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'Put your money where your mouth is': Black health advocates stress need for funding
'Put your money where your mouth is': Black health advocates stress need for funding

Yahoo

time17-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

'Put your money where your mouth is': Black health advocates stress need for funding

Apr. 17—Ahead of the Ohio Senate's deliberations on the state budget, chamber Democrats and Black health advocates are encouraging the state to "put your money where your mouth is" during this budget cycle. "We talk a whole lot about caring about families, caring about children, teaching them how to read — but they gotta live before they can start to read," said state Sen. Catherine Ingram, D-Cincinnati, joint chair of the Ohio legislature's Black Maternal Health Caucus. Ingram was joined by co-chair Sen. Paula Hicks Hudson, a Toledo Democrat who will be the party's top budget negotiator when the Senate picks up the budget later this month. The two used a statehouse press conference to cap off their inaugural Black Maternal Health Summit, aimed in large part at addressing the disparities between infant and maternal health outcomes between white and Black families. A press statement from the summit relays that Black women in Ohio are nearly three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than white women, and that Black infants die at more than twice the rate of white infants. "These disparities are rooted in long-standing structural inequities — not differences in biology — and are preventable with intentional investment and policy change," the statement reads. Caitlin Feldman, policy director for the early childhood advocacy organization Groundwork Ohio, told reporters: "it is far past time for Ohio to be lifted out of the basement when it comes to infant and maternal health outcomes." Feldman called for the Senate to counteract several changes the House made to Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine's proposed budget. Those include a $22 million decrease in funding toward Ohio's Help Me Grow home visitation program and the cancellation of a governor-proposed plan to create an up-to $1,000 tax credit for every Ohio child under seven years old. ------ For more stories like this, sign up for our Ohio Politics newsletter. It's free, curated, and delivered straight to your inbox every Thursday evening. Avery Kreemer can be reached at 614-981-1422, on X, via email, or you can drop him a comment/tip with the survey below.

Youngkin signs several maternal health bills, tweaks another on unconscious bias training
Youngkin signs several maternal health bills, tweaks another on unconscious bias training

Yahoo

time27-03-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Youngkin signs several maternal health bills, tweaks another on unconscious bias training

