Two Mississippi Delta health centers awarded competitive federal grant
for maternal care
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[October 08, 2024]
By SOPHIA PAFFENROTH/Mississippi Today
Two federally qualified health centers in the Delta will receive a total
of $3.6 million over four years from the federal government to expand
and strengthen their maternal health services.
Federally qualified health centers are nonprofits that provide health
care to under-insured and uninsured patients and receive enhanced
reimbursement from Medicare and Medicaid. They offer a sliding fee scale
for services for patients.
Delta Health Center, with 17 locations throughout the Delta, and G.A.
Carmichael Family Health Center, with six locations across central
Mississippi, beat out applicants from several southeastern and
midwestern states.
Two organizations in Tennessee and one in Alabama were also awarded
funding this year.
The grant is focused on improving access to perinatal care in rural
communities in the greater Delta region – which includes 252 counties
and parishes within the eight states of Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri and Tennessee, according to
the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).
It’s the first of its kind in terms of goal and region, said HRSA
Administrator Carole Johnson.
“We have not had a targeted maternal health initiative for the Delta
before this program,” Johnson told Mississippi Today. “We’ve had a
national competition for rural areas focused on maternal health, but
what we were able to do here, in partnership with congressional leaders
from the Delta region, was secure some resources that would go directly
to the Delta region to be able to address this very important need.”
Johnson said Mississippi applicants stood out because of their ability
to identify the most pressing issues facing mothers and babies.
“What we saw from the applicants and awardees in Mississippi was a real
commitment to prenatal care and early engagement in prenatal care,
reducing preterm births, as well as expanding access to midwives and
community-based doula services,” she said. “And all of those pieces
together really resonate with the ways we’ve been looking at how to
address maternal health services.”
At G.A. Carmichael Family Health Center, the funds will be directed
mainly to expanding services in the three Delta counties in which the
center has clinics – Humphreys, Yazoo and Leflore.
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Yazoo and Humphreys counties are maternity care deserts – meaning they
have no hospitals providing obstetric care, no OB-GYNs and no certified
nurse midwives – and Greenwood Leflore Hospital closed its labor and
delivery unit in 2022. While OB-GYNs still practice in Leflore County,
mothers have to travel outside of it to deliver their babies.
Solving the transportation issue will be a top priority, according to
the center’s CEO James L. Coleman Jr.
“We have situations where mothers have to travel 100 or so miles just
for maternal health care,” Coleman said. “Especially in times of
delivery, especially in times of emergency, that is unacceptable.”
Health care deserts pervade Mississippi, where 60% of counties have no
OB-GYN and nearly half of rural hospitals are at risk of closing.
Inadequate access to prenatal care has been linked to preterm births, in
which Mississippi leads the nation. Preterm births can lead to chronic
health problems and infant mortality – in which Mississippi also ranks
highest.
That’s why Delta Health Center is committed to using its funds to work
together with affiliated organizations – including Delta Health System;
Northwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center; Aaron E. Henry Community
Health Center; and Converge – to “move the dial” on maternal health
indicators across the Delta region, said John Fairman, the center’s CEO.
“We face many challenges including the recruitment and retention of OB-GYNs
to the area,” Fairman said, “and will be exploring models of care that
are being implemented in other areas of the country that can be adopted
to provide greater access and efficiencies for perinatal health care –
with the overall goal of significantly decreasing rates of low
birthweight and preterm birth in the Delta.”
The United States currently has the highest rate of maternal deaths
among high-income countries, and Johnson said this grant is part of a
continued effort from the Biden administration to change that.
“The president and the vice president have made maternal health a
priority since day one and have really called on all of us across the
Department of Health and Human Services to lean in and identify where we
can put resources and policy,” Johnson said. “One death is one death too
many.”
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This story was originally published by Mississippi Today and distributed
through a partnership with The Associated Press.
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