US maternal deaths fell in 2024 and may have dropped again last year,
government data shows
[March 04, 2026]
By MIKE STOBBE
NEW YORK (AP) — Fewer U.S. women died around the time of childbirth in
2024, a government analysis shows, and provisional data suggests the
trend may have continued last year.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday
reported that 649 mothers died in 2024 during pregnancy or shortly after
giving birth. That is down from 669 deaths in 2023, and a continued drop
from 2022 and 2021 — when it was the highest level in more than 50
years.
Available preliminary data suggests the trend continued in 2025, said
Eugene Declercq, a Boston University researcher who studies federal
data.
But he warned that there can be changes between the provisional and
final numbers, with the tally either rising as late death records arrive
or falling as some initials reports are removed upon review because they
do not meet inclusion guidelines. That happened with the 2024 numbers,
which at the provisional stage were higher than the 2023 count.
“All you could reasonably say is that the provisional 2025 data look
promising,” Declercq said in an email.
The CDC counts women who die while pregnant, during childbirth and up to
42 days after birth from conditions related to pregnancy. Excessive
bleeding, blood vessel blockages and infections are leading causes. The
new report did not detail how many of the 2024 deaths died from
particular causes.
Maternal deaths spiked during the COVID-19 pandemic because the
coronavirus was particularly dangerous to pregnant women and burned-out
physicians may have ignored pregnant women’s worries.

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A pregnant woman stands for a portrait in Dallas, May 18, 2023. (AP
Photo/LM Otero, File)
 The waning of COVID-19 was a major
reason for the declines in deaths since 2021, Declercq said. Some of
the improvement may also reflect successful efforts to improve care,
he added.
The new CDC report found that the maternal mortality rate in 2024
was about 18 deaths per 100,000 live births, which was not
significantly lower than the year before.
“The declines are welcome, but they are small and only bring us back
to where we were six years ago” before the COVID-19 surge, Declercq
said, adding there is a need for more attention to the problem.
The U.S. has one of the highest maternal mortality rate among
wealthy nations. Past research has found wide racial disparities in
such deaths, with Black women dying at a far higher rate than white
women.
The new report found the Black maternal death rate in 2024 was more
than three times that of the white and Hispanic rates. It also
showed that the death rate for women age 40 and older was more than
three times greater than it was for younger women.
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