Opinion: Stop mothers dying by letting women lead global health

Women dying during pregnancy is an often avoidable tragedy, yet maternal mortality rates are stagnating or increasing all around the world. Elevating women into leadership positions with influence over policy funding, design, and implementation can stop more mothers from dying, leading to healthier, happier families, and societies.

Approximately 800 women died every day during or following pregnancy in 2020. The issue is most acute for women of color.

Over 70% of these women lost their lives in sub-Saharan Africa. In the United States, where maternal deaths have risen by 40 percent between 2020 to 2021, Black women die from pregnancy-related causes at three times the rate of white women. The COVID-19 pandemic further exacerbated underlying social and political drivers like structural racism, implicit bias, and poverty that limit access to quality health care.

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