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    Your Body, Your Health Care: A Conversation with Dr. Jeffrey Singer

    Your Body, Your Health Care: A Conversation with Dr. Jeffrey Singer

    July 1, 2025

    The cost structure of hospitals nearly doubles

    July 1, 2025
    Navigating the Medical Licensing Maze

    The Fight Against Healthcare Fraud: Dr. Rafai’s Story

    April 8, 2025
    Navigating the Medical Licensing Maze

    Navigating the Medical Licensing Maze

    April 4, 2025
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    The Alarming Truth About Health Insurance Denials

    February 3, 2025
    Telehealth in Turmoil

    The Importance of NIH Grants

    January 31, 2025
  • Surveys

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    Patient Survey: Understanding Healthcare Consumerism

    Patient Survey: Understanding Healthcare Consumerism

    January 18, 2026
    Public Confidence in Proposed Changes to U.S. Vaccine Policy

    Public Confidence in Proposed Changes to U.S. Vaccine Policy

    January 3, 2026

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    Can you tell when your provider does not trust you?

    Can you tell when your provider does not trust you?

    January 18, 2026
    Do you believe national polls on health issues are accurate

    National health polls: trust in healthcare system accuracy?

    May 8, 2024
    Which health policy issues matter the most to Republican voters in the primaries?

    Which health policy issues matter the most to Republican voters in the primaries?

    May 14, 2024
    How strongly do you believe that you can tell when your provider does not trust you?

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Home Uncertainty & Complexity

Maternal Health Disparities Post-Pandemic: Reckoning with Race, Resources, and Reform

Midyear perinatal‐mortality audits illuminate stark racial and economic gaps in maternal outcomes, galvanizing policy efforts on Medicaid expansion and doula support.

Ashley Rodgers by Ashley Rodgers
July 19, 2025
in Uncertainty & Complexity
0

A single stillbirth can unmask the fissures in our healthcare system. Midyear data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reveal that perinatal mortality rates among Black and Native American mothers exceed those of White peers by more than twofold, even as overall U.S. rates crept upward in 2024 (CDC Perinatal Mortality Data). These findings have refocused attention on the ethical obligation to safeguard every mother and newborn, while igniting policy debates over the scope of Medicaid coverage and the role of doula support in closing the equity gap.

Unsettling Trends in Maternal Outcomes

Prior to the pandemic, the United States already trailed peer nations in maternal health. A 2019 report by March of Dimes noted a national maternal‐mortality ratio of 17.4 per 100,000 live births—more than double that of Canada—and persistent racial disparities, with Black women experiencing a ratio approaching 44 per 100,000 (March of Dimes Report). The pandemic exacerbated these trends: disruptions in prenatal care, heightened stressors, and resource reallocation contributed to an uptick in stillbirths and neonatal fatalities.

The CDC’s provisional 2025 figures show perinatal deaths—comprising stillbirths and early neonatal deaths—increasing from 5.8 to 6.2 per 1,000 births. Yet dissecting these numbers reveals disproportionate rises among lower‐income and minority communities. In Mississippi, the state with the nation’s highest perinatal‐mortality rate, Black mothers’ risk remained nearly three times that of White mothers in early 2025 (KFF Maternal Health).

Ethical Imperatives: Justice, Beneficence, and Autonomy

Medical ethics demands that interventions mitigate, not magnify, disparities. The principle of justice compels equitable resource distribution: every expectant mother should access high‐quality prenatal, intrapartum, and postpartum care. Beneficence obligates clinicians to advocate for interventions—such as extended Medicaid coverage and continuous labor support—that demonstrably improve outcomes. Respect for autonomy requires culturally sensitive care models that honour patient preferences, beliefs, and informed consent.

Policy Proposals: Medicaid Expansion and Doula Coverage

Two policy initiatives have gained traction:

  1. Medicaid Extension to One Year Postpartum
    Under current law, traditional Medicaid covers reproductive‐age women through sixty days postpartum. States that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act extend coverage longer, yet twenty states have not adopted expansion. The American Rescue Plan Act’s option to extend postpartum coverage to twelve months has been adopted by only 15 states as of June 2025 (CMS Postpartum Coverage). Extending full benefits would ensure continuity of care for hypertension, diabetes, and mental‐health needs that often precipitate maternal mortality long after delivery.
  2. Doula Reimbursement
    Evidence indicates that professional birth support reduces cesarean rates, preterm births, and neonatal intensive‐care admissions. A Cochrane review found that continuous labor support by doulas lowered perinatal mortality by 22 percent. Yet Medicaid covers doula services in only seven states, frequently under restrictive pilot programs (ACOG on Doulas). Advocates now press for federal mandates or incentives for universal doula reimbursement, arguing that support persons can bridge cultural and communication gaps and embody ethical principles of beneficence and respect for persons.

