In 2016, a groundbreaking maternal mortality study funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and published in The Lancet mirrors this danger, noting that the United States had one of the highest rates of maternal deaths compared to other developed nations. In 2017, a six-month investigation led by NPR and ProPublica confirmed that the U.S., in fact, had the worst maternal mortality rate in the industrialized world. The issue is even more prevalent in states with restrictive reproductive policies.

Minority Groups Are Disproportionately Affected

BIPOC women all too often face racial and ethnic disparities in the U.S. healthcare system, and Black women are the most disproportionately affected. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) indicates that Black women are three to four times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than White women. The new research sheds light on the issue: “In the U.S., unacceptably high levels of racial and ethnic disparities in infant mortality and adverse birth outcomes exist. Increased exposure to structural racism results in higher levels of infant mortality rates and fetal growth restriction.” Consider the fact that Black women living in the least restrictive states had an 8% lower risk of having a baby with low birth weight than their counterparts in the most restrictive states. It’s a statistic that speaks to the protective effect reproductive rights have for minority groups especially. When women have access to beneficial programs like free or low-cost birth control, locally available Planned Parenthood centers, and supportive prenatal healthcare, their chances of giving birth to a premature baby are greatly reduced.  Kimberly Langdon, MD, a retired OB/GYN in Ohio and writer for Medzino says, “Premature births are the primary reason for low birth weight infants. Black and Hispanic women have higher rates of premature babies due to lack of access to care or fear of the medical establishment that is primarily White—making racial disparities in healthcare a huge issue.”

Family Planning Clinics Are Not Abortion Clinics

In the U.S., there are several national policies aimed at protecting a woman’s right to choose how and when she gets pregnant, and whether she will carry that pregnancy to term. Despite that, each state has the power to choose how much access its residents have to those programs and can limit reproductive rights accordingly. Unfortunately, those women’s health clinics like Planned Parenthood that are dedicated to family planning, are unfairly branded as abortion clinics. In reality, they grant women access to a whole host of prenatal health services which enable them to bring a healthy baby to term. When certain states choose to close these centers, those women lose out on far more than abortions. It’s also important to note that pregnancy itself has its own set of health risks. “Any pregnancy that occurs, whether intended or not, can result in adverse outcomes—primarily as a reflection of underlying medical conditions such as obesity and high blood pressure,” says Langdon. When women don’t have access to proper reproductive health care, especially in situations where the pregnant mother has preexisting health concerns, the risk for mother and baby increases.

Restricted Rights Lead to Poor Pregnancy Outcomes

These policies, like restricted access to birth control, mandatory parental consent, waiting periods for abortions, and restrictions on funding for abortions lead to higher rates of poor pregnancy outcomes such as low birth weight, higher infant and maternal mortality rates, and increased odds of preterm birth. “These policies also make it difficult, if not impossible, to obtain contraception, leading to higher rates of unplanned pregnancies,” says Sarah Cross, MD, assistant professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women’s Health at the University of Minnesota Medical School. “What we know is that comprehensive sexual health education and access to contraceptives reduces the number of women seeking an abortion. When abortion services are limited or not available, women are then forced to carry these pregnancies, sometimes even ones that threaten their health or life.”