Current:Home > ContactTori Bowie's death highlights maternal mortality rate for Black women: "Injustice still exists" -VitalWealth Strategies
Tori Bowie's death highlights maternal mortality rate for Black women: "Injustice still exists"
View
Date:2025-04-12 03:54:37
When Celina Martin was expecting her first child, her concerns extended beyond delivery.
"I've been dismissed, often for age, for a lack of education or this perceived lack of education, even for just asking too many questions," Martin told CBS News. "I've been dismissed just on such small things. There's already a lack of trust in that system."
That lack of trust is common among Black women, said Ky Lindberg, the CEO of the Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies Coalition of Georgia. There's a "history of mistrust," she said, but the "most important" thing doctors can do is listen.
"We'd like to think that we've moved beyond some of our dark past, right?" Lindberg said. "But injustice still exists for marginalized populations, particularly Black and Brown people in this country. When I think about being a Black person, specifically a Black mother, the whole thing is centered around the belief that I am enough, that I am a person and I matter and my voice matters. I feel the pain you do. I want success for my children like you do."
After it was revealed that Olympic track star Tori Bowie died from complications during childbirth, experts and advocates have highlighted a disturbing healthcare disparity for Black American mothers.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Black women have the highest maternal mortality rate in the United States, almost three times the rate for White women. In general, the U.S. has the highest maternal mortality rate in the developed world.
Georgia is one of the states with the highest rates of maternal mortality. Lindberg is working to improve the area's outcomes by providing people giving birth with access to doulas and advocating for legislation to chip away at the financial barriers to doula care.
"So often, when we talk to families, we hear that, like 'I want a doula so I don't die.' It's not like 'I want to doula so that I can have the support I need for a healthy and thriving pregnancy,'" Linberg said. "It's like 'I'm a Black person, and I'm scared.' ... Doulas are that bridge and that trust builder between that patient and community resources, the clinical staff, etcetera."
The CDC found that implicit bias and institutional racism are some of the driving forces in the rising number of Black women dying before and after childbirth. The high maternal mortality rate has little to do with socioeconomic status: A recent study in California found that the richest Black mothers and their babies are twice as likely to die as the richest White mothers and their babies.
Even Serena Williams, one of the most famous athletes in the world, has opened up about the trauma she faced while giving birth, saying doctors dismissed her concerns of a pulmonary embolism after giving birth to her daughter. She was later diagnosed with the condition, a life-threatening blood clot in the lungs.
These situations are why Chanel Stryker-Boykin, a certified doula, says women of color need an advocate during and after pregnancy and labor. Research has shown that people who work with doulas are less likely to have a preterm delivery or a baby with low birthweight. They are also less likely to experience postpartum depression.
"If your autonomy is taken from you during that experience, it can affect the trajectory of your life and even the way you raise your children," Stryker-Boykin said.
While doulas can help, they are only one of many solutions that need to be enacted, she said.
"I want to also make sure that I share that doulas are not the answer to this maternal health crisis," Stryker-Boykin said. "The answer to this crisis is systemic reform."
- In:
- Childbirth
Caitlin Huey-Burns is a political correspondent for CBS News based in Washington, D.C.
TwitterveryGood! (464)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- How many calories are in an avocado? Why it might not be the best metric.
- 'One assault is too many': Attorneys for South Carolina inmate raped repeatedly in jail, speak out
- Enough to make your skin crawl: 20 rattlesnakes found inside a homeowner’s garage in Arizona
- Average rate on 30
- Mexican drug cartels pay Americans to smuggle weapons across the border, intelligence documents show
- Ukrainian forces reclaim a village in the east as part of counteroffensive
- NASA UAP report finds no evidence of extraterrestrial UFOs, but some encounters still defy explanation
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Indiana man charged with child neglect after 2-year-old finds gun on bed and shoots him in the back
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Tensions rise on Italian island amid migrant surge, posing headache for government
- Maine state police say they shot and killed a man who had bulletproof vest and rifle
- Libyan city closed off as searchers look for 10,100 missing after flood deaths rise to 11,300
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Dartmouth men's basketball team files petition to unionize with National Labor Relations Board
- Families challenge North Dakota’s ban on gender-affirming care for children
- Philly teachers sue district for First Amendment rights violation over protests
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Tory Lanez to serve 10-year sentence in state prison after bail motion denied by judge
'One assault is too many': Attorneys for South Carolina inmate raped repeatedly in jail, speak out
Bill Maher's 'Real Time' returns amid writers' strike, drawing WGA, Keith Olbermann criticism
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
Jalen Hurts runs for 2 TDs, throws for a score; Eagles hold off fumble-prone Vikings 34-28
Czech court cancels lower court ruling that acquitted former PM Babis of fraud charges
Ex-Guatemala anti-corruption prosecutor granted asylum in US