce

In June, HMHB hosted the 8th Annual Perinatal Mental Health Conference, welcoming approximately 332 professionals from across Montana, the Northwest, and parts of Canada. This gathering was one of our largest in person convenings to date and reflected the growing commitment to perinatal mental health across the region. We are looking forward to hosting the 9th Annual Perinatal Mental Health Conference next year in Billings on June 23 and 24, 2026.

In partnership with Montana PSI, we paved the way to launch the Montana Perinatal Mental Health Collaborative, creating a space for coordination, collaboration, and shared learning among providers and advocates.

We also continued working with partners across the state to explore the expansion of Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health efforts in Montana and the Montana Association of Infant Mental Health. This included hosting an IECMH Roadshow that invited stakeholders to help shape how these initiatives can best support families and behavioral health professionals statewide.

Strengthening the Montana Workforce

HMHB hosted an in person convening of the Montana Home Visiting Coalition in September and co-convened several trainings throughout the year. Together with partners, we focused on strengthening the home visiting workforce, sharing resources, supporting home visitor safety, and advancing legislative investments that help this essential work grow.

We are deeply grateful to Sarah Corbally for the work she has done to grow the Home Visiting Coalition and help shape policy in Montana. While her work will take a new direction in January, her impact on moms, babies, and families across the state will be felt long into the future.

We also continued co-convening the Montana Early Childhood Coalition alongside Montana Zero to Five.  These monthly meetings bring together early childhood advocates from across the state to share partnership, advocacy opportunities, funding updates, and training. In September, we were grateful to gather in person for a statewide convening.

Stephanie MortonHonoring Leadership

In 2025, Stephanie Morton was honored with the Mignon Waterman Award from the Montana Healthcare Foundation in recognition of her leadership in expanding access to behavioral health services for pregnant and postpartum women. We are grateful for Stephanie’s steady leadership, care, and vision. She leads her team with such grace and intention and we are all extremely proud of her.

Growing our HMHB Team

We were so happy to welcome Mary Collins as our Policy Coordinator in October. Many of our partners already know Mary well, and her leadership and experience strengthen our ability to engage in advocacy and policy work that centers families.

Looking ahead, we are excited to welcome a new Storytelling and Engagement Coordinator in January. This role reflects our commitment to amplifying lived experience and deeply integrating family stories into our policy and systems work.

We will also be welcoming a new Operations Coordinator to help streamline organizational operations, allowing leadership to focus more deeply on strategic and programmatic direction. We invite you to visit our Meet Our Team page in January to learn more about these new team members.

Moving Forward with Gratitude

This year was marked by growth, uncertainty, and resilience, including navigating a shifting federal funding landscape. Through it all, we were sustained by the strength of our partnerships and the shared belief that families deserve care, dignity, and support.

As we move into the new year, we do so with humility, gratitude, and hope. Thank you to every partner, funder, advocate, provider, and family who walked alongside us in 2025. If you’ve read this far, no doubt you are one of those individuals and please know that we appreciate and value you. We are honored to continue this work together.

When families have what they need, babies are safer and communities are stronger. If you feel called to support this work, we welcome your tax-deductible donation to Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies – The Montana Coalition. $75 helps place a baby safely in a car seat; $135 helps ensure a safe sleep space. If you feel called to donate, visit hmhb-mt.org/donate.

Just Showing Up

By Parenting

By Mindy Petranek

This story appears in the 5th Annual LIFTS Magazine, where Montana parents share honest experiences about connection, resilience, and the journey through early parenthood.

 

It can be challenging to make friends in your adult life. I can’t count the number of times I’ve tried to connect with people and then they don’t ever call back. I just really crave that community.

We live on a ranch, a cattle operation, so things run around the schedules of what’s happening at the time: calving, branding – ranching kind of stuff.  

One Christmas, my husband got me a gift certificate to a pottery class. I was super excited, but when it came time for the class, calving had begun. He said he thought I’d be able to sneak away for a couple hours in the evenings, but when it came down to it, we couldn’t make it work. We didn’t have any childcare, and it was just too crazy of a time.

Sometimes you have to cancel plans, and do what maintains your livelihood. 

I was stuck in a period of feeling really low and lonely, and didn’t know how to break the cycle. I started looking for resources and found a baby storytime in the nearest big town. So I took a chance.

My son had really long hair at the time, and one week this gal came up to me and complimented his hair. That’s all it took: just her kind openness to tell me it was okay that I was doing things differently. 

The next week I went to the library again, and saw the same gal. I thanked her for what she’d said about my son’s hair. She told me she was starting a mom’s group, and invited me to join. We exchanged numbers, and that’s how I started going to the Bad Moms Group.

