Two subcommittees of the House Education and Labor Committee today held a joint  titled “Expecting More: Addressing America’s Maternal and Infant Health Crisis,” which focused on strategies to reduce the nation’s maternal mortality rate and eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in maternal and infant health. The panel of witnesses comprised leaders of the March of Dimes, United States Breastfeeding Committee, and National Birth Equity Collaborative. Proposals included federal, state, and private sector approaches, such as: expanding Medicaid postpartum coverage; reducing cost sharing that prevents many women with insurance coverage from accessing necessary services; protecting pregnant women from discrimination in the workplace; addressing workplace barriers to breastfeeding; expanding access to paid family leave; and combating structural racism and implicit bias in health care settings. Maternal health is a high priority for AHA and its member hospitals and health systems. For more on how hospitals are working to advance better health for mothers and babies, visit /better-health-for-mothers-and-babies.

Related News Articles

Headline
The AHA Aug. 7 launched a new webpage, Reducing Disparities in Health Outcomes, featuring new and familiar resources for members and their communities. As part…
Headline
Nearly 57% of mothers did not attend a postpartum follow-up visit three to eight weeks after giving birth, according to a report published July 29 by Cedar…
Headline
The Senate Appropriations Committee July 31 advanced the fiscal year 2026 appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services,…
Headline
The Joint Commission July 29 announced an initiative to address “gaps” in how children’s hospitals are accredited and certified. The program will remove or…
Headline
The AHA July 24 announced it is collaborating with health care technology leader Epic to help hospitals adopt tools that support the early detection and…
Headline
A Health Affairs study on the decline of obstetric services in rural and urban hospitals nationwide from 2010-2022 found that seven states had at least 25% of…