Birthing while Black' is a national crisis for the US. Here's what Black lawmakers want to do about
Birthing while Black is a national crisis for the US. Heres what Black lawmakers want to do about it
When Alma Adamss daughter complained of abdominal pain during a difficult pregnancy, her doctor overlooked her cries for help. The North Carolina congresswomans daughter had to undergo a last-minute caesarean section. She and her baby daughter, now 16, survived.
It could have gone another way. I could have been a mother who was grieving her daughter and granddaughter, Adams told the Guardian, following a week in which the White House highlighted the crisis of pregnancy-related deaths among Black women. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Black women die at three times the rate of white women.
For Adams and other Black women in Congress, who formed the Black Maternal Health Caucus, the issue hits close to home. Last week, during Black Maternal Health Week, they talked about how their experiences and the work of advocates had propelled legislation, known as the Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act of 2021, to fight a healthcare crisis that disproportionately affects Black women regardless of income.
The US has the highest maternal mortality rate among industrialized countries. Since 2000, the maternal mortality rate has risen nearly 60%, making it worse now than it was decades earlier. More than half of these deaths are preventable.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/apr/19/black-mothers-birth-maternal-mortality