Health & Fitness

Here’s How Dangerous It Is To Give Birth In Illinois

An investigation from USA Today found that the U.S. is the most dangerous place in the developed world to give birth.

ILLINOIS — The United States is the most dangerous place in the developed world for a woman to give birth with a maternal death rate that has risen sharply between 1990 to 2015 while the rates have dropped in other developed nations, according to an investigation by USA Today.

The investigation looked at two primary categories of data: the maternal death rate and state “harm” rates, which includes complications during or soon after birth.

Illinois has the 36th highest maternal death rate in the country and the 18th highest harm rate, the investigation found. The data is based on death rates from 2012-16 and harm rates from Jan. to Sept. 2015. USA Today ranked 47 states for which data was available.

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Illinois has a team to review deaths from childbirth complications. The team consistently assesses medical care issues, according to USA Today’s findings.

Here’s how USA Today categorized the team assigned to review the state’s childbirth deaths:

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“The Illinois panel that reviews mothers’ deaths, created in 1982, meets quarterly but doesn’t issue public reports. Its data is used in academic studies, including one in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology in 2014 that deemed one-third of the state’s deaths related to pregnancy preventable. Team findings led Illinois to launch the Obstetric Hemorrhage Education Project of 2008, which required hospitals to adopt a curriculum teaching medical providers how to better deal with hemorrhage.”

Here are some of USA Today’s key findings:

  • Estimates say about half of the U.S.’ 700 maternal deaths could be prevented and half of the 50,000 maternal injuries prevented or reduced with better care
  • Hospitals across the country fail to perform basic medical tasks that could be life-saving
  • The maternal death rate has fallen in California and the state is considered an exception in the country with its health care practices regarded as the gold standard of care
  • Regulators and oversight boards could require hospitals to do more
  • Women interviewed by USA Today described feeling “frustrated, angry and powerless” because of practitioners they felt didn’t listen to them or weren’t prepared for emergencies
  • It can take long periods of times for best practices to be adopted by health care providers in the U.S.

Read the full USA Today Investigation here.

Photo via Shutterstock

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