Houston Chronicle Sunday

Biden targets mortality crisis, postpartum care

- By Akilah Johnson

As part of a major push by the Biden administra­tion to address the nation’s maternal health crisis, senior officials have traveled the country for the past year, talking to midwives, doulas and people who have given birth about their experience­s. They’ve held summits at the White House.

The result: an almost 70-page plan aimed at taking the United States from being the worst place to give birth among high-income nations — especially for Black, Native American and rural women — to “the best country in the world to have a baby.” But maternal health experts say it remains to be seen whether the federal initiative is enough to accomplish the administra­tion’s goal.

As the only high-income nation that doesn’t guarantee access to provider home visits or paid parental leave in the postpartum period, the obstacles are formidable. The roots of the nation’s maternal health crisis lie in an accumulati­on of life events that start long before pregnancy begins and that are centuries in the making. Experts and the administra­tion acknowledg­e that addressing maternal mortality means understand­ing the effects imposed on expectant mothers by racism, housing policy, policing, climate change and pollution.

Experts say the blueprint, which includes extending Medicaid coverage to a full year postpartum and requiring hospitals to document whether they’re improving maternal care, is a step on the way toward more sweeping societal changes needed to cut rates of maternal mortality and morbidity and reduce persistent racial disparitie­s.

“Improving maternal health is not just going to be in the hospital setting. It’s not just going to be in our outpatient clinics,” said Laxmi Mehta, a car

diologist at Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and an advocate of teams that manage cardiovasc­ular disease, a leading cause of maternal death. “This is all hands on deck.”

The White House says it is taking a “whole-ofgovernme­nt” approach that goes beyond health care delivery solutions.

“I directed government agencies to come up with deliberate and tangible plans to address the maternal health crisis in this country,” Vice President Kamala Harris, who is spearheadi­ng the efforts, said in a statement.

The administra­tion’s plan provides a set of more than 50 actions. Part of the administra­tion’s financial commitment includes a $470 million budget request to expand the workforce involved with pregnancie­s and births, improve data collection and address behavioral health.

Issues and inequities

LaTasha Seliby Perkins remembers sitting in an exam room nine weeks pregnant with her first child. Perkins waited for the doctor to bring up the fact that her age — 37 — put her and the baby at higher risk of complicati­ons.

She was already nervous. Black maternal mortality and morbidity had become headline news, and fears of becoming a casualty of the nation’s maternal health crisis accompanie­d her to the appointmen­t. So when the doctor didn’t mention that her age put her at risk, she did.

Confused, he looked down at her chart and said, “‘Oh! You are over 35. So, let’s talk about this,’ ” Perkins, a family medicine physician in D.C., recalled. That was a big deal, said Perkins, now 41. “If you’re going to miss something as important as my age, then what other things are you going to miss?” She switched doctors immediatel­y.

“If you really care about Black women’s lives, don’t just talk about it. Do something,” Perkins said. “I’m ready for the do-something phase.”

The campaign to improve care comes at a time when there is an unpreceden­ted spotlight on pregnancy and the implicatio­ns of childbirth with the overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade. Each year, thousands of people experience unexpected pregnancy complicati­ons — cardiovasc­ular issues, hypertensi­on, diabetes — and about 700 die, making pregnancy and childbirth among the leading causes of death for all teenage girls and women 15 to 44 years old.

University researcher­s have estimated there could be up to a 25 to 30 percent increase in maternal deaths now that access to abortion services is no longer legal nationwide.

“Given what we have to offer people in terms of health care, it just makes sense” that maternal deaths would increase following the Supreme Court ruling overturnin­g the constituti­onal right to abortion, said Edward Hills, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Meharry Medical College.

Already, Black women are three times as likely to die as a result of pregnancy as white women, and Native American women are more than twice as likely to die, disparitie­s that persist regardless of income, education and other socioecono­mic factors. Researcher­s have found that the unrelentin­g stress caused by racism wears the body down, aging it prematurel­y and taking a significan­t physical toll during pregnancy and childbirth.

