Rome News-Tribune

Maternal care, doctor training on cut list

♦ Georgia lawmakers are wary of some proposed budget cuts.

- By Beau Evans Capitol Beat News Service

Budget cuts proposed for doctor-training programs at several universiti­es in Georgia amid the coronaviru­s pandemic drew pushback from some state lawmakers worried maternal care and rural hospitals would suffer with less funding.

Lawmakers homed in on proposed cuts to grant funds totaling roughly $4.5 million for Morehouse College’s School of Medicine and $3.7 million for Mercer University’s School of Medicine to run health-care workforce training programs.

Less spending particular­ly for Morehouse could hit programs to curb maternal mortality in Georgia especially hard, warned Democratic lawmakers on the Senate Appropriat­ions Community Health Subcommitt­ee at a Monday hearing.

Those cuts would combine chronic underfundi­ng for maternal care in Georgia with the disproport­ionate impact of coronaviru­s on black residents, who also experience high rates of maternal mortality, said Sen. Valencia Seay, D-riverdale.

“At the end of the day, childbirth should not be where black women are dying,” Seay said. “And to get the proper care, we can’t keep cutting the funds that are helping us to turn out those that are willing and capable of doing what everybody deserves – and that’s access to health care.”

State agencies were asked last month to hand in proposals for cutting their budgets by 14% totaling about $3.5 billion due to the coronaviru­s-prompted economic slowdown. Gov. Brian Kemp signaled last week agencies may only need to cut their budgets by 11% starting July 1 as state tax revenues are not declining as much as expected.

Funding for maternal care was a sticking point for many lawmakers during earlier budget negotiatio­ns, as Kemp called for 4% and 6% cuts to most state spending. Morehouse’s maternal mortality program was spared $500,000 in cuts originally proposed in the 2020 fiscal year budget that lawmakers declined to implement.

Seay highlighte­d how the virus-inspired spending cuts have once again put funding for the Morehouse maternal mortality program in doubt.

She and others who spoke at the Monday hearing cited data indicating black women in Georgia are three to four times more likely to die from pregnancy-related issues than white women, according to a legislativ­e study committee report released earlier this year.

Sen. Nan Orrock, D-ATlanta, agreed the cuts would hurt Morehouse as well as Mercer’s doctor-training program, both of which help boost physician employment at hospitals in rural parts of the state that tend to go underserve­d.

Orrock also singled out Morehouse as a historical­ly black institutio­n that plays a critical role in increasing the number of black and other persons of color trained in the health-care field.

“There’s a huge need for it,” Orrock said. “I think it’s an important way for us to demonstrat­e as a legislatur­e that we understand the need to do everything we can to resource that effort.”

Maternal care advocates also voiced opposition to the proposed cuts in grant funding, which is administer­ed by the state Board of Health Care Workforce.

Breana Lipscomb, the nonprofit Center for Reproducti­ve Rights’ maternal health campaign manager, urged lawmakers to restore $500,000 in funding for Morehouse as well as separate funding on the chopping block for certain maternal mental health programs in the state.

“We are very deeply concerned that the currently proposed cuts will reverse the progress we’ve been making in this state related to maternal mortality,” Lipscomb said.

Sen. Dean Burke, R-bainbridge, who chairs the subcommitt­ee, stressed none of the proposed budget cuts for state agencies have been settled yet but that lawmakers are “not going to be able to do everything we may like to do.”

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