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Health, Science & Environment

5 Ohio Hospitals Sign Onto Program Aimed To Help Improve Equity In Pregnancy Care

Ariane Hunter
/
Flickr

Five Ohio hospitals are signing onto a program aimed at improving maternal care for Black parents-to-be. "Mama Certified" is designed to help parents assess birthing centers and ensure babies of color receive equitable care. It launches in the spring.

"It is a certification process by which hospitals are saying to Black moms, 'We are here for equitable birthing experiences and equitable birthing outcomes,' " said Cradle Cincinnati Director of Equity and Community Strategies Meredith Shockley-Smith, Ph.D.

She said the program will make data available so people can find the right place for them based on their needs, concerns, and experiences.

"If, for example, they have significant barriers to care or essential determinants of health issues, they might look for a hospital (that) is really specializing in that work. Or if they have a high-risk pregnancy or whatever the issue might be, really the information is often hard to find. The goal with Mama Certified is mom will be able to find it quickly and make a good choice for herself and her birth experience."

The Christ Hospital Network, Mercy Health, TriHealth, UC Health, and St. Elizabeth Healthcare have all committed to the program. The Health Collaborative will compile data the hospitals are already collecting and make it easily accessible and understandable. The data will track four main categories: infant care, maternal care, staff care, and community care.

Mama Certified was developed in conjunction with Cradle Cincinnati and Queens Village, among others, to address racial disparities in infant mortality and Black maternal health. Black babies are more than twice as likely to die before their first birthdays than white babies. Black women, additionally, tell Cradle Cincinnati and Queens Village they often feel their concerns are ignored by medical providers - that they are unseen and unheard, and therefore don't get or are discouraged about seeking the care they need.

Cradle Cincinnati - which aims to lower the rate at which babies in Hamilton County die before their first birthdays - put its focus squarely on Black maternal health in 2019. The four-pronged approach included increasing community health workers, expanding prenatal care, additional education, and advocacy and training programs to identify and rectify implicit bias in the health care system and by care providers.

Shockley-Smith said the efforts appear to be paying off. She tells WVXU Hamilton County is seeing improvement in the infant mortality rate and is on track to "see extremely low numbers" at the end of the year.

Copyright 2021 91.7 WVXU. To see more, visit 91.7 WVXU.

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Health, Science & Environment Maternal CarePregnancyblack women
Tana Weingartner earned a bachelor's degree in communication from the University of Cincinnati and a master's degree in mass communication from Miami University. Most recently, she served as news and public affairs producer with WMUB-FM. Ms. Weingartner has earned numerous awards for her reporting, including several Best Reporter awards from the Associated Press and the Ohio Society of Professional Journalists, and a regional Murrow Award. She served on the Ohio Associated Press Broadcasters Board of Directors from 2007 - 2009.