Gov. Glenn Youngkin. (Photo by Charlotte Rene Woods/Virginia Mercury) Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed several bills aimed at improving maternal health in the commonwealth, building on promises both he and Democratic leadership made to support parents and health care workers. Dubbed the 'Momnibus' package, the Democrat-led bills stem from a Black Maternal Health Summit hosted last year in the state Capitol that brought medical professionals, advocates and lawmakers from across the state and beyond for roundtable discussions and panels. Alongside these conversations, a rural health committee spent months touring Virginia, gathering firsthand accounts of maternal care gaps in underserved communities. Resulting legislation included bills aimed at addressing disparities, from requiring implicit bias training for medical license renewals to strengthening obstetrics training in hospitals and expanding support for midwives and doulas. While the state has previously allocated funding to boost OB-GYN and family practice medical residencies in the state, maternal healthcare workers like midwives and doulas are more likely to live longer-term in the areas that they serve. Both are key players in filling rural health care gaps as well as addressing health care disparities for patients of color. To that end, Youngkin has signed Senate Bill 1352 and House Bill 1635, which build on a 2021 law that allowed some midwives to establish private practices after completing 1,000 training hours under agreements with other physicians. The new bills, by Sen. Kannan Srinivasan, D-Loudoun, and Del. Joshua Cole, D-Spotsylvania, respectively, will extend that opportunity to other types of midwives. Youngkin signs bill to protect reproductive and sexual health data, vetoes right to contraception Relatedly, Youngkin didn't fully approve but also didn't outright reject House Bill 1923, which would create more pay parity for midwives. In lieu of a signature, his amendment requires the Health Insurance Reform Commission conduct an assessment and that if the legislature accepts his tweaked version of the bill, it would be subject to reenactment next year. Bolstering emergency responses, Youngkin also signed House Bill 1904 by Del. Rodney Willett, D-Henrico, which will allow midwives and nurse practitioners to be on 24-hour on-call duty rosters. The governor further approved House Bill 2753 by Del. Cliff Hayes, D-Chesapeake, which requires hospitals and outpatient birthing facilities to establish protocol for identifying and responding to obstetric emergencies. He also signed House Bill 2083 by Del. Irene Shin, D-Fairfax, which will establish a special enrollment period for qualified pregnant people on Virginia's health insurance exchange. A survey the state conducted last year showed long wait times for new enrollees' paperwork to be processed. This contributed to delayed access to care for people to schedule their appointments. Though Youngkin followed through on his stated goals of remedying maternal health care issues, for the second year in a row he is seeking an amendment on the unconscious bias training bill. Senate Bill 740 by Sen. Mamie Locke, D-Hampton and House Bill 1649 by Hayes would require workers to complete unconscious bias and cultural competency training to renew medical licenses. The bills have been carried for several years in a row. Last year, with bipartisan co-patrons and supporting votes, they reached Youngkin's desk where he also sought amendments before vetoing them. Like last year, Youngkin's substitute strips the mention of cultural competency and unconscious bias, adding instead 'populations that data indicate experience significantly greater than average maternal mortality, postpartum complications and infant mortality.' Governor unleashes veto storm to drown progressive legislation Studies show that Black people are more likely to experience negative maternal health outcomes, in part, due to providers' racial bias. Black women are also more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications than white women, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows. Youngkin's substitute also would limit the training to two hours. Locke, who has carried the Senate version of the bill for several years, said that 'no one can overcome unconscious bias and cultural incompetence by viewing a two-hour video.' As she did last year, she plans to reject his substitute, which will likely garner another veto from the governor. 'My point to him is he needs to overcome his own implicit bias regarding Black maternal health issues,' Locke said. 'It is clear that he has no clue.' While Youngkin has been supportive of doulas, which are key companions and advocates for parents-to-be, his amendment to a bill to expand doula state health insurance coverage postpartum left one of its patrons perplexed. House Bill 1614 by Del. Adele McClure, D-Arlington, and Senate Bill 1418 by Sen. Lashrecse Aird, D-Petersburg, could allow for Virginia's health insurance to cover up to 10 doula visits — four during pregnancy and six afterwards. Youngkin's substitute changes the semantics by removing the words 'birthing people' and changing it to 'birthing women.' Though most pregnancies are experienced by cisgender women, transgender and nonbinary people with uteruses can still get pregnant, groups that the original language of the bill would have included. The governor's amendment also removed a provision referring to 'culturally appropriate and individualized care.' Aird called it 'frustrating' to see the removal of culturally tailored care from her bill. She also said his fixation on gendered language is 'distracting from what really matters — getting people the care they need to improve outcomes and save lives.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Maternal health bills move forward, now Youngkin holds the final say
Maternal health bills move forward, now Youngkin holds the final say

Yahoo

time20-02-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Maternal health bills move forward, now Youngkin holds the final say

