Most of America's Maternal Deaths Are Preventable: Here's a Crucial Symptom to Watch Out For

Most of America's Maternal Deaths Are Preventable: Here's a Crucial Symptom to Watch Out For

I'm filing this under "facts I'm glad I didn't know about before I gave birth." According to this ProPublica article, "The Last Person You'd Expect to Die in Childbirth," the U.S. has the highest maternal death rate of any developing country. And the rate is going up, while in other countries it's going down. What's the problem? 

"The reasons for higher maternal mortality in the U.S. are manifold," write ProPublica authors Nina Martin and Renee Montagne (also of NPR). "New mothers are older than they used to be, with more complex medical histories. Half of pregnancies in the U.S. are unplanned, so many women don’t address chronic health issues beforehand. Greater prevalence of C-sections leads to more life-threatening complications. The fragmented health system makes it harder for new mothers, especially those without good insurance, to get the care they need. Confusion about how to recognize worrisome symptoms and treat obstetric emergencies makes caregivers more prone to error."

The devastating examples of maternal deaths in the article involve new moms in their early 30s (not older moms), and the stories of how dangerous symptoms went unrecognized even in supposedly high-quality, top-rated hospitals are terrifying. Of the U.S.'s 700-900 annual maternal deaths (and whopping 65,000 near-deaths), 60 % are preventable, the article reports. One crucially important takeaway from the story

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Jimmy Kimmel's Baby for President

Jimmy Kimmel's Baby for President

Warning: If you're out and about right now and you hate crying in public, don't watch this Jimmy Kimmel bit about his newborn son's open-heart surgery. I first watched it on YouTube on my phone while walking down the sidewalk (I know, that sucks and I won't do it again, promise). I couldn't stop the tears in time to hide indoors, and I'm definitely someone who gets mortified at public waterworks. The story that Kimmel, 50, tells about what he, his wife Molly McNearney (she's 39), and their newborn baby went through ripped me apart. I hope it'll do the same for members of Congress who are hell-bent on signing the horrifying Trumpcare bill.

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Where the Air Is Sweet: Sesame Street's New Character, Julia, Has Autism

Where the Air Is Sweet: Sesame Street's New Character, Julia, Has Autism

The banged-up old Sesame Street records my parents put on for my brother and me when we were kids are sitting on my Brooklyn shelf, their covers so chafed you can't read the spines anymore. But the vinyl still plays, crackly but clear as ever. Whenever I put the LPs on for my kids, I can't get that "ABC-DEF-GHI" song--where Big Bird turns the entire alphabet into one giant word-- out of my head for days. I end up humming the tunes the entire rest of the week. In adult company. Mortifying. The kids don't yet have much in the way of a visual experience of Sesame Street, and we keep waiting for the right time to start in on that slippery-slope "TV shows" phase of their lives. But the recent news about Sesame Street makes me think the time is now. The show is introducing a new character named Julia, who has autism, as part of the regular gang. 

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