ProPublica Series Sheds Light on Critical Maternal Health Issues in the United States

By: Sarah Hodin, MPH, CD(DONA), LCCE, National Senior Manager of Maternal Newborn Health Programs, Steward Health Care

In 2017, ProPublica introduced a series of articles titled “Lost Mothers”—which was recently awarded the Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting—to raise awareness about preventable maternal deaths and striking maternal health inequities in the United States (U.S.). The featured article describes an effort to identify the estimated 700 to 900 women who died from pregnancy- or childbirth-related causes in 2016 in the U.S., presenting heart-wrenching stories of women from around the country. Other articles highlight critical maternal health issues in the U.S. with an emphasis on racial inequities, quality of care and monitoring and surveillance of maternal deaths.

Featured article

Lost mothers
Nina Martin | July 2017

Selected articles

How hospitals are failing black mothers
Annie Waldman | December 2017

Nothing protects black women from dying in pregnancy and childbirth
Nina Martin and Renee Montagne | December 2017

‘If you hemorrhage, don’t clean up’: Advice from mothers who almost died
Adriana Gallardo, Nina Martin and Renee Montagne | August 2017

Learn more about maternal health in the U.S. on the Maternal Health Task Force blog and topic page.