Columbia School of Public Health: White House Cites Columbia Mailman Research in Maternal Health Report
In June, the
Among the research the report cites are two studies by
In the section of the
The same section notes that "roughly 55% of women with Medicaid coverage at delivery experienced a gap in coverage in the following six months," citing a second paper by Daw published in 2017. As the report notes, this "loss of coverage is dangerous, given that many deaths and complications occur more than 60 days following delivery."
The Biden-Harris plan proposes to work to eliminate these coverage gaps. One key policy proposal is to encourage states to take advantage of the American Rescue Plan option to provide 12 months of postpartum Medicaid coverage for low-income pregnant people. The report also urges
Says Daw: "As public health researchers, our goal is to inform the development of policies and programs that will improve health and health equity. I am thrilled to see the Biden-Harris administration propose concrete, evidence-based policy changes to address the structural barriers faced by pregnant people in accessing timely, high-quality health care. I look forward to continuing to study how the
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JOURNAL: Health Affairs https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/forefront.20190913.387157/full/
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