Skip to content Skip to search

Republish This Story

* Please read before republishing *

We’re happy to make this story available to republish for free under an Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives Creative Commons license as long as you follow our republishing guidelines, which require that you credit The 19th and retain our pixel. See our full guidelines for more information.

To republish, simply copy the HTML at right, which includes our tracking pixel, all paragraph styles and hyperlinks, the author byline and credit to The 19th. Have questions? Please email partnerships@19thnews.org.

— The Editors

Loading...

Modal Gallery

/
Sign up for our newsletter

Menu

Topics

  • Abortion
  • Election 2024
  • Education
  • LGBTQ+
  • Caregiving
  • Environment & Climate
  • Business & Economy
View all topics

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

  • Latest Stories
  • Our Mission
  • Our Team
  • Ways to Give
  • Search
  • Contact
Donate
Home

We’re an independent, nonprofit newsroom reporting on gender, politics and policy. Read our story.

Topics

  • Abortion
  • Election 2024
  • Education
  • LGBTQ+
  • Caregiving
  • Environment & Climate
  • Business & Economy
View all topics

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

  • Latest Stories
  • Our Mission
  • Our Team
  • Ways to Give
  • Search
  • Contact

We’re an independent, nonprofit newsroom reporting on gender, politics and policy. Read our story.

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

Become a member

The 19th thanks our sponsors. Become one.

Health

‘This challenge is urgent’: Kamala Harris holds summit to address pregnancy-related deaths

 Americans die of pregnancy-related causes at alarming rates, and racial disparities are stark. On Tuesday, Harris issued a call to action.

Kamala Harris listens during a conversation with Olympic athlete Allyson Felix.
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks with Olympic athlete Allyson Felix during the White House Maternal Health Day of Action. (JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images)

Mariel Padilla

General Assignment Reporter

Published

2021-12-07 20:14
8:14
December 7, 2021
pm

Republish this story

Share

  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Email

Republish this story

When her only daughter excitedly announced her pregnancy, Toni Brown thought the birth of her first grandchild would be the happiest day of her life. Near the due date, the doctors decided to induce labor — which lasted more than 18 hours before they decided to perform a cesarean section. After waiting five more hours, Brown was told her daughter was in a coma, brain-dead. 

“To this day, we still don’t know why she stopped breathing, and the doctors said they still don’t know,” Brown said at the White House’s first Maternal Health Day of Action on Tuesday. At the event attended by lawmakers, advocates and celebrities, Vice President Kamala Harris issued a nationwide call to action for private and public sectors to improve health outcomes for pregnant people in the United States, where pregnancy-related deaths occur at a higher rate than in other countries with similar incomes.

“This challenge is urgent and it is important and it will take all of us,” Harris said. “ And to put it simply, here’s how I feel about this: In the United States of America, in the 21st century, being pregnant and giving birth should not carry such great risk. But the truth — and this is a hard truth — women in our nation are dying before, during and after childbirth.”

The 19th thanks our sponsors. Become one.

Harris also pointed out stark racial disparities.

“When we know that for some women, the risk is much higher,” Harris said. “We should do something about it.”

Black women, like Brown’s daughter, are three times as likely to die from pregnancy-related complications as their White counterparts. Native American women are more than twice as likely to die, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And women who live in rural areas — where pregnancy care is often difficult to come by — are about 60 percent more likely to die. In addition, tens of thousands of Americans experience life-altering health changes as a result of pregnancy, including severe heart issues, hemorrhages, seizures and blood infections.

Sign up for more news and context delivered to your inbox, daily

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting…

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

This health crisis has been a priority for Harris for years. As attorney general of California, Harris established the Bureau of Children’s Justice, which prioritized the needs of children and their parents and established programs to support at-risk and low-income pregnant people. As a senator, Harris introduced the Maternal CARE Act and the Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act. Neither made it into law, but parts became key components of the Build Back Better Act, which includes a $3 billion investment in maternal health. The House has passed the measure, but negotiations continue in the Senate. 

“The point for me has always been clear,” Harris said. “What affects the children of our communities, affects all of us.” 

Harris also announced that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services would propose a new “Birthing-Friendly” designation for hospitals and have issued new guidance to encourage states to provide one year of continuous postpartum coverage — an expansion from 60 days. Research shows that many maternal deaths and complications happen more than 60 days after the delivery, when, in many states, Medicaid coverage has lapsed.  Xavier Becerra, the secretary of health and human services, also announced the release of a new report that found that such an expansion would double the number of Americans getting coverage and help more than 720,000 people each year.  

The summit also included conversations about the role of men in improving maternal health — led by Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey — and systemic challenges that disproportionately affect Black and Indigenous pregnant people and pregnant people who live in rural America. 

“Action is long overdue,” Harris said. “We have all heard the stories, and some here have lived the stories: Women who have experienced pain only to be ignored. Stories of women who have experienced postpartum depression only to be dismissed. Stories of women who had to be put on life support or receive a blood transfusion after blood transfusion and could not hold their newborn baby. These stories should compel all of us to take on this crisis.”

Republish this story

Share

  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Email

Recommended for you

Jennifer Carroll Foy holds her baby on the floor of the Virginia House.
‘We’re done dying’: How Black women lawmakers are advocating for pregnancy-related health
A young pregnant black woman sit up on an exam table in her doctors office during a routine prenatal check-up.
State legislators are taking the maternal mortality crisis into their own hands
Kamala Harris smiling.
In Harris VP pick, maternal health experts see a new ally
A mother holds an infant near a crib in a prison cell with a cartoon scene painted on the wall behind the crib.
‘A moral failure’: Pregnant people face health risks and inconsistent care in prisons

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

Become a member

Explore more coverage from The 19th
Abortion Election 2024 Education LGBTQ+ Caregiving
View all topics

Support representative journalism today.

Learn more about membership.

  • Transparency
    • About
    • Team
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Community Guidelines
  • Newsroom
    • Latest Stories
    • 19th News Network
    • Podcast
    • Events
    • Careers
    • Fellowships
  • Newsletters
    • Daily
    • Weekly
    • The Amendment
    • Event Invites
  • Support
    • Ways to Give
    • Sponsorship
    • Republishing
    • Volunteer

The 19th is a reader-supported nonprofit news organization. Our stories are free to republish with these guidelines.