To mark mental health awareness month, fertility tracking app Natural Cycles partnered with nonprofit Postpartum Support International to ask a simple, often overlooked question: Is Mommy Okay?

As it turns out, mommy is not okay. As listed by five celebrity moms — musician Halle Bailey, model Tess Holliday, activist and author Elaine Welteroth and actors Stephanie Beatriz and Ashley Tisdale — new mothers are often dealing with an endless list of mental health issues. 

In a PSA, dressed in 1950s attire, each celebrity candidly shares their own postpartum struggles. They note that they felt wholly unprepared to manage the anxiety, exhaustion and hormone changes of postpartum while dealing with the realization that their lifestyle, work and relationships are changing now that they have a baby to take care of.

“There is so much information about how to care for a new baby, but what about the mom?” said Holliday in a press release. “Society needs to do a better job of attending to her needs, especially during those early months when the transition is so mentally and physically tough.”

The campaign aims to raise awareness around understanding and attending to new mothers’ mental health. As Bailey says in the video, “you have to be nurtured to be a nurturer.”

“While we aim to raise awareness using star power, the real stars are all the moms out there who often put their own needs aside,” said Dr. Elina Berglund Scherwitzl, Natural Cycles’ CEO and cofounder, in a press release. “It’s time we give them the support they deserve.”

Alongside the PSA, Natural Cycles announced the launch of an in-app program, NC° Postpartum, to support new mothers  as they recover both physically and mentally during the postpartum period. 

“At least one in five women experience depression or anxiety during the perinatal period, so our hope is this campaign will raise greater awareness about the prevalence of perinatal mental health disorders and empower individuals with knowledge, support and resources, ensuring that no one faces these challenges alone,” said Wendy Davis, executive director of Postpartum Support International, in a press release.

This article originally appeared on Campaign US.