Eliminating the Postpartum "Don't Know Where to Go" in This Country.

Postpartum care salon "Mom's Holiday" announced its dream to solve the problem of "not knowing where to go" for mothers and babies after childbirth, aiming to expand a seamless support society from Nagoya nationwide, where hospitals, midwives, specialists, businesses, and government collaborate.
その他NQ 38/100出典:PR Times

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  • 📰 Published: April 1, 2026 at 19:00
  • 🔍 Collected: April 1, 2026 at 10:15
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 21, 2026 at 09:24 (479h 9m after Collected)
Our company supports April Dream, which aims to make April 1st a day to express dreams. This press release is the dream of "Postpartum Care Specialty Salon ~Mom's Holiday~".

This is not a "lie", but a genuine dream.

"I'm not sick, but something feels off."
From the day after discharge from the maternity ward, there's no one to continuously check on the mother's body.
Pelvic pain, persistent fatigue, tenosynovitis, a body that must recover while raising a child.
Still, "I don't know where to go."

[Image: Consultation session for expectant mothers and fathers]

Worried about the baby's head shape. Strong arching. Persistent head preference. Difficult to hold. Cannot crawl properly. Cannot go to a pediatrician because it's not a disease.
It's not even within the scope of a midwife.
"Please observe" — beyond those words, there's nowhere to go.

Dad returns to work. Mom carries the burden alone.
Even if paternity leave is taken, it ends without knowing what to do.

This "lack of destination" has isolated postpartum families.
As a specialist in postpartum care and baby care, I have continued to fill that "gap."
And today, I speak of my dream.

**My Dream**

Hospitals, midwives, specialists, businesses, and government seamlessly connect and support the postpartum mother's body and the baby's growth.

To spread this **"seamless support society"** from Nagoya nationwide.

I am a Judo therapist who operates the postpartum care specialty salon "~Mom's Holiday~" in Nagoya City.
For 12 years, I have also been a body structure specialist, teaching bone, muscle, joint movement, injuries, and disorders at a medical and sports vocational school.

I have faced over 1,000 mother-and-child pairs in the field of postpartum care.

What I have delivered consists of two pillars.

One is care for the postpartum mother's own body.
To adjust the pelvis, joints, and muscles that have changed due to childbirth, and to restore the body to be able to raise a child.
The feeling of "my body returning" directly leads to the reduction of postpartum loneliness and anxiety.

The other is care focused on the baby's development and body usage.
To provide specific care from an anatomical and physiological perspective for urgent concerns for parents that are not diseases, such as head shape, arching, head preference, and crawling difficulties.
Furthermore, I also conduct development classes for fathers (how to hold, soothe, and observe development), disseminating "body-based childcare support that can be done at home."
There are almost no specialists in Japan who can play the role of clearly explaining the "wait-and-see" problems that exist between medical care and childcare from an anatomical and physiological perspective and translating them into practical care that can be implemented at home.