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Public Act 101-0038 | ||||
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AN ACT concerning State government.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Task | ||||
Force on Infant and Maternal Mortality Among African Americans | ||||
Act. | ||||
Section 5. Findings. Based upon an April 11, 2018 New York | ||||
Times article on "Why America's Black Mothers and Babies Are in | ||||
a Life-or-Death Crisis", the General Assembly finds the | ||||
following:
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(1) From 1915 through the 1990s, amid vast improvements | ||||
in hygiene, nutrition, living conditions and health care, | ||||
the number of babies of all races who died in the first | ||||
year of life dropped by over 90% — a decrease unparalleled | ||||
by reductions in other causes of death. But that national | ||||
decline in infant mortality has since slowed. In 1960, the | ||||
United States was ranked 12th among developed countries in | ||||
infant mortality. Since then, with its rate largely driven | ||||
by the deaths of black babies, the United States has fallen | ||||
behind and now ranks 32nd out of the 35 wealthiest nations. | ||||
Low birth weight is a key factor in infant death, and a new | ||||
report released in March by the Robert Wood Johnson | ||||
Foundation and the University of Wisconsin suggests that |
the number of low-birth-weight babies born in the United | ||
States — also driven by the data for black babies — has | ||
inched up for the first time in a decade.
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(2) Black infants in America are now more than twice as | ||
likely to die as white infants — 11.3 per 1,000 black | ||
babies, compared with 4.9 per 1,000 white babies, according | ||
to the most recent government data — a racial disparity | ||
that is actually wider than in 1850, 15 years before the | ||
end of slavery, when most black women were considered | ||
chattel. In one year, that racial gap adds up to more than | ||
4,000 lost black babies. Education and income offer little | ||
protection. In fact, a black woman with an advanced degree | ||
is more likely to lose her baby than a white woman with | ||
less than an eighth-grade education.
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(3) This tragedy of black infant mortality is | ||
intimately intertwined with another tragedy: a crisis of | ||
death and near death in black mothers themselves. The | ||
United States is one of only 13 countries in the world | ||
where the rate of maternal mortality — the death of a woman | ||
related to pregnancy or childbirth up to a year after the | ||
end of pregnancy — is now worse than it was 25 years ago. | ||
Each year, an estimated 700 to 900 maternal deaths occur in | ||
the United States. In addition, the Centers for Disease | ||
Control and Prevention reports more than 50,000 | ||
potentially preventable near-deaths per year — a number | ||
that rose nearly 200% from 1993 to 2014, the last year for |
which statistics are available. Black women are 3 to 4 | ||
times as likely to die from pregnancy-related causes as | ||
their white counterparts, according to the Centers for | ||
Disease Control and Prevention — a disproportionate rate | ||
that is higher than that of Mexico, where nearly half the | ||
population lives in poverty — and as with infants, the high | ||
numbers for black women drive the national numbers.
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(4) In her 2014 testimony before the United Nations | ||
Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, | ||
Monica Simpson, the Executive Director of SisterSong, the | ||
country's largest organization dedicated to reproductive | ||
justice for women of color, testified that the United | ||
States, by failing to address the crisis in black maternal | ||
mortality, was violating an international human rights | ||
treaty. Following this testimony, the committee called on | ||
the United States to "eliminate racial disparities in the | ||
field of sexual and reproductive health and standardize the | ||
data-collection system on maternal and infant deaths in all | ||
states to effectively identify and address the causes of | ||
disparities in maternal and infant-mortality rates". No | ||
such measures have been forthcoming. Only about half the | ||
states and a few cities maintain maternal-mortality review | ||
boards to analyze individual cases of pregnancy-related | ||
deaths. There has not been an official federal count of | ||
deaths related to pregnancy in more than 10 years. An | ||
effort to standardize the national count has been financed |
in part by contributions from Merck for Mothers, a program | ||
of the pharmaceutical company, to the CDC Foundation.
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(5) The crisis of maternal death and near-death also | ||
persists for black women across class lines.
