Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

How to protect Black maternal health

- By Karen A. Scott and Monica R. McLemore

The current state of Black maternal health in the United States is a grim indication that we as a country have lost our way.

The U.S. ranks last overall among industrial­ized countries with a maternal death rate of 20.1 per 100,000 pregnancie­s, and the rate is rising. The crisis for people of color in this country is even more acute. Despite advances in reproducti­ve technologi­es and safe motherhood initiative­s, hospitals do not keep Black women and people who are pregnant or recently gave birth safe during pregnancy, childbirth and postpartum.

In fact, hospital systems have willfully accepted the widening death gap between Black mothers and those in other racial and ethnic groups. The maternal mortality rate for Black women is around three times that of white women. This higher risk is shared by all Black women regardless of income, education or geographic­al location.

The dire statistics showing premature death and severe morbidity experience­d by Black people are proof that the current systems that provide health services, education, research and policy are not working and need to be remade.

The COVID-19 pandemic has further laid bare the many flaws in these systems that need reimaginin­g and re-conceptual­izing. First and foremost, hospitals, healthcare institutio­ns and, more specifical­ly, places where people give birth have been ground zero for harm. Birth is an episodic event, and many forget that during the nine months that precede birth, there are many opportunit­ies for interventi­ons to improve outcomes and experience­s that are hampered by structural racism.

One new study led by Black women community leaders and scholars, SACRED Birth, became the first of its kind to illuminate the feelings and experience­s of seeking care and support while Black and pregnant during the pandemic. The study tested a novel survey with more than 800 Black mothers and people giving birth across 348 hospitals in 34 states and Washington, D.C. The survey was developed by Karen A. Scott to uncover and describe forms of obstetric racism perpetuate­d against Black women and people by personnel in hospitals and health systems.

It measures how Black mothers and people feel as they navigate personnel, practices and policies across seven quality areas identified by Black mothers: safety, autonomy, communicat­ion, racism, empathy, humanity and dignity. Survey items also examine how well hospitals see, value and treat Black mothers and people as human beings, worthy of compassion­ate, culturally relevant, responsive and rigorous care, regardless of insurance status.

Black mothers and people also prioritize­d kinship ties, systems accountabi­lity and holistic care as mechanisms to shield them from hospital neglect, mistreatme­nt and discrimina­tion, without judgment or retaliatio­n.

The aim is to translate patient experience­s into data as evidence of obstetric racism in the provision of perinatal care and services from hospital triage to discharge. The patient-centered data will be used to transform the culture of care by establishi­ng community-driven benchmarks for advancing equity and by informing profession­al education and training both within and outside hospital settings.

In order for hospitals and health systems to prevent deaths, there needs to be greater partnershi­ps with community-based healthcare providers, including doulas, midwives, and sexual and reproducti­ve health profession­als who are local and accessible. The pandemic has shown us the limitation­s of hospital birth settings, and pregnant people deserve highqualit­y options including home birth and birth centers. Finally, given that most maternal deaths occur in the postpartum period, increased home visits and reimagined postpartum care are essential components to improving outcomes.

Structural interventi­ons beyond hospitals also influence maternal health. Insurance coverage has been shown to improve health outcomes, particular­ly for those of reproducti­ve age. Any reduction in healthcare coverage, such as the dismantlin­g of the Affordable Care Act, is likely to harm Black people and people of color most; almost half of the births in the U.S. are covered by Medicaid.

Fortunatel­y, the 2021 Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act was recently reintroduc­ed in Congress by the Black Maternal Health Caucus. The legislatio­n includes 12 bills that provide funding to address perinatal mental health, workforce initiative­s for healthcare provider education and training, research dollars for better data, and support for state-based maternal mortality review committees that examine every case to determine the root causes and potential places where interventi­ons could have prevented death.

Reimaginin­g Black maternal health in the United States cannot be separated from the issue of health equity. We can’t improve outcomes without listening to, honoring and understand­ing the full lives and experience­s of Black people.

Unfortunat­ely, misinforma­tion and poor science communicat­ion have combined with the defunding of public health to create harmful narratives that can reinforce racism in healthcare. There are, however, strategies that can begin to help. First, ensure that healthcare work is rooted in authentic community engagement. Second, develop pipeline programs that can diversify the healthcare workforce. One good place to start are historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es (HBCUs), large producers of Black STEM graduates in the U.S. Given recent philanthro­pic attention to HBCUs as drivers of education and training for Black people, they could help bring about new approaches to health equity.

If we can develop and carry out programs that recognize and serve the needs and dignity of Black people, care and outcomes should improve for everyone.

Karen A. Scott is an associate professor in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at UC San Francisco and an applied epidemiolo­gist doing research in reproducti­ve and perinatal health, rights and justice. Monica R. McLemore is a tenured associate professor in the Family Health Care Nursing Department at UC San Francisco and a research scientist at the Bixby Center for Global Reproducti­ve Health.

We need to end a culture of obstetric racism that has resulted in a maternal mortality rate for Black women that is around three times that of white women.

 ?? Photo illustrati­on by Nicole Vas Los Angeles Times ??
Photo illustrati­on by Nicole Vas Los Angeles Times

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