Individual Patient Experiences Illuminate Policy Gaps

For Ms. Lopez, a 29‐year‐old mother in rural New Mexico, losing Medicaid sixty days postpartum meant abrupt cessation of hypertension management. A subsequent hypertensive crisis forced emergency hospitalization. “I thought I’d get follow‐up, but I was told to find private insurance,” she recalls. Her narrative underscores the moral imperative to align policy with real‐world patient trajectories.

In Philadelphia, Ms. Jackson, a Black mother, credits her doula with averting a preterm birth—earning her infant a full‐term chance. Initially referred through a hospital pilot, she faced a three‐month waiting list due to limited funding. “Doulas are lifelines,” she asserts. Her experience reflects how constrained coverage undermines broad beneficence.

Structuring Equitable Solutions

To realize ethical and effective reform, stakeholders should consider:

  • Federal Incentives for State Adoption: Tie enhanced Medicaid matching funds to postpartum coverage extensions and doula reimbursement implementation.
  • Standardized Certification: Develop national doula credentialing to assure quality while minimizing bureaucratic barriers for community‐based providers.
  • Culturally Competent Training: Mandate implicit‐bias and cultural‐safety modules for all perinatal staff, fostering respect for autonomy and mitigating systemic inequities.
  • Integrated Care Models: Create perinatal medical homes that co‐locate obstetric, mental‐health, and social‐service referrals under one roof, aligning with the principle of beneficence.
  • Robust Data Systems: Enhance perinatal mortality registry granularity—capturing social determinants of health and patient‐reported outcomes—to guide targeted interventions.

Navigating Political and Financial Landscapes

Both Medicaid expansion and doula coverage confront political headwinds. Opponents cite cost concerns; the Kaiser Family Foundation estimates a 5 percent increase in state Medicaid budgets for twelve‐month postpartum coverage. Yet cost‐benefit analyses reveal that preventing a single preeclampsia emergency or NICU admission can offset expanded coverage expenditures.

Building cross‐sector coalitions—encompassing obstetricians, midwives, community advocates, and bipartisan legislators—will be crucial. In Wisconsin, the Maternal Health Task Force unites state health agencies and grassroots organizations to draft comprehensive maternal‐health legislation, signaling potential pathways for consensus.

Conclusion

The midyear perinatal‐mortality audits lay bare uncomfortable truths: racial and socioeconomic fractures in maternal health persist post‐pandemic. Addressing these gaps demands that medical ethics guide policy—ensuring justice through Medicaid reform, beneficence via doula coverage, and autonomy through culturally attuned care. As advocates strive to translate data into deliverable services, the collective commitment to safeguarding every mother and newborn will define the nation’s moral and health‐policy legacy.

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Ashley Rodgers

Ashley Rodgers

Ashley Rodgers is a writer specializing in health, wellness, and policy, bringing a thoughtful and evidence-based voice to critical issue

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Videos

Summary

In this episode of the Daily Remedy Podcast, the host delves into the evolving landscape of healthcare consumerism as we approach 2026. The discussion highlights how patients are increasingly becoming empowered consumers, driven by the rising costs and complexities of healthcare in America. The host emphasizes that this shift is not merely about convenience but about patients demanding transparency, trust, and agency in their healthcare decisions. With advancements in technology, particularly AI, patients are now equipped to compare prices, switch providers, and even self-diagnose, fundamentally altering the traditional patient-provider dynamic.

The conversation further explores the implications of this shift, noting that patients are seeking predictable pricing and upfront cost estimates, which are becoming essential in their healthcare experience. The host also discusses the role of technology in facilitating this change, enabling a more fluid relationship between patients and healthcare providers. As healthcare consumerism matures, the episode raises critical questions about the future of patient engagement and the collaborative model of care that is emerging, where decision-making is shared rather than dictated by healthcare professionals alone.

Takeaways

Patients are becoming empowered consumers in healthcare.
Healthcare consumerism is maturing into a demand for transparency and trust.
Technology is enabling patients to become strong economic actors.
Patients want predictable pricing and upfront cost estimates.
The shift towards collaborative decision-making is changing the healthcare landscape.

Chapters

00:00 Introduction to Healthcare Consumerism
01:46 The Rise of Patient Empowerment
04:31 Technology's Role in Healthcare Transformation
07:16 The Shift Towards Collaborative Decision-Making
09:44 Conclusion and Future Outlook
Healthcare Consumerism 2026: A New Era of Patient Empowerment
YouTube Video dcz8FQlhAog
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Analysis of the DHHS “Real Food” Initiative

Analysis of the DHHS “Real Food” Initiative

by Daily Remedy
January 18, 2026
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Department of Health and Human Services has launched a transformative public health initiative through the RealFood.gov platform, introducing revised Dietary Guidelines for Americans that represent a fundamental departure from decades of nutritional policy. This initiative, branded as "Eat Real Food," repositions whole, minimally processed foods as the cornerstone of American nutrition while explicitly challenging the role of ultra-processed foods in the national diet. The initiative arrives amid a stark public health landscape where 50% of Americans have...

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