Stamford Advocate

Harris highlights pregnancy difficulti­es facing Black women

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WASHINGTON — One Black mother said she nearly died after her son was born following an earlier miscarriag­e and a stillbirth. Another Black mother said that she wasn’t told about the dangers of her particular pregnancy complicati­on in women like herself and that it led to the loss of her baby just before her delivery date. A third Black woman who is caring for her grandson spoke through her tears about unexpected­ly losing her daughter after the baby was born.

“We didn’t see this coming,“Donna Trim-Stewart, the grandmothe­r, said at a White House-sponsored discussion on the health of Black mothers. “It’s the unexpected way we lost her.”

To mark Black Maternal Health Week, Vice President Kamala Harris led a discussion Tuesday of the issues that make African American women two to three times more likely than other women to die because of childbirth. Harris noted that Native American women are 2.3 times more likely to die from pregnancyr­elated causes than white women.

“Race should never determine health outcomes — and pregnancy and childbirth should be safe for all,” President Joe Biden tweeted. “But for too many Black women, safety and equity have been denied. This Black Maternal Health Week, our Administra­tion is taking action to change that.”

Harris, who is Black, said that throughout her career she’s heard stories about women whose complaints about pain or postpartum depression were ignored or dismissed. She blamed systemic inequities and implicit bias and said the consequenc­es are “very real.”

“Black women deserve to be heard. Their voices deserve to be respected,” the vice president said. “And like all people, they must be treated with dignity.”

Before the discussion, the administra­tion announced a series of steps to address U.S. maternal mortality rates that are among the highest in developed countries. Biden also issued a proclamati­on calling attention to the state of Black maternal health.

The budget proposal Biden released last week asks Congress for $200 million for implicit bias training for health care providers and other programs; more funding for the Department of Health and Human Services’ civil rights office; and more spending on reproducti­ve and preventive health services.

HHS also approved a Medicaid waiver permitting Illinois to expand postpartum coverage for Medicaid-eligible women from 60 days to up to 12 months. The administra­tion is also taking steps to improve access to and the continuity of maternal care in rural communitie­s.

Erica McAfee, founder of the podcast “Sisters in Loss,” described the harrowing birth of her son that followed the earlier losses of another son at 39 weeks and a daughter at 18 weeks.

McAfee said that her placenta had completely separated from her uterus and that she lost so much blood that she needed eight blood transfusio­ns and a partial hysterecto­my at age 28. Her family was summoned after she was put on life support. Her son, deprived of oxygen because of the placenta abruption, was resuscitat­ed at birth and later diagnosed with cerebral palsy.

She started the podcast in 2017 to share stories like hers and said women feel relief and comfort when they talk about their experience­s.

“The stigma and shame that comes with sharing loss stories prevent Black women from achieving the healing they need to thrive in their new normal,” McAfee said.

 ?? Manuel Balce Ceneta / Associated Press ?? Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a roundtable discussion highlighti­ng the disparitie­s that Black women face in maternal health at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington on Tuesday.
Manuel Balce Ceneta / Associated Press Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a roundtable discussion highlighti­ng the disparitie­s that Black women face in maternal health at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? White House Domestic Policy director Susan Rice speaks during a roundtable discussion attended by Vice President Kamala Harris, highlighti­ng the disparitie­s that Black women face in maternal health at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington on Tuesday.
White House Domestic Policy director Susan Rice speaks during a roundtable discussion attended by Vice President Kamala Harris, highlighti­ng the disparitie­s that Black women face in maternal health at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington on Tuesday.

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