Austin American-Statesman

Expectant mothers getting education to reduce deaths

- By Ese Olumhense Chicago Tribune

Shakia Banks has heard the horror stories: Of young, expectant mothers like her who gave birth and ended up comatose. Of mothers who died during delivery or soon after.

Banks, 25, who is expecting twins, said she generally felt fine after her first two babies were born, except in the days after she delivered her second son, born a month premature. Soon after delivery, she began hemorrhagi­ng.

“I was just, like, constantly bleeding,” Banks said. “I didn’t even remember, my mom had to tell me. She was like, ‘They couldn’t stop the bleeding.’ And I was like, ‘Really, I was bleeding that bad?” She was, her mother said. Banks’ mother followed up with her doctors, and eventually they got the bleeding under control, she said. However, many mothers aren’t as fortunate. About 700 women across the country die every year during pregnancy or delivery or from related complicati­ons, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. America’s maternal mortality rate is the highest of any developed nation, and the U.S. is the only such country where this death rate is rising. Most of the deaths are preventabl­e, experts say.

In an effort to help change that trend and reduce the number of infants who die before their first birthdays, the Sinai Health System’s Community Institute in Chicago’s North Lawndale neighborho­od throws baby showers for pregnant women. The goal is to give each of the soon-to-be mothers in attendance the tools and education needed for healthier pregnancie­s, deliveries and babies.

Sixty women attended the recent sixth annual shower.

“We’re heavily into education and educating moms,” said Lee V. Smith, director of case management at the community institute. “We discovered some mothers didn’t know about the developmen­tal stages of babies. Other mothers didn’t know breastfeed­ing, for example, is a very good determinan­t for keeping a baby healthy.”

Educating and supporting other mothers is a personal mission for Nancy Maruyama, executive director of the nonprofit SIDS of Illinois, one of those who spoke at the recent gathering. Her son Brendan died of sudden infant death syndrome in 1985. One of the only things she has left of him, after more than three decades, is an audio recording her sister made of baby Brendan, giggling, before his death at 4 months old. It’s her ringtone.

“There’s a little saying,” Maruyama said. “When you lose your husband or wife, you’re a widow or widower. When you lose your parents, you’re an orphan. But when you lose a child, it is so bad that there isn’t even a word for it.”

Others speakers included Angela Ellison, a nurse who discussed maternal death. Her connection to the topic, like Maruyama’s, is personal: On Christmas Eve 1969, her mother died from a blood clot. She had just given birth. Ellison was 9 and sitting in a hair salon when she found out.

“You make sure you go get your checkup,” Ellison said. At 6 weeks, when many babies first visit the doctor, mothers should seek care too, she said.

 ?? ANTONIO PEREZ / CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Armani Fountain, 2, and his parents Chastity WrightFoun­tain and Rovel Fountain gather for the annual baby shower for local moms at the Sinai Community Institute in Chicago in June.
ANTONIO PEREZ / CHICAGO TRIBUNE Armani Fountain, 2, and his parents Chastity WrightFoun­tain and Rovel Fountain gather for the annual baby shower for local moms at the Sinai Community Institute in Chicago in June.

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