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(6) The reasons for the black-white divide in both | ||
infant and maternal mortality have been debated by | ||
researchers and doctors for more than 2 decades. But | ||
recently there has been growing acceptance of what has | ||
largely been, for the medical establishment, a shocking | ||
idea: for black women in America, an inescapable atmosphere | ||
of societal and systemic racism can create a kind of toxic | ||
physiological stress, resulting in conditions — including | ||
hypertension and pre-eclampsia — that lead directly to | ||
higher rates of infant and maternal death. And that | ||
societal racism is further expressed in a pervasive, | ||
longstanding racial bias in health care — including the | ||
dismissal of legitimate concerns and symptoms — that can | ||
help explain poor birth outcomes even in the case of black | ||
women with the most advantages.
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(7) Science has refuted the theory that high rates of | ||
infant death in American black women has a genetic | ||
component. A 1997 study published by 2 Chicago | ||
neonatologists, Richard David and James Collins, in The New | ||
England Journal of Medicine found that babies born to new | ||
immigrants from impoverished West African nations weighed | ||
more than their black American-born counterparts and were |
similar in size to white babies, and were more likely to be | ||
born full term, which lowers the risk of death. In 2002, | ||
the same researchers further found that the daughters of | ||
African and Caribbean immigrants who grew up in the United | ||
States went on to have babies who were smaller than their | ||
mothers had been at birth, while the grandchildren of white | ||
European women actually weighed more than their mothers had | ||
at birth. It took just one generation for the American | ||
black-white disparity to manifest.
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(8) Though it seemed radical 25 years ago, few in the | ||
field now dispute that the black-white disparity in the | ||
deaths of babies is related not to the genetics of race but | ||
to the lived experience of race in this country. In 2007, | ||
Richard David and James Collins published an even more | ||
thorough examination of race and infant mortality in the | ||
American Journal of Public Health, again dispelling the | ||
notion of some sort of gene that would predispose black | ||
women to preterm birth or low birth weight. Based upon his | ||
years of research and study on the subject, David, a | ||
professor of pediatrics at the University of | ||
Illinois-Chicago, stated that for "black women...something | ||
about growing up in America seems to be bad for your baby's | ||
birth weight".
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(9) People of color, particularly black people, are | ||
treated differently the moment they enter the health care | ||
system. In 2002, the groundbreaking report "Unequal |
Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in | ||
Health Care", published by a division of the National | ||
Academy of Sciences, took an exhaustive plunge into 100 | ||
previous studies, careful to decouple class from race, by | ||
comparing subjects with similar income and insurance | ||
coverage. The researchers found that people of color were | ||
less likely to be given appropriate medications for heart | ||
disease, or to undergo coronary bypass surgery, and | ||
received kidney dialysis and transplants less frequently | ||
than white people, which resulted in higher death rates. | ||
Black people were 3.6 times as likely as white people to | ||
have their legs and feet amputated as a result of diabetes, | ||
even when all other factors were equal. One study analyzed | ||
in the report found that cesarean sections were 40% more | ||
likely among black women compared with white women. | ||
(10) In 2016, a study by researchers at the University | ||
of Virginia examined why African-American patients receive | ||
inadequate treatment for pain not only compared with white | ||
patients but also relative to World Health Organization | ||
guidelines. The study found that white medical students and | ||
residents often believed incorrect and sometimes | ||
"fantastical" biological fallacies about racial | ||
differences in patients. For example, many thought, | ||
falsely, that blacks have less-sensitive nerve endings | ||
than whites, that black people's blood coagulates more | ||
quickly and that black skin is thicker than white. For |
these assumptions, researchers blamed not individual | ||
prejudice but deeply ingrained unconscious stereotypes | ||
about people of color, as well as physicians' difficulty in | ||
empathizing with patients whose experiences differ from | ||
their own. In specific research regarding childbirth, the | ||
Listening to Mothers Survey III found that one in five | ||
black and Hispanic women reported poor treatment from | ||
hospital staff because of race, ethnicity, cultural | ||
background or language, compared with 8% of white mothers.
