News

State: Most pregnancy-related deaths ‘preventable’

State:  Most pregnancy-related deaths ‘preventable’

The Illinois Department of Public Health says it's looking at ways through a 'blueprint' to improve maternal outcomes. Photo: Shutterstock


Springfield, IL (CAPITOL CITY NOW) – A new report from the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) suggests deaths of mothers either during pregnancy or soon after giving birth may be increasing, and may also be able to be prevented.

IDPH Tuesday released its latest Illinois Maternal Data Report, looking at deaths during pregnancy or up to one year after.  The report says during 2021 and 2022, and average of 110 women died.  But the problem doesn’t end there.

The state says Black women were more than twice as likely to die from pregnancy-related conditions, and were three-times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications, than White woman.  Mothers who lived in Chicago and other urban areas were also more likely to die.  Substance use disorders were the most likely cause of pregnancy-connected deaths, followed by thrombotic embolism, COVID-19, and hemorrhages.  The report also says that one-third of the deaths happened more than 60 days postpartum.

“Behind every data point in this report is a life lost, and far too often, it’s a Black woman or someone living in an underserved community,” said IDPH Director Dr. Sameer Vohra, in a news release. “These disparities are unacceptable and as the data show, largely preventable. The Governor’s Birth Equity Blueprint and the investments being made are designed to address these disparities, ensuring that our next steps include coordinated action, shared accountability, and deep community partnership. We are working to build an Illinois where everyone has a safe and healthy pregnancy, birth, and postpartum experience.”

According to IDPH, the report contains prevention recommendations targeted at “providers, hospitals, state systems, community-based organizations, and payers.  Goals in the “Birth Equity Blueprint” include “a roadmap to improve maternal care and birth outcomes in Illinois” to be addressed by multiple state agencies and offices, along with addressing “systemic inequities in maternal healthcare and birth outcomes due to systemic racism and geographic inequalities” with four goals:

  • Expand Investments in Health Quality and Provider Support
  • Promote Access to Birthing and Specialty Care Services
  • Establish Universal Risk Assessment, Referral, and Care Coordination Framework
  • Develop Shared Measurement and Accountability Framework for Maternal Health and Birth Equity.  (SOURCE:  Illinois Department of Public Health)

The state also used the data to tout what it calls the “Governor’s Birth Equity Initiative, which IDPH says included:

  • 12 million in child tax credits
  • $5 million to expand home visits
  • $1 million in a diaper pilot program for new parents
  • $1 million for the Chicago South Side Birth Center
  • $4.5 million in birth equity seed grants which have helped fund the following:
    • 186 doulas trained across two quarters of implementation, significantly expanding access to culturally competent perinatal support
    • 79 lactation consultants trained, enhancing breastfeeding support capacity across communities
    • 110,647 individuals reached through education and outreach services
    • 7,158 individuals referred to critical maternal and reproductive health services.  (SOURCE:  Illinois Department of Public Health)

CLICK HERE for more details on the Illinois Maternal Mortality Data Report (.pdf document).

Recent Headlines

17 hours ago in Entertainment

Romanian court sentences US rapper Wiz Khalifa to 9 months for drug possession

American rapper Wiz Khalifa was sentenced by a court in Romania on Thursday to nine months in jail for drug possession, more than a year after he took part in a music festival in the Eastern European country.

17 hours ago in Entertainment, Trending

Tennessee governor pardons country star Jelly Roll, who has sought redemption from criminal past

Tennessee's governor pardoned country star Jelly Roll on Thursday for his criminal past in the state, acknowledging the Nashville native's long road back from drugs and prison through soul-searching, songwriting and advocacy for second chances.

19 hours ago in Business, Entertainment, Local, Sports

Lucky Horseshoes announce 2026 schedule

The schedule includes a two-city, day-night doubleheader with Decatur's new team.

1 day ago in Entertainment

Add expectant father to Allen’s list of achievements in Buffalo, after Steinfeld announces pregnancy

Marriage, fatherhood and an NFL MVP honor were the furthest things on Josh Allen's mind when he arrived in Buffalo as a raw but promising quarterback prospect in April 2018.

1 day ago in Entertainment

Thousands of fans join tribute to reggae pioneer Jimmy Cliff in his native Jamaica

The instructions on Wednesday were clear: no serious, sad or long faces. And the crowd filing into a gymnasium in Jamaica's capital largely obliged as they honored reggae giant Jimmy Cliff.