Published On: 10.30.22 | 

By: 37207

UAB researchers lead in creating task force to improve maternal health in Alabama

UAB researchers will help lead an effort to lower infant and maternal mortality rates in Alabama. (Getty Images)

In efforts to improve infant and maternal health — and to lower infant and maternal mortality rates in the Yellowhammer State — researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Public Health and the Alabama Perinatal Quality Collaborative will lead the effort to create the Alabama Maternal Health Task Force.

Through the Health Resources and Services Administration State Maternal Health Innovation and Data Capacity Program, the task force will centralize efforts across the state to build and implement a strategic plan aimed at improving maternal health.

“Alabama is a rural state with many racial and ethnic disparities, health care access issues, co-morbid and chronic conditions, economic barriers and more that all exacerbate our maternal health problems,” said Martha Wingate, DrPH, chair of the UAB School of Public Health Department of Health Policy and Organization and director of the initiative. “Other initiatives have been able to tackle one or two areas; but to see significant changes and improvements, it is time to combine knowledge, skills and resources to develop a strategic and comprehensive plan that reduces maternal mortality and morbidity across the state.”

To strengthen the task force’s ability to address maternal health disparities, the HRSA program will also provide funding for:

  • Enhanced state-level data collection.
  • Assistance in expanding the workforce and addressing training needs related to maternal health.
  • Improved access to comprehensive, continuous, high-quality maternal clinical care through telehealth and other strategies.
  • Engagement opportunities for community partners, families and others with lived experiences related to adverse maternal health outcomes.

Read more: UAB awarded $20 million from American Heart Association for research to improve outcomes in pregnancy.

The UAB School of Public Health received support in building the task force from partners across the state’s public and private sectors, including the Alabama Department of Public Health, Alabama Hospital Association, Alabama Department of Mental Health Services, Alabama Department of Early Childhood Education, March of Dimes and many more.

The Alabama Maternal Health Task Force will drive collaboration and use creative approaches to develop a more comprehensive means of improving maternal health in the state.

This story originally appeared on the UAB News website.