Maternal mortality review panels are in the spotlight. Here's what they
do
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[December 06, 2024]
By LAURA UNGAR
Efforts to reduce the nation's persistently high maternal mortality
rates involve state panels of experts that investigate and learn from
each mother's death.
The panels — called maternal mortality review committees — usually do
their work quietly and out of the public eye. But that's not been the
case recently in three states with strict abortion laws.
Georgia dismissed all members of its committee in November after
information about deaths being reviewed leaked to the news organization
ProPublica. Days later, The Washington Post reported that Texas'
committee won’t review cases from 2022 and 2023, the first two years
after the state banned nearly all abortions. In Idaho, the state let its
panel disband in 2023 only to reinstate it earlier this year.
“They’ve become more of a lightning rod than they were before,” said
epidemiologist Michael Kramer, director of the Center for Rural Health
and Health Disparities at Mercer University in Georgia.
Here’s what maternal mortality review committees across the nation do
and what might happen next:
What are they?
“Maternal mortality review committees are important because they are the
most comprehensive source of information about maternal mortality that
we have,” said David Goodman, who leads the maternal mortality
prevention team at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The panels review deaths that occur during pregnancy or within a year
after it ends, whether directly related to the pregnancy or not. Causes
of death can range from hemorrhage during childbirth to drug overdoses
to traffic accidents.
The goal, Kramer said, is to examine maternal deaths and help "decide
what we can do about them.”
All states, a few cities and Puerto Rico have these committees. Their
membership varies and may include OB-GYNs, maternal-fetal medicine
doctors, nurses, midwives, mental and public health experts and members
of patient advocacy groups. Most have representatives from several areas
of expertise, which the CDC recommends.
How members are selected also varies; people may apply, submit letters
of interest or be invited to serve.
The selection shouldn’t be politically motivated, Kramer said, because
“if there’s a systematic exclusion of certain data or certain
perspectives” it’s difficult to truly understand what’s happening.
How do they look at deaths?
First, the panels work with state vital statistics offices and
epidemiologists to identify deaths associated with pregnancy by
examining death certificates and looking for a pregnancy checkbox or a
related cause of death. They may also search for links to birth and
fetal death records, or delve into hospital discharge data, media
reports and obituaries.
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A doctor performs an ultrasound scan on a pregnant woman on Aug. 7,
2018, at a hospital in Chicago. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford, File)
Once they identify cases, they
collect as much information as possible, such as prenatal care
records, hospital and social service records, autopsy reports and
interviews with family members. Professional “abstractors” distill
all this into case narratives, which committee members pore over.
Most use a standardized review process developed by the CDC — and
all panels can get help and guidance from the agency.
They consider questions such as: Was the death pregnancy-related?
What was the underlying cause? Was it preventable? What factors
contributed?
States generally have privacy rules that protect committee members
and people who provide information on the deaths.
The groups then issue public reports that don’t name moms or
hospitals but include overall findings, trends and recommendations.
Some come out a couple of years or more after the deaths.
Across the nation in 2023, Goodman said, 151 recommendations from
those reports were implemented by communities, hospitals, medical
professionals and policymakers.
What about Georgia, Texas and Idaho?
Georgia will rebuild its committee through a new application
process, the state public health commissioner said.
Texas' committee has been reviewing 2021 deaths and will start on
2024 cases at its next meeting, Texas Department of State Health
Services spokesperson Lara Anton said in an email to The Associated
Press.
“Reviewing cases is a lengthy process and legislators have asked for
more recent data. Starting the next review cycle with 2024 cases
will allow us to provide that in the next report,” Anton said,
adding that maternal and child health epidemiologists will continue
to analyze and publish data for 2022 and 2023.
In Idaho, the reconstituted review committee now falls under the
state board of medicine, which licenses doctors, instead of the
state's health and welfare department. It will operate like it
always has, said Bob McLaughlin, spokesperson for the medical board.
Members met for the first time in November and plan to issue a
report by Jan. 31. Because the legislature wanted the most
up-to-date information, McLaughlin said the first report will cover
only 2023 cases, and the group will review 2022 deaths next.
Goodman said he’s encouraged that every state has a review committee
now — only 20 had them in 2015.
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