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(11) Researchers have worked to connect the dots | ||
between racial bias and unequal treatment in the health | ||
care system and maternal and infant mortality; however, | ||
based upon the preceding findings, it is clear that more | ||
must be done, and the General Assembly finds that a Task | ||
Force is necessary to work to establish best practices to | ||
decrease infant and maternal mortality among African | ||
Americans in Illinois. | ||
Section 10. Task Force on Infant and Maternal Mortality | ||
Among African Americans.
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(a) There is hereby created the Task Force on Infant and | ||
Maternal Mortality Among African Americans to work to establish | ||
best practices to decrease infant and maternal mortality among | ||
African Americans in Illinois.
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(b) The Task Force shall consist of the following members:
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(1) the Director of Public Health, or his or her |
designee;
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(2) the Director of Healthcare and Family Services, or | ||
his or her designee;
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(3) the Secretary of Human Services, or his or her | ||
designee;
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(4) two medical providers who focus on infant and | ||
community health appointed by the Director of Public | ||
Health;
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(5) two obstetrics and gynecology (OB-GYN) specialists | ||
appointed by the Director of Public Health;
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(6) two doulas appointed by the Director of Public | ||
Health. For the purposes of this paragraph (6), "doula" | ||
means a professional trained in childbirth who provides | ||
emotional, physical, and educational support to a mother | ||
who is expecting, is experiencing labor, or has recently | ||
given birth;
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(7) two nurses appointed by the Director of Public | ||
Health;
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(8) two certified nurse midwives appointed by the | ||
Director of Public Health;
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(9) four community experts on maternal and infant | ||
health appointed by the Director of Public Health;
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(10) one representative from hospital leadership | ||
appointed by the Director of Public Health;
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(11) one representative from a health insurance | ||
company appointed by the Director of Public Health; |
(12) one African American woman of childbearing age who | ||
has experienced a traumatic pregnancy, which may or may not | ||
have included the loss of a child, appointed by the | ||
Director of Public Health;
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(13) one physician representing the Illinois Academy | ||
of Family Physicians; and | ||
(14) one physician representing the Illinois Chapter | ||
of the American Academy of Pediatrics. | ||
(c) The Task Force shall elect a chairperson from among its | ||
membership and any other officer it deems appropriate. The | ||
Department of Public Health shall provide technical support and | ||
assistance to the Task Force and shall be responsible for | ||
administering its operations and ensuring that the | ||
requirements of this Act are met.
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(d) The members of the Task Force shall receive no | ||
compensation for their services as members of the Task Force.
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Section 15. Meetings; duties.
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(a) The Task Force shall meet at least once per quarter | ||
beginning as soon as practicable after the effective date of | ||
this Act.
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(b) The Task Force shall:
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(1) review research that substantiates the connections | ||
between a mother's health before, during, and between | ||
pregnancies, as well as that of her child across the life | ||
course;
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(2) review comprehensive, nationwide data collection | ||
on maternal deaths and complications, including data | ||
disaggregated by race, geography, and socioeconomic | ||
status;
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(3) review the data sets that include information on | ||
social and environmental risk factors for women and infants | ||
of color;
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(4) review better assessments and analysis on the | ||
impact of overt and covert racism on toxic stress and | ||
pregnancy-related outcomes for women and infants of color;
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(5) review research to identify best practices and | ||
effective interventions for improving the quality and | ||
safety of maternity care;
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(6) review research to identify best practices and | ||
effective interventions, as well as health outcomes before | ||
and during pregnancy, in order to address pre-disease | ||
pathways of adverse maternal and infant health;
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(7) review research to identify effective | ||
interventions for addressing social determinants of health | ||
disparities in maternal and infant health outcomes; and
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(8) produce an annual report detailing the Task Force's | ||
findings based upon its review of research conducted under | ||
this Section, including specific recommendations, if any, | ||
and any other information the Task Force may deem proper in | ||
furtherance of its duties under this Act.
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Section 20. Report. Beginning December 1, 2020, and for | ||
each year thereafter, the Task Force shall submit a report of | ||
its findings and recommendations to the General Assembly. The | ||
report to the General Assembly shall be filed with the Clerk of | ||
the House of Representatives and the Secretary of the Senate in | ||
electronic form only, in the manner that the Clerk and the | ||
Secretary shall direct.
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | ||
becoming law.
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