Saturday, July 22, 2023

Employers Can Improve Reproductive Health Equity

This is the third in this week's Health Affairs short series on Private Sector Solutions For Health Equity: "Employers Can Help Raise The Bar For Reproductive Health Equity" (July 20) by Sinsi Hernández-Cancio, JD,  vice president for health justice at the National Partnership for Women & Families.

The main focus of the article is on maternal health, which the author frames this way:

We need to solve the maternal health crisis for three main reasons. First and foremost, we must put an end to our status as the most dangerous place to give birth among high-income countries. Second, this crisis is the clearest example of the impact of racism and other structural inequities on the lives and well-being of women and their families. Finally, we know that the healthiest start possible for every person supports a positive life trajectory, while poor maternal and infant health can have long-reaching negative consequences on the health and well-being of both mom and baby.

 Her solutions are multi-tiered, mostly long-term, and hard to read without feeling some despair, e.g.:

  • "expand[] their employee health coverage to include out-of-state services for those seeking reproductive care, and also gender-affirming care"
  • "invest[] philanthropic dollars in reproductive health advocacy groups such as Planned Parenthood" and in general increase advocacy efforts aimed at improving, not destroying, their employees health care option
  • "focus on improving clinical care–especially providing culturally centered, whole-person care that considers the patient’s life context. But health care institutions can and should do more, including aligning their hiring and workplace policies with equity goals, collaboratively partnering with community-based organizations, and pushing for improved policies at various decision making tables"
  • diversify "their workforce, especially at leadership levels. According to a 2020 report from Mercer, a business consulting company, 64 percent of corporate entry-level positions were held by white employees; at the executive level that number jumped to 85 percent. The health care industry is no exception. Roughly nine out of ten hospital CEOs are white. Only 15 percent of health care CEOs are women, despite women comprising a large majority of health care workers, including the maternal health workforce."
  • "focus[] on the dignity, personal agency, and bodily autonomy of birthing people. Among the recommendations: screening for and helping to meet patients’ physical, mental, and social health needs, and measuring respectful care for internal improvement and accountability. This includes understanding and addressing how structural inequities undermine people’s health."
  • "collaborate and co-create with community-based partners"
The basic lesson here is that maternal health won't get significantly better if we wait for initiatives and funding to come from the public sector, nor can it happen without the public sector. One engine for change is companies that are willing to put resources -- including time and money -- into improving health for their employees.

Almost four years ago, Texans Care for Children (TCC) issued a reportHealthy Moms Raising Healthy Babies: Central Texas and Statewide Challenges and Opportunities to Support Maternal Behavioral Health During the First Year After Childbirth (Oct. 2019). One section addressed "What Factors Contribute to Racial Disparities in Maternal Health Outcomes?" The factors include:
  • Implicit biases in our health care system can affect the quality of health care provided, decision making, and how health programs are carried out. 
  • Chronic stress, including the physical toll of stress related to structural racism, increases health risks for mothers and babies. 
  • Discrimination, both past and present, negatively affects social determinants of health — such as housing, food scarcity, and education, among others. 
  • Lack of access to health insurance disproportionately affects people of color and limits the ability to manage health conditions before and after pregnancy. 
The depth and complexity of social and cultural roots of the problem reinforce the conclusion I drew from Ms. Hernández-Cancio's article: It's going to take a lot of work, a lot of investment, and a lot of time to improve maternal health in this country. 

One thing the legislature and Governor Abbott could do with the stroke of a pen and at almost no cost to the state is take up the federal government's invitation to expand Medicaid eligibility and let the United States pay for nearly all of the additional cost. As the TCC report noted:
In Texas, Black and Hispanic women are more likely to be uninsured than White women. Seventeen percent of nonelderly Black adults in Texas, 29 percent of nonelderly Hispanic adults, and 12 percent of nonelderly White adults in the state were uninsured in 2017.

Recent research found that states that offer Medicaid insurance to cover low-wage adults who do not have insurance through their job experienced a decrease in disparities for Black families with respect to maternal mortality, infant death, preterm birth, and low birth weight babies. Specifically:

Analysis of data from 2010 to 2016 found that infant deaths have declined across most states, but the decline was more than 50 percent greater in states that offer health coverage before, during, and after pregnancy — with the decline in infant deaths greatest among Black infants.

Research found that coverage for low-wage workers before, during, and after pregnancy was associated with “significant improvements in disparities for black infants relative to white infants for the four outcomes studied: preterm birth, very preterm birth, low birth weight, and very low birth weight.” 
Is a drop of empathy too much to ask of our state leaders? This is the question I've been asking on this blog for years (here, here, here, here, and here). When we find that our leaders are unmoved by the deaths of women who need life-saving abortions and women dying during and after childbirth, it ought to be a question that decides elections.


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