Article

Racism is a maternal health crisis: address the external forces

Suzanna Thiese
Research Fellow
Additional Contributors
No items found.
February 13, 2023
Read time:
Download Fact Sheets
Register now
Subscribe to our Newsletter
By subscribing you agree to with our Privacy Policy.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Download this as a PDF

Maternal mortality in the United States is the highest of any developed nation. Even more striking is that Black women die at three times the rate of white women. Racial disparities in health outcomes are well-known and well-documented, and maternal health is no exception. However, little has been mentioned about the effect of systemic racism on mothers that contribute to their high rates of death and morbidity. In fact, racism isn't mentioned much in medical journals at all; in the top four medical journals in the world, less than 1 percent included the word "racism," and 90 percent of those were opinion pieces.

 Racism isn't mentioned much in medical journals at all; in the top four medical journals in the world, less than 1 percent included the word "racism."

The root causes of these racial disparities need to be examined in order to address the public health crisis that maternal health has become. Dismissing these racial disparities through the "social determinants of health" explanation allows us to accept these disproportionally high deaths as an acceptable side effect. However, the research has shown that racial and ethnic differences exist even when controlling for education, income, comorbidities, and other variables. In fact, a white woman with no high school diploma has a better chance of survival than a college-prepared Black woman.

Race is not biology, but a metric of social hierarchy

Recently, Community Solutions’ Racial Equity Media Club watched a documentary that described how race is a human-designed construct, using our biology as an excuse for social hierarchy. Historically, different races were seen as having varied physiologic structures that aided each group in different physical aspects, such as having advantages in certain sports.  

Published in 1898, Fredrick Hoffman's Race, Traits, and Tendencies of the American Negro found enormous disparities between Black individuals and whites through flawed data. He concluded that, "In contrast to today's belief in Black physical superiority…African American's were innately infirm. As such, attempts to improve their housing, health, and education would be futile. Their extinction was inevitable, encoded in their blood.” It is easier for people to scrutinize the physical being of an individual and use it as an explanation for disparities rather than address the external forces that cause them. And racism is one of these forces.

Disparities are systemic, not individual failures

As appalling as these historical comments are, these sentiments are still widely in place and sometimes perpetuated today, even here in Ohio. We hear public officials make incorrect, misleading, and sometimes overtly racist statements, such as the well-publicized instance of equating COVID-19 infection rates to the completely untrue assumption that some populations "do not wash their hands as well as other groups."

 Placing blame on the patient for dying are, by nature, racist diversions that allow for these disparities to remain intact without acknowledging the role of systemic discrimination.

Statements about maternal health are no different. Very recent comments blame individuals for the disparities in health outcomes, suggest that we remove Black and brown mothers from official statistics, or deny that pregnancy and childbirth can be dangerous are just some examples. Placing blame on the patient for dying are, by nature, racist diversions that allow for these disparities to remain intact without acknowledging the role of systemic discrimination.  

Creating a healthier environment for people to live, grow, work, and play is extremely important, and that healthier environment must include equity for all. In order to move towards a more equitable environment in health care, we must be willing to recognize when our system perpetuates and encourages disparities along racial identity and work against those forces.

Download Fact Sheets

District 10

Download

All Council Districts 2024

Download

District 4

Download

District 2

Download

District 11

Download

District 9

Download

District 8

Download

District 5

Download

District 7

Download

District 1

Download

District 3

Download

District 6

Download

West Boulevard

Download

University

Download

Union-Miles

Download

Tremont

Download

Stockyards

Download

St.Clair-Superior

Download

Old Brooklyn

Download

Ohio City

Download

North Shore Collinwood

Download

Mount Pleasant

Download

Lee-Seville

Download

Lee-Harvard

Download

Kinsman

Download

Kamm's Corners

Download

Jefferson

Download

Goodrich-Kirtland Park

Download

Glenville

Download

Fairfax

Download

Euclid-Green

Download

Edgewater

Download

Downtown

Download

Detroit Shoreway

Download

Cudell

Download

Collinwood-Nottingham

Download

Clark-Fulton

Download

Central

Download

Buckeye-Woodhill

Download

Buckeye-Shaker Square

Download

Brooklyn Centre

Download

Broadway-Slavic Village

Download

Bellaire-Puritas

Download

All Neighborhoods 2024

Download

West Boulevard Factsheet

Download

University Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Union-Miles Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Tremont Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Stockyards Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

St. Clair-Superior Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Old Brooklyn Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Ohio City Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

North Shore Collinwood Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Mount Pleasant Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Lee-Seville Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Lee-Harvard Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Kinsman Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Kamm's Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Jefferson Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Hough Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Hopkins Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Goodrich-Kirtland Park Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Glenville Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Fairfax Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Euclid-Green Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Edgewater Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Downtown Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Detroit Shoreway Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Cuyahoga Valley Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Cudell Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Collinwood-Nottingham Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Clark-Fulton Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Central Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Buckeye-Shaker Square Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Brooklyn Centre Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Broadway-Slavic Village Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Bellaire-Puritas Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

All Neighborhoods 2016

Download

District 2

Download

District 1

Download

Ohio Women Statewide

Download

All Women Fact Sheets

Download

Wyandot Women

Download

Wood Women

Download

Williams Women

Download

Wayne Women

Download

Washington Women

Download

Warren Women

Download

Vinton Women

Download

Van Wert Women

Download

Union Women

Download

Tuscarawas Women

Download

Trumbell Women

Download

Summit Women

Download

Stark Women

Download

Shelby Women

Download

Seneca Women

Download

Scioto Women

Download

Sandusky Women

Download
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Download report

Subscribe to our newsletter

5 Things you need to know arrives on Mondays with the latest articles, events, and advocacy developments in Ohio

Explore the fact sheets

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse varius enim in eros elementum tristique.

No Related Fact Sheets

Explore Topics

Browse articles, research, and testimony.

Poverty & Safety Net
Article

Cleveland’s population is steady, older adult poverty continues to grow

Emily Campbell
September 16, 2024
Poverty & Safety Net
Article

Why we changed how we’re calculating race data

Alex Dorman
September 9, 2024
Poverty & Safety Net
Article

The importance of seeing yourself in the data

Emily Muttillo
September 9, 2024
Behavioral Health
Article

988 and Suicide Prevention Awareness Day + Month

Kyle Thompson
September 6, 2024
Behavioral Health
Article

Ohio observes fourth annual Overdose Awareness Day

Dylan Armstrong
September 3, 2024
Medicaid
Article

Community Reinvestment Collaborative Plan proposals are in review

Brandy Davis
September 3, 2024