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accessHealth - April 2024

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- 17 - accessHealthNews.net April 2024 Volume 10 | Issue No. 83 The United States is one of the most dangerous places to give birth in the industrialized world, with maternal mortality rates rising over the last few decades. With that in mind, it is critical to understand the relationship between access to care and overall outcomes. Overall, black women are two to three times more likely than white women to die during pregnancy or childbirth. These discrepancies also apply to newborn health outcomes. Enhancing access to care, including care from various providers such as midwives and doulas, reduces inequities and improves maternal health outcomes. Unfortunately, the United States does not practice midwifery as often as other nations and cultures do, even though having a midwife improves the outcomes of childbirth. Despite, and arguably, what appears to be a robust healthcare system, in 2020, the March of Dimes found that 1,095 counties in the United States lack maternity care (no hospital offering obstetric care, no birth center, and no obstetric provider). That included 57 counties in Missouri and 76 in Kansas. These maternity care deserts span urban and rural areas of the country. A report from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) found that counties with more significant proportions of black and Hispanic populations and those with an overall lower median income were more likely to lack a hospital with obstetric services. READ MORE "You see me. You hear me. You understand me. You don't tell me what to do. You give me information and help me make informed decisions I feel good about, and then you support me." Kim Oline, CPM, BA, JD provides Midwifery services for Altruism, Inc.

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