Wellness That Matters: Black Health News & Community Care
- Black maternal health was omitted from the rollout, erasing visibility and accountability for the communities most impacted.
- Advocates warn Black women face higher pregnancy-related death and severe complications driven by systemic racism, provider bias, and access gaps.
- Removing race from the conversation hides structural inequities and undermines solutions; naming race is essential to center affected communities.
- Effective solutions require listening to Black women, expanding prenatal and postpartum care, supporting doulas, protecting Medicaid, and funding Black-led programs.
This week, the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services unveiled a new maternal health initiative along with Moms.gov, a federal website designed to support mothers and address America’s maternal mortality crisis.
During the rollout, administration officials emphasized concerns around maternal health outcomes in rural communities, fertility trends, and family support resources. But for many advocates, one thing stood out immediately:
Black maternal health was notably absent from the conversation.
That omission matters.
Because while maternal mortality in rural America deserves urgent attention, Black women in the United States continue to face some of the worst maternal health outcomes in the developed world, with pregnancy-related death rates approximately three to four times higher than white women.
For many public health leaders, advocates, and Black women who have spent years sounding the alarm, the silence felt impossible to ignore.
Why Advocates Are Concerned
This is not simply about wording.
It is about visibility, accountability, and whether the communities most impacted by the maternal health crisis are being centered in the solutions.
Black women continue to experience disproportionately high rates of:
- Pregnancy-related death
- Severe maternal complications
- Delayed diagnosis
- Inadequate postpartum care
- Medical dismissal and bias
And these disparities persist regardless of income or education level.
Research has repeatedly shown that systemic racism, implicit bias, gaps in access to quality care, and chronic stress all contribute to these outcomes.
Advocates say that when race is removed from the conversation, it becomes easier to overlook the structural inequities driving the crisis itself.
The Numbers Tell the Story
During the rollout, administration officials highlighted data showing maternal mortality in rural areas is estimated to be roughly 30% higher than in urban communities.
Again, that is a serious issue worthy of attention and investment.
But many advocates questioned why there was little discussion of the fact that Black women face pregnancy-related death rates roughly 200% higher than white women nationwide.
Those disparities have remained persistent for years.
And many Black women say they are tired of hearing broad conversations about maternal health that fail to directly acknowledge who is being impacted most severely.
This Is About More Than Healthcare
Maternal health is not just a medical issue. It is a reflection of whose pain is believed, whose concerns are dismissed, and who receives access to quality care before, during, and after pregnancy. For Black women, stories of being ignored, undertreated, or forced to fight for proper care during pregnancy and childbirth are tragically common. Many advocates argue that any national maternal health strategy that does not directly address Black maternal health risks missing the heart of the crisis itself.
Because you cannot solve a problem you refuse to fully name.
A Broader Shift in Public Health Conversations?
The concerns surrounding this rollout come amid broader national debates about how race, equity, and health disparities are discussed in federal policy spaces.
Advocates have already raised concerns about:
- Threats to maternal health funding
- Cuts to equity-focused programs
- Reduced emphasis on racial disparities in public health
- Attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives
- The future of culturally responsive healthcare programs
For many Black maternal health leaders, this moment feels especially critical because progress in awareness and advocacy has taken years to build.
There is concern that failing to explicitly center Black maternal health could slow momentum at a time when the crisis remains urgent.
What Black Women Need
Advocates say improving maternal health outcomes for Black women requires more than awareness campaigns.
It requires:
- Listening to Black women
- Expanding access to quality prenatal and postpartum care
- Supporting doulas and midwives
- Addressing provider bias
- Investing in community-based care models
- Protecting Medicaid access
- Funding Black-led maternal health organizations
- Collecting accurate racial health data
- Treating maternal mortality as both a healthcare and human rights issue
Most importantly, advocates say Black women must remain centered in the conversation.
Not as an afterthought.
Not as a side note.
But as a public health priority.
Read our National Health Policy Agenda HERE.
Resources and Organizations Supporting Black Maternal Health
Read the full article on the original site


