Mississippi Today
Two Delta health centers awarded competitive federal grant for maternal care
Two federally qualified health centers in the Delta will receive a total of $3.6 million over four years from the federal government to expand and strengthen their maternal health services.
Federally qualified health centers are nonprofits that provide health care to under-insured and uninsured patients and receive enhanced reimbursement from Medicare and Medicaid. They offer a sliding fee scale for services for patients.
Delta Health Center, with 17 locations throughout the Delta, and G.A. Carmichael Family Health Center, with six locations across central Mississippi, beat out applicants from several southeastern and midwestern states.
Two organizations in Tennessee and one in Alabama were also awarded funding this year.
The grant is focused on improving access to perinatal care in rural communities in the greater Delta region โ which includes 252 counties and parishes within the eight states of Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri and Tennessee, according to the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).ย ย
It’s the first of its kind in terms of goal and region, said HRSA Administrator Carole Johnson.
โWe have not had a targeted maternal health initiative for the Delta before this program,โ Johnson told Mississippi Today. โWe’ve had a national competition for rural areas focused on maternal health, but what we were able to do here, in partnership with congressional leaders from the Delta region, was secure some resources that would go directly to the Delta region to be able to address this very important need.โ
Johnson said Mississippi applicants stood out because of their ability to identify the most pressing issues facing mothers and babies.
โWhat we saw from the applicants and awardees in Mississippi was a real commitment to prenatal care and early engagement in prenatal care, reducing preterm births, as well as expanding access to midwives and community-based doula services,โ she said. โAnd all of those pieces together really resonate with the ways we’ve been looking at how to address maternal health services.โ
At G.A. Carmichael Family Health Center, the funds will be directed mainly to expanding services in the three Delta counties in which the center has clinics โ Humphreys, Yazoo and Leflore.
Yazoo and Humphreys counties are maternity care deserts โ meaning they have no hospitals providing obstetric care, no OB-GYNs and no certified nurse midwives โ and Greenwood Leflore Hospital closed its labor and delivery unit in 2022. While OB-GYNs still practice in Leflore County, mothers have to travel outside of it to deliver their babies.
Solving the transportation issue will be a top priority, according to the center’s CEO James L. Coleman Jr.
โWe have situations where mothers have to travel 100 or so miles just for maternal health care,โ Coleman said. โEspecially in times of delivery, especially in times of emergency, that is unacceptable.โ
Health care deserts pervade Mississippi, where 60% of counties have no OB-GYN and nearly half of rural hospitals are at risk of closing.ย
Inadequate access to prenatal care has been linked to preterm births, in which Mississippi leads the nation. Preterm births can lead to chronic health problems and infant mortality โ in which Mississippi also ranks highest.ย
That’s why Delta Health Center is committed to using its funds to work together with affiliated organizations โ including Delta Health System; Northwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center; Aaron E. Henry Community Health Center; and Converge โ to โmove the dialโ on maternal health indicators across the Delta region, said John Fairman, the center’s CEO.
โWe face many challenges including the recruitment and retention of OB-GYNs to the area,โ Fairman said, โand will be exploring models of care that are being implemented in other areas of the country that can be adopted to provide greater access and efficiencies for perinatal health care โ with the overall goal of significantly decreasing rates of low birthweight and preterm birth in the Delta.โ
The United States currently has the highest rate of maternal deaths among high-income countries, and Johnson said this grant is part of a continued effort from the Biden administration to change that.ย
โThe president and the vice president have made maternal health a priority since day one and have really called on all of us across the Department of Health and Human Services to lean in and identify where we can put resources and policy,โ Johnson said. โOne death is one death too many.โ
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
She was accused of murder after losing her pregnancy. South Carolina woman now tells her story.
Content warning: This story contains details of a pregnancy loss.
ORANGEBURG, S.C. โ Amari Marsh had just finished her junior year at South Carolina State University in May 2023 when she received a text message from a law enforcement officer.
โSorry it has taken this long for paperwork to come back,โ the officer wrote. โBut I finally have the final report, and wanted to see if you and your boyfriend could meet me Wednesday afternoon for a follow up?โ
Marsh understood that the report was related to a pregnancy loss she’d experienced that March, she said. During her second trimester, Marsh said, she unexpectedly gave birth in the middle of the night while on a toilet in her off-campus apartment. She remembered screaming and panicking and said the bathroom was covered in blood.
โI couldn’t breathe,โ said Marsh, now 23.
The next day, when Marsh woke up in the hospital, she said, a law enforcement officer asked her questions. Then, a few weeks later, she said, she received a call saying she could collect her daughter’s ashes.
At that point, she said, she didn’t know she was being criminally investigated. Yet three months after her loss, Marsh was charged with murder/homicide by child abuse, law enforcement records show. She spent 22 days at the Orangeburg-Calhoun Regional Detention Center, where she was initially held without bond, facing 20 years to life in prison.
This August, 13 months after she was released from jail to house arrest with an ankle monitor, Marsh was cleared by a grand jury. Her case will not proceed to trial.
Her story raises questions about the state of reproductive rights in this country, disparities in health care, and pregnancy criminalization, especially for Black women like Marsh. More than two years after the U.S. Supreme Court issued itsย Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizationย decision, which allowed states to outlaw abortion, the climate around these topics remains highly charged.
Marsh’s case also highlights what’s at stake in November. Sixty-one percent of voters want Congress to pass a federal law restoring a nationwide right to abortion, according toย a recent pollย by KFF, the health policy research, polling, and news organization that includes KFF Health News. These issues could shape who wins the White House and controls Congress, and will come to a head for voters in theย 10 statesย where ballot initiatives about abortion will be decided.
