ProPublica analysis shows that women who deliver at hospitals that disproportionately serve black mothers are at a higher risk of harm.
by Annie Waldman
by Annie Waldman
NEW YORK — When Dacheca Fleurimond decided to give birth at SUNY
Downstate Medical Center earlier this year, her sister tried to talk her
out of it.
Her sister had recently delivered at a better-rated hospital in
Brooklyn’s gentrified Park Slope neighborhood and urged Fleurimond, a
33-year-old home health aide, to do the same.
But Fleurimond had given birth to all five of her other children at
the state-run SUNY Downstate and never had a bad experience. She and her
family had lived steps away from the hospital in East Flatbush when
they emigrated from Haiti years ago. She knew the nurses at SUNY
Downstate, she told her sister. She felt comfortable there.
She didn’t know then how much rode on her decision, or how fraught with risk her delivery would turn out to be.
It’s been long-established that black women like Fleurimond fare worse in pregnancy and childbirth, dying at a rate more than triple
that of white mothers. And while part of the disparity can be
attributed to factors like poverty and inadequate access to health care,
there is growing evidence that points to the quality of care at
hospitals where a disproportionate number of black women deliver, which
are often in neighborhoods disadvantaged by segregation.
Researchers have found that women who deliver at these so-called “black-serving” hospitals are more likely
to have serious complications — from infections to birth-related
embolisms to emergency hysterectomies — than mothers who deliver at
institutions that serve fewer black women.
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Source: ProPublica
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