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1 | | between 2016 and 2017, Black women had the highest rate of |
2 | | severe maternal morbidity with a rate of 101.5 per 10,000 |
3 | | deliveries, which is almost 3 times as high as the rate for |
4 | | white women. |
5 | | (3) In 2019, the Chicago Department of Public Health |
6 | | released a data report on Maternal Morbidity and Mortality |
7 | | in Chicago and found that "(w]omen for whom Medicaid was |
8 | | the delivery payment source are significantly more likely |
9 | | than those who used private insurance to experience severe |
10 | | maternal morbidity." The Chicago Department of Public |
11 | | Health identified zip codes within the city that had the |
12 | | highest rates of severe maternal morbidity in 2016-2017 |
13 | | (100.4-172.8 per 10,000 deliveries). These zip codes |
14 | | included: 60653, 60637, 60649, 60621, 60612, 60624, and |
15 | | 60644. All of the zip codes were identified as |
16 | | experiencing high economic hardship. According to the |
17 | | Chicago Department of Public Health "(c)hronic diseases, |
18 | | including obesity, hypertension, and diabetes can increase |
19 | | the risk of a woman experiencing adverse outcomes during |
20 | | pregnancy." However, "there were no significant |
21 | | differences in pre-pregnancy BMI, hypertension, and |
22 | | diabetes between women who experienced a |
23 | | pregnancy-associated death and all women who delivered |
24 | | babies in Chicago." |
25 | | (4) In a national representative survey sample of |
26 | | mothers who gave birth in an American hospital in |
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1 | | 2011-2012, 1 out of 4 mothers who identified as Black or |
2 | | African-American expressed that they would "definitely |
3 | | want" to have a future birth at home, compared to 8.4% of |
4 | | white mothers. Black mothers express a demand for planned |
5 | | home birth services at almost 3 times the rate of white |
6 | | mothers. And yet, in the United States, non-Hispanic white |
7 | | women who can afford to pay out-of-pocket for their labor |
8 | | and delivery costs access planned home birth care at the |
9 | | greatest rate. Similarly, an analysis of birth certificate |
10 | | data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention |
11 | | for the years 2016-2019 shows that non-Hispanic white |
12 | | mothers are 7 times more likely than non-Hispanic Black |
13 | | mothers to experience a planned home birth. |
14 | | (5) According to calculations based on birth |
15 | | certificate data from July 2019 in Cook County, there |
16 | | would have to be 7 Black or African-American certified |
17 | | professional midwives working in Cook County in order for |
18 | | just 1% of Black mothers in Cook County to have access to |
19 | | racially concordant midwifery care in a given month. |
20 | | (6) For birthing persons of sufficient health who |
21 | | desire to give birth outside of an institutional setting |
22 | | without the assistance of epidural analgesia, planned home |
23 | | birth under the care of a certified professional midwife |
24 | | can be a dignifying and safe, evidence-based choice. In |
25 | | contrast, regulatory impingement on Black families' |
26 | | ability to access that choice does not serve to enhance |
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1 | | maternal or neonatal safety, but instead reifies the |
2 | | institutionalization of Black bodies by the State. |
3 | | (7) In order to make safe, planned home births |
4 | | accessible to Black families in Illinois, the State must |
5 | | require Medicaid provider networks to include certified |
6 | | professional midwives. According to natality data from the |
7 | | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, every year |
8 | | from 2016 through 2019, 2 out of every 3 live births to |
9 | | Black or African-American mothers living in Cook County |
10 | | utilized Medicaid as the source of payment for delivery. |
11 | | According to that same data, Medicaid paid for over 14,000 |
12 | | deliveries to Black or African-American mothers residing |
13 | | in Cook County during the year 2019 alone. |
14 | | (8)
A population-level, retrospective cohort study |
15 | | published in 2018 that used province-wide maternity, |
16 | | medical billing, and demographic data from British |
17 | | Columbia, Canada concluded that antenatal midwifery care |
18 | | in British Columbia was associated with lower odds of |
