Politics & Government
Kansas Bill Advocates More Reporting On Racial Elements Of Black Maternal Deaths
Extent of the problem among women in Kansas isn't fully known, the group said.

January 13, 2021

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TOPEKA β A coalition of House and Senate members moved Wednesday to work for approval of legislation requiring precise accounting of maternal deaths along racial lines in Kansas.
Extent of the problem among women in Kansas isnβt fully known, the group said, in a manner consistent with statistics compiled by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment on infant deaths among Black, Hispanic and white babies. The bills were introduced at the behest of women legislators and a professor of population health at University of Kansas.
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βWe find it unacceptable that the decision to grow oneβs family substantially increases a womanβs chance of dying in this country,β said Rep. Gail Finney, a Wichita Democrat. βWe need to empower our health care providers to make addressing the needs of pregnant and postpartum women a priority.β
The bills would establish a review panel that includes people of color to evaluate Black maternal death cases. Information gathered in a uniform manner would be used to prevent deaths. Itβs not clear whether the State and Federal Affairs Committee in both chambers would consider the legislation.
βLast spring, reports found that Black Kansans have faced a higher risk of death from COVID-19 than Kansans of other races,β said Sen. Oletha Faust-Goudeau, also a Wichita Democrat. βThe same is true for Black mothers in Kansas. While I am hopeful that we will soon see the end of this pandemic, we must do more to confront medical racism in our state. This legislation is a good first step in addressing this dangerous health disparity.β
KDHEβs annual reports show infant mortality rates of Blacks and Hispanics to be twice as high as whites. In 2018, the year for which the most recent KDHE report was available, the agency said infant mortality for every 1,000 live births was 6.4% statewide, 5.4% for whites, 9.8% for Hispanics and 10% for Blacks.
Democratic Sen. Pat Pettey, of Kansas City, Kansas, said the right questions werenβt being asked in Kansas regarding the loss of Black women giving birth.
βInformation is power so the more information that we have about maternal health care and the issues that are facing mothers in our state of Kansas, the better off it is for our families,β Pettey said. βWeβre very interested in seeing families have the opportunity to know what resources are available in our state early on, in the hospital, because if they know that theyβre available, then theyβre going to access them.β
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