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Title The practical playbook. III, Working together to improve maternal health / Dorothy Cilenti, Alisahah Jackson, Natalie D. Hernandez, Lindsey Yates, Sarah Verbiest, J. Lloyd Michener, and Brian C. Castrucci
Published New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2024]

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Contributors -- Section I Introduction -- 1 Why a Practical Playbook about Working Together to Improve Maternal Health? -- 2 Promoting Federal Partnerships for Effective Program Implementation -- 3 How Academic Centers Can Accelerate Partnerships and Progress in Maternal Health -- 4 Transformational Maternal and Child Health through Expanded Healthcare Coordination and Community Engagement -- 5 Improving Maternal and Child Health Outcomes: An Opportunity for Expanded Primary Healthcare Teams
6 It's Not a Flip of the Switch: One Healthcare System's Collaborative Approach to Engaging External Partners to Support the Maternity Journey -- Section II Collaboration -- 7 Collaborations to Improve Maternal Health -- 8 Extending the Reach of Maternal Health Practice into New Zones of Transformation with the Framework for Aligning Sectors -- 9 An Approach for Whole-Person Health: Oral Healthcare Integration for Improved Maternal Outcomes -- 10 What It Really Takes to Succeed: Practical Tips for Maternal Health Collaboration
11 Bringing Together Clinical and Community Partners for Better Patient Care: Bootheel Perinatal Network -- 12 A Community Approach to Addressing Inequities in Maternal Health -- 13 The Broward Healthy Start Program: Cross-Sector Collaboration-Improving Pregnancy Outcomes and Birth Equity Using a Collective-Impact Framework -- 14 Impacting Maternal and Prenatal Care Together: A Harris County/Houston Collaborative -- 15 Activating Our Village in Los Angeles County: Birth Equity and Black Families -- Section III Equity
16 Centering Equity: Systemic Racism and Social Determinants of Maternal Health -- 17 Historical Context Matters: Structural Racism, Maternal Health, and Reproductive Justice -- 18 Equity and Systemic Racism -- 19 Introduction to Maternal Health Equity: A Consensus-Driven Definition and Research Priorities -- 20 Redesigning Systems with Black Women to Improve Maternal Health in Atlanta -- 21 Doulas and Incarcerated Populations -- 22 Environmental Impacts on Maternal Health
23 Reimagining Prenatal Care: Designing a Justice-Conscious Approach to Reproductive Health, Pregnancy, and Early Parenthood -- Section IV Data -- 24 Using and Improving Maternal Health Data to Achieve Equity -- 25 Democratizing Data: Understanding the Challenges and Opportunities for Community-Based Utilization of Maternal Mortality Data and Maternal Health Interventions -- 26 Decolonizing Maternal Health Research: An Introduction to Indigenous Research Methods and a Decolonial Framework for Indigenous Maternal Health Research
Summary "Each day in the US, more than 10,000 women and birthing people give birth.1 While most parents and infants remain healthy through this experience, each day about 136 people will have some severe complication, such as cardiac arrest, acute renal failure, sepsis, the need for a blood transfusion, or respiratory distress syndrome,2 and three people will die.3 More birthing people die because of pregnancy and childbirth in the US than in other comparable countries.4 Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic/Latina women have the highest rates of childbirth and pregnancy complications5 and are more likely to die compared with white women.3,6 These disparities are rooted at the intersection of racism, sexism, poverty, and other systems of oppression that lead to fewer opportunities, less access to resources and protections, increased stress, and poorer quality care. At one of the most vulnerable times in their lives, women and birthing people face inequities that perpetuate illness and disease. This is unacceptable"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed
Subject Maternal health services.
Maternal health services
Social services & welfare, criminology.
Health and Wellbeing.
Form Electronic book
Author Cilenti, Dorothy, editor
Jackson, Alisahah, editor
Hernandez, Natalie D., editor
Yates, Lindsay, editor
Verbiest, Sarah, editor
Michener, J. Lloyd, editor
Castrucci, Brian C., editor
LC no. 2023033306
ISBN 9780197663011
019766301X
9780197663004
0197663001