19 | | small-for-gestational-age birth, preterm birth, and low |
20 | | birth weight for women of low socioeconomic position |
21 | | compared with physician models of care. Results support |
22 | | the development of policy to ensure antenatal midwifery |
23 | | care is available and accessible for women of low |
24 | | socioeconomic position. |
25 | | (9)
In its January 2018 report to the General |
26 | | Assembly, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
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1 | | reported that its infant and maternal care expenditures in |
2 | | calendar year 2015 totaled $1,410,000,000. The Department |
3 | | of Healthcare and Family Services said, "(t)he majority of |
4 | | HFS birth costs are for births with poor outcomes. Costs |
5 | | for Medicaid covered births are increasing annually while |
6 | | the number of covered births is decreasing for the same |
7 | | period." The Department of Healthcare and Family Services' |
8 | | expenditures average $12,000/birth during calendar year |
9 | | 2015 for births that did not involve poor outcomes such as |
10 | | low birth weight, very low birth weight, and infant |
11 | | mortality. That $12,000 expenditure covered prenatal, |
12 | | intrapartum, and postpartum maternal healthcare, as well |
13 | | as infant care through the first year of life. The next |
14 | | least expensive category of births averaged an expenditure |
15 | | of $40,200. The most expensive category of births refers |
16 | | to births resulting in very low birth weight which cost |
17 | | the Department of Healthcare and Family Services over |
18 | | $328,000 per birth. |
19 | | (10)
Expanding Medicaid coverage to include perinatal |
20 | | and intrapartum care by certified professional midwives |
21 | | will not contribute to increased taxpayer burden and, in |
22 | | fact, will likely decrease the Department of Healthcare |
23 | | and Family Services' expenditures on maternal care while |
24 | | improving maternal health outcomes within the Black |
25 | | community in Illinois.
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1 | | Section 10. Medicaid voucher pilot program. The Task |
2 | | Force on Infant and Maternal Mortality Among African Americans |
3 | | shall partner with community-based maternal care providers to |
4 | | develop rules and regulations for a Medicaid voucher pilot |
5 | | program to expand consumer choice for Black mothers that |
6 | | includes planned home birth services and in-home perinatal and |
7 | | postpartum care services provided by racially concordant |
8 | | nationally accredited certified professional midwives. The |
9 | | Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall implement |
10 | | the pilot program no later than January 1, 2023 and the pilot |
11 | | program shall operate for a 5-year period. On January 1, 2024, |
12 | | and each January 1 thereafter through January 1, 2028, the |
13 | | Task Force shall submit a report to the General Assembly that |
14 | | provides a status update on the pilot program and annual |
15 | | impact measure reporting. |
16 | | Section 15. Maternity episode payment model. The pilot |
17 | | program shall implement a maternity episode payment model that |
18 | | provides a single payment for all services across the |
19 | | prenatal, intrapartum, and postnatal period which covers the 9 |
20 | | months of pregnancy plus 12 weeks of postpartum.
The core |
21 | | elements of the maternity care episode payment model shall |
22 | | include all of the following:
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23 | | (1) Limited exclusion of selected high-cost health |
24 | | conditions and further adjustments to limit service |
25 | | provider risk such as risk adjustment and stop loss. |
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1 | | (2) Duration from the initial entry into prenatal care |
2 | | through the postpartum and newborn periods. |
3 | | (3) Single payment for all services across the |
4 | | episode. |
5 | | The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall |
6 | | make available to the Task Force all relevant data related to |
7 | | maternal care expenditures made under the State's Medical |
8 | | Assistance Program so that budget-neutral reimbursement rates |
9 | | can be established for bundled maternal care services spanning |
10 | | the prenatal, labor and delivery, and postpartum phases of a |
11 | | maternity episode.".
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