The name of the group either sparks an interest or people are turned off by it. I love the truth of it, cause as a mom there are so many moments where I feel like I’m botching the job. 

The moms group was an hour’s drive away, and the first time I went I was nervous, but excited to be out of the house by myself, listening to music as loud as I wanted. I felt like I had a grip on a little of me. When you become a mom, you can lose yourself, and it’s all about figuring out how to reinvent.

The way the group works is you just show up. Each meeting starts with the mission statement: to create a safe space for mamas to share in order to gain understanding and compassion for ourselves and others. Zero judgment. No one is to repeat what we say here. No interrupting, and only give input if the person sharing welcomes it or is asking for advice. 

Connecting with other women about the challenges of motherhood gave me reassurance, comfort, and camaraderie. It was so much better than just packing all of my feelings into a hole and telling myself that I’m tough enough to handle it. A friend in the group once said to me, you’re always so tough – do you ever get tired of being tough?

A moms group can help you find a better head space, which will be tenfold worth it for yourself and your family. You can’t understand how much you need that outlet till you’re on your drive home and thinking: oh, I feel like me again. 

Just stick with it and go out of your comfort zone. It will be worth it. A little bit of discomfort will help you grow.

Stories like this remind us that finding connection can make all the difference. If you’re looking for parenting support, mental health resources, or ways to connect with other families, visit HMHB-LIFTS.org.

Honoring Stories. Elevating Care.

By Maternal Mental Health

By Emily Freeman, HMHB Storytelling Coordinator

Photos by Kim Giannone

May is Maternal Mental Health Month.

Maternal Mental Health Month can be a good time to remember that motherhood doesn’t always feel – on the inside – quite the same way it appears on the outside. All manner of challenges and stressors may lurk behind the smiling family portrait posted on social media. That perfect mom you see at pre-school pick-up? She may be holding back deep grief over a lost pregnancy, or shame about needing help with a problem she can’t yet put words to, the solution to which she can’t yet identify. 

Perinatal mental health challenges can vary widely. While some issues may require robust support from trained professionals and systems, others can be helped along through person-to-person, community-based care, which we can all be a part of. This can be as simple as smiling at a struggling mom to make her feel seen, and not like her crying baby is a burden; it can be a few small words spoken to a stranger in line at the grocery store: You’re doing great. It can be a weekly moms meetup at the park that begins as a group of strangers, and soon becomes a place to connect, to vent, to heal. These points of human connection are so important. 

Real Stories from Montana Moms

At HMHB, Maternal Mental Health Month provides us with an opportunity to highlight some of the lived experiences that mothers across the state have been bold and generous enough to share. In last year’s issue of LIFTS magazine, Shayla Horner wrote about the support and medical advice she received for her bipolar disorder, allowing her to become the strong and stable mom her daughters deserve. Kelsie Christensen wrote about the encouragement she received from a local moms group which helped her manage her anxiety in the early months of motherhood. On the Mother Love podcast, Rachael Watters shared her harrowing journey through postpartum psychosis, and how she continues to grow and heal.

Insights from Perinatal Mental Health Experts

In addition to these invaluable stories from moms, we’re honored to be able to share the lived experience of our trusted network experts and providers working with, and for, moms and families during this season of life. In the 2023 edition of LIFTS, Dr. Ariela Frieder offered her wisdom and expertise as a perinatal psychiatrist, including a perinatal mood and anxiety disorder checklist for moms, and resources to guide them towards getting the help they might need.

Recent guests on the Mother Love podcast have included Amy Lowney, a labor and delivery nurse who pivoted to postpartum doula work to better address the mental and emotional needs of moms after they left the hospital. Last year, we spoke with perinatal mental health expert Diana Barnes, an episode which not only addressed the way that maternal mental health can have unintended legal consequences, but provided an opportunity for listeners to hear mothers across two generations in conversation about their own experiences with postpartum mood disorders.  

Explore the LIFTS Resource Guide

Maternal Mental Health is a good time to share and bookmark our LIFTS online resource guide. LIFTS offers a searchable, and frequently updated, database of resources around the state, with categories such as Mental Health Providers, Family Support and Education, Cultural Connections, and more. It’s a great resource to share with parents, or with providers who interface with, and support, families during this season of life. 

In June, we’re hosting the 8th annual Perinatal Mental Health Conference, a chance for providers from across the state to come together to share, strategize, and enjoy the camaraderie of a vast network of those who work collectively to improve and sustain the health of moms in our state. We’re looking forward to learning together, and pooling the knowledge that each of us will bring from our different pocket of this vast and diversely resourced state. You can get a taste of the conference by viewing Dr. Samantha Greenberg’s “Perinatal Mental Health 101” session from last year’s conference. If you’d like to join us this year, you can find more information and register here.