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Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forumLet's Save the Maternity Units Like We Do the Banks
Lets Save the Maternity Units Like We Do the Banks
4/12/2023 by Andrea Flynn
Maternity units are closing at an alarming rate. What if we thought about maternity care like we thought about extractive, under-regulated, poorly run banks?
Access to obstetric services has been on the decline for years in rural areas: At least 89 obstetrics units in rural U.S. hospitals closed their doors between 2015 and 2019. Today, more than half of rural counties are maternity-care deserts. (Jalaa Marey / AFP via Getty Images)
The United States is experiencing a health crisis that rarely makes it into mainstream headlines: the shuttering of obstetric units in (mostly) rural hospitals across the country. These units are closing at an alarming rate and disproportionately impacting Black and brown women who are already shouldering the heaviest burdens of our broken health system. The most recent wave of maternity unit closures, or expected closures, is the result of numerous cascading factors. In the post-Dobbs environment, obstetricians and gynecologists are choosing not to work in red states, fearing the inability to provide needed care to their patients amidst an ever growing slate of anti-abortion restrictions, and also not wanting to raise their own families in such a troubling health environment. (Reproductive justice leaders warned us that abortion wasnt the only one thing that would be lost when Roe was overturnedwe should have listened to them.)
The lack of physicians is forcing some units to close all together, forcing women to travel long distances to access basic healthcare. Other units cannot withstand the financial pressure created by shrinking patient bases. And those serving predominantly low-income populations cannot sustain themselves in the face of Medicaids low reimbursement rates and high uncompensated care costs. And lets not forget about healthcare being a patriarchal system that has historically marginalized (often fully ignored or intentionally harmed) women and their health needs. More than half of rural counties in the U.S. do not have obstetric care, a trend that worsened during the pandemic and has only continued to accelerate since. Black and brown women who already faced care shortages, coverage gaps and discrimination in healthcare are shouldering the greatest danger and weight of these changes.
. . . . .
But what if we thought about maternity care like we thought about extractive, under-regulated, poorly run banks? We have plenty of examples of the federal government quickly mobilizing resources to bail them out. They are indispensable! They are core to the wellbeing of our economy and our communities! They are too big to fail! But I cant imagine many things more core to the well-being of our economy and our communities than the health of women, of mothers and the children they bring into this world.
. . . .
The existence and persistence of maternity care deserts isnt inevitable, it is a choice. Our leaders could decide to view the loss of maternity care as the crisis it is and make different policy choices to address it. Black women lawmakers have given us a roadmap to do just that. But the historical devaluation and disregard for Black womens bodies, labor and lives has made the current crisiswhich Black and brown women are feeling most acutely, but which has spilled into poor white communities as wellbackground noise for many of our political leaders. They clearly dont feel its their responsibility to ensure the health and wellbeing of the women who are the backbone of our economy, our communities, and our families.
But you can bet if tech bros were facing an escalating crisis in sexual and reproductive health, it would be.
https://msmagazine.com/2023/04/12/hospital-baby-delivery-abortion-black-maternal-health-rural-maternity-ward-close/
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