Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A maternal mortality crisis

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In 2023, in the richest and most powerful nation on Earth, it shouldn’t be life-threatenin­g to carry a child and give birth. Yet for years, mothers in these United States—Black mothers especially—have suffered from elevated mortality rates, rates that were only driven higher during covid-19, as women of all ethnic background­s saw the sharpest-ever annual fatality spike.

New CDC numbers reveal that 1,205 women died of pregnancy-related causes in 2021, compared with 861 in 2020 and 754 in 2019. That represente­d a one-year jump of 38 percent and a two-year jump of 64 percent, to the highest maternal mortality rate on record since 1965. Egad. Much of the increase can be attributed to covid-19; the virus was a contributi­ng factor in at least 400 maternal deaths, according to the Government Accountabi­lity Office.

Though that particular public health emergency has since abated (though not disappeare­d), there are two emergencie­s inside it that remain.

First, America’s overall rate was and still is far higher than its peer countries, and remains high by internatio­nal standards whether you’re white, Latina or Black. Our maternal mortality is 54 percent higher than Russia’s; nearly double Canada’s; more than double the UK’s, France’s and Italy’s, and five times Japan’s and Germany’s.

Second, race-based disparitie­s here are especially egregious and stubborn. Black women are 2.6 and 2.5 times likelier to die of maternity-related causes than white or Hispanic women.

There’s no single, simple reason for that shameful fact. Research suggests economic disadvanta­ges, discrimina­tion by health care providers and chronic stress all add up to take their toll.

The Biden administra­tion last year laid out a thoughtful blueprint to save mothers’ lives; passage of sweeping federal legislatio­n, a dozen bills collective­ly nicknamed the Momnibus, would go further.

Waste no time. American women are dying in numbers far too large. As long as they do, American values remain on life support.

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