See the 4/12 Panel of “The Black Maternal Health Crisis in the United States” on Our YouTube Channel

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If you couldn’t join us on Monday, April 12, 2021 (2:00-3:30 pm) for our virtual webinar discussion about the current state of Black Maternal Health in the United States, no worries—click here to see what you missed via our YouTube Channel.

GUESTS:  

  

  • L. Latéy Bradford, MD, PhD, University of Maryland Medical Center: Chief Resident, Family Medicine 

  • Stephanie  Etienne, CNM, Certified Nurse Midwife based in Baltimore 

  • Stacey Stephens, LCSW-C, Director, B’more for Healthy Babies, Promise Heights  

  • Congresswoman Lauren Underwood, Representing the 14th District of Illinois, and first woman, the first person of color, and first millennial to represent her community in Congress, and also the youngest Black woman to serve in the United States House of Representatives

    MODERATOR: Tatyana Turner, Reporter, The Baltimore Sun 

    HOST: Bronwyn Mayden, MSW, Executive Director of Promise Heights

FORMAT: Panel discussion with questions and answers, with the audience being welcomed to join.

[Note to Social Workers: A certificate of attendance will be provided to participants who attend the live event at no cost.]

ABOUT THIS VIRTUAL PROGRAM THAT YOU CAN NOW SEE ON OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL:

In the richest nation on earth, moms are dying at the highest rate in the industrialized world—and the rate is rising. For as dire as the situation is for all women, the crisis is more severe for Black mothers. On March 11, 2021, the New York Times featured the story, Why Black Women Are Rejecting Hospitals in Search of Better Births, reporting that, Black mothers in the United States are 4 times as likely to die from maternity-related complications as white women.”  

Black women also experience higher rates of maternal complications and infant mortality. They are twice as likely to lose an infant to premature death, and these disparities have not improved in more than 30 years. These disproportionate inequities exist regardless of income, educational level or any other demographic characteristic.  

  

The Black Maternal Health Caucus was launched by Congresswomen Alma Adams and Lauren Underwood to improve Black maternal health outcomes and to raise awareness within Congress about the problem and advocate for effective, evidence-based, culturally component policies and best practices for health outcomes for Black mothers. 

  

This virtual session provided significant insights how to make pregnancy and childbirth safer in the U.S., amplify community–driven policy, practice and systems and enhance community organizing on Black maternal health by taking action to reduce maternal mortality and reduce morbidity related to childbirth.  

To express your concern about legislative action and learn more about the Momnibus Act, click here.

 

#BlackMaternalHealthCrisis  #FromTheHeights  #BlackMaternalHealthWeek


Funding for the From the Heights series was provided by The Annie E. Casey Foundation and Kaiser Permanente

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