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U.S. maternal mortality more than doubled since 1999, most deaths among Black women - study

www.reuters.com U.S. maternal mortality more than doubled since 1999, most deaths among Black women - study

The number of U.S. women who died within a year after pregnancy more than doubled between 1999 and 2019, with the highest deaths among Black women, researchers said on Monday.

U.S. maternal mortality more than doubled since 1999, most deaths among Black women - study
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2 comments
  • Nobody cares.

    Which isn't me complaining about the post, it's the reason for it happening. It's hyperbole, because some people do care, but nowhere near enough. But the last decade in particular, the country as a whole has been beaten down so hard that having the energy to fight back against the hundred ways we're being fucked over just isn't possible.

    • I suspect it isn't that there aren't enough people that care, but more that hospitals have been hyper-monetized so that regular people can't afford health care. If you don't have insurance, you'll avoid U.S. healthcare as a matter of financial survival. If you do have insurance, health care is still ridiculously expensive. Add systemic racism to the mix and care providers may go with the least care for people of color on the presumption they are less likely to be able to pay for it.

      What happened to hospitals as charitable institutions? I remember Reagan closing state hospitals because of gross negligence, but why didn't we fix them instead of sending all the homeless people onto the streets? And what about the rest of the not-for-profit ones? They all seem to be corporate entities now and their only goal is to get as much money as they can at the lowest overhead.