EverThrive Illinois launched train-the-trainer presentations for community organizations serving the CCMH priority communities to equip them with knowledge and resources about maternal health and mortality as they provide quality care to pregnant people and their families. The first cohort was comprised of 48 staff from two large community-based organizations; individuals who attended were home visitors, family support workers, doulas, parent coaches, and others who directly serve pregnant and postpartum people and their families. In these sessions, the cohort received an extensive overview of the disparities and causes of maternal mortality and morbidity, the data sources and the state’s review process, and participated in thoughtful conversation about crafting community-based solutions. Evaluations from this first cohort point to the value of this effort, with attendees reporting an increased understanding of the factors that contribute to maternal health, a better understanding of the importance of their role as a community provider, and more confidence in their ability to act on the information they gained to support pregnant and parenting people. Our second cohort will meet later this year. Additionally, EverThrive IL facilitated three focus groups with pregnant and recently postpartum people living in the CCMH priority communities. Participants provided rich insight into their personal experiences, including the impact of COVID-19 on their wellbeing, that will inform work across all CCMH aims. We hope to publish findings from those focus groups in the coming months, but preliminary themes highlight significant challenges meeting basic physical and mental health needs, systemic barriers to well-being like insurance issues and lack of parental leave, and little awareness of post-birth warning signs that indicate someone may be experiencing life-threatening complications. Taken together, these focus groups provide more depth for our understanding of how complex forces are driving poor health outcomes for pregnant and postpartum people and, ultimately, lead to the Black maternal mortality crisis. |
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