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There's No Success Story Texas Can Follow To Stop Black Mothers From Dying

Maddy Oden's daughter, who is African-American, died after doctors gave her a drug to induce labor. Tatia Oden French's baby also died.
Christie Hemm Klok for KUT
Maddy Oden's daughter, who is African-American, died after doctors gave her a drug to induce labor. Tatia Oden French's baby also died.

Part 3 of a three-part series.

As Texas looks to reduce its maternal mortality rate, there is one aspect of the crisis that is going to be harder to solve: Black women are more likely to die while pregnant or after giving birth than women from other racial or ethnic groups.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, black mothers in the U.S. die at three to four times the rate of white mothers. In Texas, 11 percent of births in 2011-2012 were to black women, yet they made up 30 percent of the reported maternal deaths in the state.

Maddy Oden, who lives in Oakland, Calif., lost her daughter about 17 years ago. Tatia Oden French was pregnant with her first child at 32 years old.

鈥淪he was African-American,鈥 Oden says. 鈥淪he had just gotten her Ph.D. She was getting ready to go into medical school, actually. She had been a vegetarian for way over 15 years. She was totally healthy. The baby was totally healthy.鈥

But Tatia was about 10 days overdue, and Oden says her doctors wanted to induce labor.

鈥淪he didn鈥檛 want to be induced,鈥 she says. 鈥淪he wanted a natural birth, and they put a lot of pressure on her, specifically saying, 'Well, you don鈥檛 want to go home with a dead baby do you?'鈥

Eventually, Tatia was given a drug used to induce labor.

鈥淭en hours after they gave it to her, she was dead and the baby was dead,鈥 Oden says. 鈥淎nd so I decided that I was going to focus on getting the drug out of the toolbox of induction.鈥

Oden does that work now through a . She also became a doula and works predominately with black women. She says she sees what happened to her daughter happen to a lot of her clients.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a very common type of attitude: disrespect, you know, total disregard for what the mom wants,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey want you to do what they want you to do.鈥

Oden says the problem is rooted in racism, which makes it difficult to fix. Even though California has cut its overall maternal mortality rate in half, she says, the disproportionate effect on black women hasn鈥檛 gone anywhere.

鈥淭here is still a tremendous amount of work to be done even in California,鈥 Oden says. 鈥淎nd then again, quite frankly, it depends on who you are and how dark your skin is.鈥

As California successfully brought down its rate, that gap between black and white women remained.

鈥淚n California, our African-American rate fell similarly to our overall rate 鈥 fell in half,鈥 says Elliott Main, the director of California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative (CMQCC). 鈥淏ut at the end of the day, it was still three times higher.鈥

Main has been largely credited with leading the effort to drastically bring down the maternal mortality and morbidity rates in California. He says this race disparity is not just alarming and hard to fix; it鈥檚 also a unique problem.

鈥淭hat is the biggest racial disparity among any public health measure,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e pay attention to infant mortality, we look at prematurity rates, we look at cancer deaths 鈥 those are all higher in African-Americans in general.鈥

Those rates, Main says, are up to two times higher among black people. Maternal mortality is three to four times higher. And in New York City, for example, it鈥檚 up to 12 times higher.

鈥淭his is a disgrace,鈥 Main says, 鈥渁nd a national imperative that we really have to address."

Main says California is starting some pilot programs aimed at closing the gap.

It鈥檚 going to be tough, though. Advocates who pay attention to the issue say it isn鈥檛 about tackling specific health issues like hypertension; it鈥檚 about tackling a much thornier issue: racism.

Darline Turner, a physician鈥檚 assistant and doula in Austin, became interested in maternal health among black women several years ago after her own tough pregnancy.

鈥淲e had some spotting. We had cramping,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e had 鈥 you know, I had lost one before her. We had so many different things going on.鈥

Then, Turner says, she went into labor early, and that presented another set of problems because she had recently had uterine surgery.

鈥淚 was at great risk for uterine rupture,鈥 she says. 鈥淪o we were playing beat the baby to get the baby out.鈥

Turner says giving birth was an overwhelming experience, and she felt bad for her husband who had no idea what was going on.

鈥淎nd he was just standing there watching this cacophony of instruments being thrown, baby being whisked away, wife throwing up and being gassed because I was just kind of crazed," she says, "and there was no one there [for him]."

Darline Turner decided to become a doula after her own tough pregnancy.
Credit Montinique Monroe for KUT
Darline Turner decided to become a doula after her own tough pregnancy.

Turner became a doula because she wants to be in the room helping people through deliveries 鈥 particularly black mothers, like her.

鈥淵ou know, now doing doula work, it鈥檚 interesting ... the things that I will sometimes hear come out of health care providers鈥 mouths,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd I'll turn [and say], 'Did you really say that to her?鈥"

Sometimes medical professionals don鈥檛 really listen to black women, she says. Turner says the daughter of one of her clients was pregnant with twins. She was feeling bad throughout the pregnancy and had gone to the emergency room 22 times.

鈥淲ho goes to the ER 22 times?鈥 she says. 鈥淎fter two or three you admit her and like, 鈥榃hy are you here again?鈥欌

But the hospital didn鈥檛 admit her. Each time, Turner says, the woman was told she was 鈥渂eing alarmist鈥 and sent home. Turner says she eventually died.

According to the latest report from Texas' maternal mortality task force, a lot of black women are dying after pregnancy-related hospital stays. In fact, they are twice as likely to die than women of any other ethnic or racial group.

Turner says saving black women鈥檚 lives will require a shift in how the medical community treats these women. It鈥檚 going to be hard to fix the small things without that shift.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not that hard 鈥 treat people kindly,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the bottom line: Treat people kindly.鈥

Unlike most of what the state has to learn from California鈥檚 success in decreasing maternal mortality, there is no framework on how to make these changes.

Back in Oakland, Oden says to prevent another woman like her daughter from dying it will require larger cultural shifts.  

鈥淭he disparities exist and will continue to exist until racism in the medical institution, along with the other institutions in this country, is significantly addressed and reversed,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hich is not going to happen to tomorrow.鈥

Copyright 2020 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit .

Ashley Lopez is a reporter forWGCUNews. A native of Miami, she graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a journalism degree.