WASHINGTON, March 8, 2021—The Primary Collaborative (PCC), along with a number of its members and members of the Bridging the Chasm Collaborative, is releasing a women-first agenda today, International Women’s Day. This agenda closes the healthcare gaps that contribute to preventable maternal deaths and chronic illness later in life among all women, especially Black, Indigenous, and other women of color. PCC believes that primary care can play a key role in closing care gaps often evident in the year after women give birth but that can affect them for a lifetime.
The agenda is presented in two articles published today in the journal Women’s Health Issues: “Bridging the Chasm between Pregnancy and Health over the Life Course: A National Agenda for Research and Action,” and an accompanying commentary, “It’s Time to Eliminate Racism and Fragmentation in Women’s Health Care.” The agenda comes as Congress considers legislation to tackle huge racial inequities in maternal health with the 2021 Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act.
The broad coalition of clinicians, researchers and advocates that formulated the agenda includes PCC members - Black Women’s Health Imperative, Mathematica, Johns Hopkins Community Physicians - and is led by the Boston University Schools of Public Health and Medicine.
“Many women, especially women of color, fall into a healthcare chasm after they give birth. That gap is a major factor in preventable deaths and chronic illness for these women,” said Ann Greiner, PCC’s president and CEO and a contributing author to the journal articles. “Primary care can step into that gap and provide the care that these mothers need after giving birth and stave off pregnancy-related conditions that can affect them for a lifetime. Providing such care can address fragmentation and improve healthcare equity.”
The journal articles present remedies to the structural chasms in women's health care, with key roles for advocates, policymakers, researchers, healthcare leaders, educators, and the media (see more below).
“The United States has an abysmal record when it comes to Black maternal health. We know that change comes through both practice and policy. The Bridging the Chasm agenda sets the strategy for addressing structural racism in systems of care and identifies the policy changes required to eliminate needless inequities in Black maternal outcomes,” says Linda Goler Blount, MPH, president and CEO of the Black Women’s Health Imperative and another contributor to the journal articles.
The agenda is the product of two years of collective work, launched at an innovative national conference hosted at Boston University in 2018. The conference brought together women with lived experiences of complicated pregnancies, clinicians, researchers, health system innovators, policymakers, and private sector advocates to identify the gaps in care after pregnancy and other systemic issues, and to outline an agenda for transformation. A group of dedicated stakeholders—the Bridge the Chasm Collaborative—co-created the resulting agenda.
The Gaps
In their commentary, the authors note that the Momnibus Act offers an ideal platform on which to build key planks of the Bridge the Chasm Agenda, investing in mothers not only during but long after pregnancy.