Tiffany Casby cradles her newborn son Zayne, shortly after birthing him at Embrace Midwifery & Birth Center in Richmond in 2017. (Photo by Cheyenne Varner). For the first time in her career, Nichole Wardlaw feels like policymakers are finally listening — not just to her, but to Black maternal health professionals and the patients they serve. 'I feel like I've been seen and heard, and I've been doing this work for a long time,' said Wardlaw, a certified nurse midwife with two decades of experience. Wardlaw has been a steady presence for parents in need, but in recent years, Virginia lawmakers have also begun to take notice. Their efforts, shaped by voices like Wardlaw's, have led to a slate of maternal health-focused bills moving through the General Assembly — collectively dubbed the 'Momnibus' package. The legislative push follows last fall's Black Maternal Health Summit at the Virginia Capitol, where medical professionals, advocates, and lawmakers from across the state and beyond convened for roundtable discussions and panels. Alongside these conversations, a rural health committee spent months touring Virginia, gathering firsthand accounts of maternal care gaps in underserved communities. The result: a range of proposals aimed at addressing disparities, from requiring implicit bias training for medical license renewals to strengthening obstetrics training in hospitals and expanding support for midwives and doulas — both critical players in bridging maternal healthcare gaps. One piece of the package, Senate Bill 1352, sponsored by Sen. Kannan Srinivasan, D-Loudoun, builds on a 2021 law that allowed midwives to establish private practices after completing 1,000 hours under agreements with other physicians. His proposal, along with House Bill 1635 by Del. Joshua Cole, D-Spotsylvania, would extend that opportunity to other types of midwives, expanding access to maternal care statewide. For Wardlaw, spending 15 years working in hospitals revealed a stark reality — many Black patients didn't feel safe in those settings. Now, as a certified nurse midwife providing care outside hospital walls, she's able to meet clients where they are, which is especially critical for rural patients who face longer travel times after a wave of obstetrics unit closures in recent years. 'What I was finding is that being in the hospital was not beneficial for many Black women,' Wardlaw said. 'A lot were leaving the hospital system because they were afraid.' Studies show Black parents-to-be experience disproportionately negative maternal health outcomes, often due to provider bias. Black women are also more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications, a disparity confirmed by Virginia's Maternal Mortality Review Team. Still, unassisted home births can pose risks if medical complications arise, making midwives like Wardlaw an essential bridge in maternal care. Certified nurse midwives are not only registered nurses but also trained specialists in pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum care. Other types of certified midwives may come from different healthcare backgrounds but provide similarly vital services. Several bills in the 'Momnibus' package focus on strengthening midwifery. House Bill 1923, sponsored by Del. Jeion Ward, D-Hampton, seeks to establish pay parity for midwives, while HB 1904, from Del. Rodney Willett, D-Henrico, would ensure midwives and nurse practitioners have 24-hour on-call services. Katie Page, a certified nurse midwife serving Farmville and Lynchburg, sees this legislative session as a turning point. She recalled speaking with lawmakers last summer when the rural health committee visited Farmville, urging them to find ways to support midwifery. 'Magic' is happening around maternal health support this legislative session, Page said. Access to maternal care remains a challenge in Virginia, where 15% of residents lack a birthing hospital within a 30 minute drive, according to a March of Dimes report. Last year, lawmakers allocated state funding to expand OB-GYN and family medicine residencies, hoping to strengthen the workforce. But while doctors trained in Virginia sometimes leave for other states, midwives tend to remain in the communities they serve. Still, Page is encouraged by lawmakers' effort to support a broad range of maternal health professionals and the governor's expressed support for addressing maternal healthcare. 'I'm glad to see lawmakers taking a both/and approach rather than an either/or one' Page said. Wardlaw had high hopes for HB 2102, sponsored by Del. Michael Feggans, D-Virginia Beach, which would have made pregnancy an automatic qualifier for Medicaid enrollment. However, the measure failed. Youngkin has signaled support for some maternal health initiatives, including funding doulas and perinatal hubs in his proposed budget amendments. But he could still block certain bills that reach his desk. One proposal that previously met resistance is SB 740 by Sen. Mamie Locke, D-Hampton, and HB 1649 by Del. Cliff Hayes, D-Suffolk, which would require implicit bias training for medical professionals during license renewals. Sen. Chris Head, R-Botetourt, co-patroned Locke's bill this year, but a similar measure was rejected in 2023. Rather than outright vetoing it last time, Youngkin proposed an amendment requiring two hours of continuing education on maternal health disparities instead of a broader bias training program. Locke rejected the revision, arguing that his approach fell short. It was 'a case of unconscious bias and a lack of cultural competency,' she said. With the 2025 legislative session wrapping up this week, Youngkin has until March 24 to sign, veto or amend the maternal health bills that make it to his desk. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

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