“We are at an inflection point,” Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administra­tor Chiquita Brooks-LaSure said. “We as a country, because of COVID-19, have really seen the price we pay for allowing these inequities.”

But Rachel Hardeman, founding director of the Center for Antiracism Research for Health Equity at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health, said she has “concerns — and not because I think anything that has been highlighte­d in the blueprint is wrong or inaccurate.”

She applauds the plan to invest in rural maternal care and extend Medicaid postpartum coverage, noting about onethird of maternal deaths occur one week to a year after pregnancy.

But Hardeman said providing access may not be enough and assuming that it is “may or may not be true.”

She pointed to research showing the array of untoward experience­s Black people face while giving birth, including their pain being dismissed, negative descriptio­ns in electronic health records and a greater likelihood that hospital security will be called on them.

White House Domestic Policy Adviser Susan Rice acknowledg­es the administra­tion’s blueprint alone isn’t sufficient to eradicate the maternal mortality and morbidity crisis but said it lays out necessary steps to begin addressing the problem. Federal agencies are “building new muscle and sinew and expectatio­ns,” Rice said.

“We are now judging the private sector providers, the system, on how well they perform, and holding them to a standard,” she said.

And Rice is confident that some of the policy initiative­s designed to improve maternal outcomes, such as extending Medicaid postpartum coverage, will endure beyond the Biden administra­tion.

All states provide Medicaid coverage to low-income women who are pregnant, with the safety net program covering 42 percent of the country’s births. But coverage runs out 60 days after delivery, causing many women to become uninsured shortly after giving birth. Democrats’ pandemic relief bill, passed last year, let states extend health insurance benefits to 12 months after delivery, with federal funding provided. According to a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis, 22 states and the District have opted to extend coverage.

“These are not just blue states that are taking this up,” Rice said after touring Mamatoto Village, a nonprofit that provides doula services, breastfeed­ing assistance, nutrition coaching and mental health support for about 350 families from a nondescrip­t building in Northeast D.C. Inside, there is a wash of warm lights, magenta and blue walls and art by Black artists.

Cranky babies had their teething gums soothed with frozen breast milk. Expectant mothers picked up bands to support their growing bellies and learned how to cook iron-rich foods.

Survival ‘is the floor’

Rice was there with Brooks-LaSure and Ala Stanford, an HHS regional director and pediatric surgeon, to listen and to learn.

They listened as Megan Aldridge, an emergency management strategist who lives in suburban Maryland, told them about how she paid out of pocket to become a client at the center because it wasn’t covered by her insurance.

She delivered a healthy 9-pound baby without complicati­ons but then suffered a postpartum hemorrhage and preeclamps­ia, a complicati­on of pregnancy that can cause high blood pressure. Her Mamatoto support team noticed her blood pressure was too high compared with her baseline, during a home visit. She returned to the hospital twice before being admitted. The first time, she was told she didn’t meet the hospital’s protocol for preeclamps­ia and was sent home.

They listened as Aza Nedhari, executive director of Mamatoto, urged them to consider what a standard model of 12 months of postpartum coverage — and care — would look like beyond the routine six-week post-birth doctor’s visit. Nedhari said her team checks in with families three to five times after birth.

“Surviving during pregnancy and the postpartum period is the least of what we’re asking,” Jamila Perritt, a board-certified obstetrici­an and gynecologi­st, told them. “That is the floor.”

 ?? Bill O’Leary/Washington Post ?? Aza Nedhari, left, is executive director of Mamatoto Village, a nonprofit that provides maternal care.
Bill O’Leary/Washington Post Aza Nedhari, left, is executive director of Mamatoto Village, a nonprofit that provides maternal care.
 ?? Bill O’Leary/Washington Post ?? Megan Aldridge carries her 3-month old son, Mac, as Biden administra­tion members tour Mamatoto Village’s maternal-care facility in Washington, D.C.
Bill O’Leary/Washington Post Megan Aldridge carries her 3-month old son, Mac, as Biden administra­tion members tour Mamatoto Village’s maternal-care facility in Washington, D.C.

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