Advancing racial equity in maternal-child health and addressing disparities through a reproductive and birth justice lens - full report

Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Beverly Gorman
Felicia Otto
Rebecca Rae
Erica Surova
Sara Twiss
Marisa Wagner
Publisher
W.K. Kellogg Foundation
Date
June 2022
Abstract / Description

From 2014 to 2015, W.K. Kellogg Foundation (WKKF) partnered with the University of New Mexico evaluation team to conduct a study to examine if and how the Foundation's investments in the strategies of folic acid initiative, home visiting, doulas, breastfeeding peer counselors and baby-friendly hospitals were improving maternal-child health in WKKF's priority places in New Mexico. One key finding in the Healthy Birth & Early Development in New Mexico evaluation report was that these strategies supported a continuum-of-care that is essential for strengthening the health and wellbeing of babies, mothers, and families from preconception through a child's third year. A continuum of care framework was developed by the evaluators to capture achievable short-term outcomes such as healthy family behaviors, policy change and systems change that over time could be linked to improvement in the long-term outcomes of full-term births, healthy birth weights, exclusive access to mother's milk, decreased adverse childhood experiences, increased social support, improved parental well-being, and healthy developmental milestones. (author introduction)

 

Artifact Type
Application
Reference Type
Report
Priority Population
Ethnic and racial groups
Women and girls
Topic Area
Illness/Disease/Injury/Wellbeing » Maternal/Child Health