New York Post

‘NEW MOM’ SHOCK

Deaths at birth up

- By OLIVIA LAND oland@nypost.com

Maternal deaths in the US have surged to the highest rate in nearly six decades, a new report has revealed.

The number of mothers who died during or shortly after pregnancy rose to 1,205 in 2021, for a maternal mortality rate of 32.9 deaths per 100,000 live births, the National Center for Health Statistics said Thursday.

The new numbers marked a 40% increase from 861 maternal deaths in 2020 and a 60% increase from 754 in 2019.

The troubling statistics are the country’s highest since 1965, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The CDC lists the leading causes of pregnancy-related death as hemorrhagi­ng, cardiovasc­ular conditions and infection or sepsis.

Experts say COVID-19 also exacerbate­d the dangers, as pregnant patients faced greater risk of serious illness or death, as well as premature delivery and other complicati­ons. These perils increase if the patient is unvaccinat­ed.

“It’s hard for us to speculate, but we did suspect that the pandemic would have an unfortunat­e effect on maternal mortality,” Stacey D. Stewart, president and chief executive of March of Dimes, told the Journal in February.

Maternal deaths among black patients remain especially high compared with other groups, with a rate of 69.9 deaths per 100,000 live births, or 2.6 times that of non-Hispanic white patients.

Dr. Veronica Gillispie-Bell, an OB-GYN at Ochsner Health in Louisiana, told NPR this week that social factors drive the racial gap.

“We have to address the social factors that either are barriers to accessing care or that make your medical conditions worse coming into the pregnancy,” she said.

“This is not just about doctors in the hospital.”

Louisiana is one of the states working with the CDC to address maternal deaths by reducing racial disparitie­s and implicit bias in health care, Gillispie-Bell noted.

A ways to go

“It’s not something that happens overnight. It’s going to be a while before we see the benefits of that change,” she explained.

Maternal deaths overall are also much higher in the US than any other high-income country. The OECD Health Statistics reported, for example, that Australia, Austria, Israel, Japan and Spain all hovered around 2 to 3 deaths per 100,000 births in 2020.

In fact, maternal mortality rates in the US rose 78% between 2000 and 2020 while dropping in most other countries, the WHO said.

“There is just no reason for a rich country to have poor maternal mortality,” Eileen Crimmins, a professor of gerontolog­y at the University of Southern California, told NPR.

Donna Hoyert, a health scientist at the National Center for Health Statistics who authored the new reports, told the outlet that provisiona­l data suggest that pregnancy-related deaths may have peaked in 2021 and declined last year.

“So hopefully that’s the apex,” she said.

The report comes after new data showed the US had fallen when measured against 200 other nations in a report on life expectancy, dropping 40 spots since 1950 to 53rd place.

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