[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 108 (Wednesday, July 21, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H5895-H5896]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MOMS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from California (Ms. Roybal-Allard) is recognized for 5
minutes.
Ms. ROYBAL-ALLARD. Mr. Speaker, each year over 4 million women give
birth in the United States. Their care and that of their babies is a
leading cause of hospitalization in this country and a major factor in
our Nation's escalating health care costs. Yet, in spite of the fact we
spend more than any country in the world on maternity care and more on
mother and baby fees for childbirth than other types of hospital care,
the United States ranks far behind nearly all developed countries in
perinatal outcomes, and childbirth continues to present significant
risks for mothers and babies, particularly in communities of color.
There are many factors that contribute to these poor outcomes and
high costs. The most disturbing is that our current health system fails
to follow the vast body of research on the best evidence-based
practices in maternity care. The result is a widespread overuse of
expensive maternity practices, such as Cesarean sections and scheduled
inductions, which only in limited situations are needed and beneficial.
When used routinely and without medical necessity, these and other
practices expose women and infants to unnecessary risk and are a major
factor in pregnancy and delivery being our most costly Medicaid
expenditure.
Credible research tells us noninvasive, cost-effective, evidence-
based maternity practices which result in safer and healthier outcomes
for mother and baby are significantly underused in our country.
To address these concerns, I am introducing the Maximizing Optimal
Maternity Services for the 21st Century
[[Page H5896]]
Act. The MOMS for the 21st Century Act expands Federal research on
maternity practices and ensures the healthiest of maternity outcomes,
and it authorizes a scientifically based media campaign to educate the
public about those practices. In addition, the bill creates a national
focus on maternity care by establishing an interagency coordinating
committee to promote optimal outcomes for mothers and babies.
To help address serious health disparities in maternity care outcome,
the MOMS for the 21st Century Act directs the collection of data to
determine the areas in our country which lack adequate access to
maternity care providers. It also directs the Secretary of HHS to
support the education of a more culturally and geographically diverse
interdisciplinary workforce by convening a maternity curriculum
commission to develop core curricula across maternity professional
disciplines, establishing loan repayment programs for providers in
maternity care shortage areas and by authorizing grant programs for
maternity professional organizations to recruit and retain minority
providers.
Mr. Speaker, as Lee Jong-wook, former Deputy General of the World
Health Organization once said, ``Mothers, the newborn, and children
represent the well-being of a society and its potential for the future.
Their health needs cannot be left unmet without harming the whole of
society.''
Mr. Speaker, there is no doubt the future of our country depends on
the health and well-being of our mothers and their children. I urge my
colleagues to make evidence-based maternity care a national priority by
cosponsoring and helping to pass the MOMS for the 21st Century Act.
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