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How Social Determinants of Health Drive Maternal Health Disparities

Black women born in the US are more likely to have preeclampsia than Black immigrants, indicating other social determinants of health join race in driving maternal health disparities.

maternal health disparities

Source: Getty Images

By Sara Heath

- Black women born in the US have a higher odds of preeclampsia than Black women who immigrated from other countries, according to new data from Johns Hopkins Medicine, indicating that other social determinants of health join race in perpetuating Black maternal health disparities.

Preeclampsia is a leading cause of maternal deaths, and particularly exacerbates Black maternal health disparities. Per CDC figures, Black women are between three and four times more likely to die from childbirth-related complications than their White counterparts. Higher rates of preeclampsia among Black women could account for part of that overall disparity.

According to Garima Sharma, the Hopkins study’s lead researcher and the director of cardio-obstetrics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, the conventional wisdom has stated Black women were at higher risk for poor birthing outcomes by virtue of their race.