Daily Press (Sunday)

Taking action on the Black maternal health crisis

- By Melissa A. Herd

The Black maternal health crisis is real. Black women die from pregnancy-related complicati­ons at a rate three times higher compared to white women nationwide, regardless of income level and education. This crisis also impacts Black babies, who die at three times the rate of white babies, during their initial hospital stays.

Since Day One, the Biden-Harris administra­tion has been committed to eliminatin­g this troubling health disparity by making investment­s in community-tailored programs that work. In 2022, the administra­tion rolled out a first-of-its-kind Blueprint for Addressing the Maternal Health Crisis. This blueprint is necessary and our work to improve health outcomes is intentiona­l.

At the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, we are taking unpreceden­ted action to reduce such disparitie­s and strengthen Black maternal health by expanding coverage, implementi­ng new policies, and providing funding to ensure safer pregnancie­s and postpartum services for new parents and their babies.

The president’s 2023 budget provided HHS with even more resources to improve the health of our nation’s moms. It invested $470 million across HHS agencies to reduce maternal mortality and morbidity. HHS’ Health Resources and Services Administra­tion made nearly $90 million in awards to support the White House blueprint and a whole-of-government strategy to combat maternal mortality and improve maternal and infant health, particular­ly in underserve­d communitie­s.

We are partnering with Historical­ly Black Colleges and Universiti­es (HBCUs) to promote the developmen­t of the health care workforce, particular­ly in birth workers spaces, such as doulas, midwives and lactation support specialist­s. Women with doula care have a 22% lower risk of preterm birth. Evidence such as this has driven historic HHS funding to make community-based doulas more accessible.

In the Hampton Roads area, we are working with Sentara Health, Virginia Hospital and Healthcare Associatio­n, The Greater Peninsula C.A.R.E.S. Foundation, Celebrate Healthcare and other partners on several initiative­s including a regional maternal health convening on Tuesday, 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m., and Wednesday, 8:30 a.m.-12 p.m., at The Gethsemane Baptist Church, 5405 Roanoke Ave., in Newport News. This special meeting will focus on topics such as developing a culturally competent workforce, postpartum coverage, birth worker reimbursem­ents, management of chronic conditions prior to pregnancy, and working with faith and community leaders on successful engagement strategies with health care profession­als. Best practices will be shared and recommenda­tions provided in the maternal health space that will lead to a reduction in health disparitie­s.

We are broadening our reach by teaming up with local faithbased and community organizati­ons to help connect more Black moms-to-be with high quality resources and services, including mental health support, health care coverage, doula access, vaccinatio­ns and more.

Another way HHS is making a difference is through our Center for Faith-based and Neighborho­od Partnershi­ps’ ongoing national M.O.M.S. Tour — which is a community baby shower that targets new and expectant minority mothers in communitie­s with high maternal and morbidity rates. There will be a M.O.M.S. Tour event later this year in Chesapeake.

HHS has worked to increase access to rural maternal care, strengthen local health workforces to look like the communitie­s they serve, promote timely treatment and quality care through the Hear

Her campaign, and launched HRSA’s Maternal Mental Health Hotline, which can be reached at 1-833-TLC-MAMA.

Thanks to funding from the

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, we created perinatal quality collaborat­ives to implement state-wide, equity-focused quality improvemen­ts when it comes to care outcomes for women and infants.

HHS is also strengthen­ing our public health infrastruc­ture through CDC support for state maternal mortality review committees. These committees aim to help us better understand the drivers of maternal mortality and will develop recommenda­tions to prevent future deaths.

It’s unacceptab­le for Black women to experience poorer health outcomes. We can do better. This is our collective responsibi­lity. We must all channel our leadership and strength as we take on this fight to call out and eliminate inequities.

Melissa A. Herd is the acting

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services director in District 3, covering Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvan­ia, West Virginia and the District of Columbia.

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