Current Mississippi law bans abortions โexcept in the case where necessary for the preservation of the mother’s lifeโ or where the pregnancy was caused by rape and reported to law enforcement. Doctors who perform abortions outside of those parameters face up to 10 years in prison, in addition to the loss of their license.
OB-GYNs in the state told Mississippi Today the lack of clarity around the law worries them. Life-threatening conditions during pregnancy often occur on a spectrum and can develop over time โ calling into question what does and does not constitute a threat to the life of the mother, one Jackson area physicianย told Mississippi Todayย after the Dobbs ruling in 2022.
The South Carolina case shows how pregnancy loss is being criminalized around the country, said U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, a Democrat whose congressional district includes Orangeburg, and an alumnus of the same university Marsh was attending.
โThis is not a slogan when we talk about this being an โelection about the restoration of our freedoms,’โ Clyburn said.
โI Was Scared’
When Marsh took an at-home pregnancy test in November 2022, the positive result scared her. โI didn’t know what to do. I didn’t want to let my parents down,โ she said. โI was in a state of shock.โ
She didn’t seek prenatal care, she said, because she kept having her period. She thought the pregnancy test might have been wrong.
Anย incident reportย filed by the Orangeburg County Sheriff’s Office on the day she lost the pregnancy stated that in January 2023 Marsh made an appointment at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Columbia to โtake the Plan-C pill which would possibly cause an abortion to occur.โ The report doesn’t specify whether she took โ or even obtained โ the drug.
During an interview at her parents’ house, Marsh denied going to Planned Parenthood or taking medicine to induce abortion.
โI’ve never been in trouble. I’ve never been pulled over. I’ve never been arrested,โ Marsh said. โI never even got written up in school.โ
She played clarinet as section leader in the marching band and once performed at Carnegie Hall. In college, she was majoring in biology and planned to become a doctor.
South Carolina state Rep. Seth Rose, a Democrat in Columbia and one of Marsh’s attorneys, called it a โreally tragicโ case. โIt’s our position that she lost a child through natural causes,โ he said.
On Feb. 28, 2023, Marsh said, she experienced abdominal pain that was โway worseโ than regular menstrual cramps. She went to the emergency room, investigation records show, but left after several hours without being treated. Back at home, she said, the pain grew worse. She returned to the hospital, this time by ambulance.
Hospital staffers crowded around her, she said, and none of them explained what was happening to her. Bright lights shone in her face. โI was scared,โ she said.
According to the sheriff’s department report, hospital staffers told Marsh that she was pregnant and that a fetal heartbeat could be detected. Freaked out and confused, she chose to leave the hospital a second time, she said, and her pain had subsided.
In the middle of the night, she said, the pain started again. She woke up, she recalled, feeling an intense urge to use the bathroom. โAnd when I did, the child came,โ she said. โI screamed because I was scared, because I didn’t know what was going on.โ
Her boyfriend at the time called 911. The emergency dispatcher โkept telling me to take the baby outโ of the toilet, she recalled. โI couldn’t because I couldn’t even keep myself together.โ
First medical responders detected signs of life and tried to perform lifesaving measures as they headed to Regional Medical Center in Orangeburg, the incident report said. But at the hospital, Marsh learned that her infant, a girl, had not survived.
โI kept asking to see the baby,โ she said. โThey wouldn’t let me.โ
The following day, a sheriff’s deputy told Marsh in her hospital room that the incident was under investigation but said that Marsh โwas currently not in any trouble,โ according to the report. Marsh responded that โshe did not feel as though she did anything wrong.โ
More than 10 weeks later, nothing about the text messages she received from an officer in mid-May implied that the follow-up meeting about the final report was urgent.
โOh it doesn’t have to be Wednesday, it can be next week or another week,โ the officer wrote in an exchange that Marsh shared with KFF Health News. โI just have to meet with y’all in person before I can close the case out. I am so sorryโ
โNo problem I understand,โ Marsh wrote back.
She didn’t tell her parents or consider hiring a lawyer. โI didn’t think I needed one,โ she said.
Marsh arranged to meet the officer on June 2, 2023. During that meeting, she was arrested. Her boyfriend was not charged.
Her father, Herman Marsh, the band director at a local public school in Orangeburg, thought it was a bad joke until reality set in. โI told my wife, I said, โWe need to get an attorney now.’โ
Pregnancy Criminalization
When Marsh lost her pregnancy on March 1, 2023, women in South Carolina could still obtain an abortion untilย 20 weeks beyond fertilization, or the gestational age of 22 weeks.
Later that spring, South Carolina’s Republican-controlled legislatureย passed a banย that prohibits providers from performing abortions after fetal cardiac activity can be detected, with some exceptions made for cases of rape, incest, or when the mother’s life is in jeopardy. That law does not allow criminal penalties for women who seek or obtain abortions.
Solicitor David Pascoe, a Democrat elected to South Carolina’s 1st Judicial Circuit whose office handled Marsh’s prosecution, said the issues of abortion and reproductive rights weren’t relevant to this case.
โIt had nothing to do with that,โ he told KFF Health News.
The arrest warrant alleges that not moving the infant from the toilet at the urging of the dispatcher was ultimately โa proximate cause of her daughter’s death.โ The warrant also cites as the cause of death โrespiratory complicationsโ due to a premature delivery stemming from a maternal chlamydia infection. Marsh said she was unaware of the infection until after the pregnancy loss.
Pascoe said the question raised by investigators was whether Marsh failed to render aid to the infant before emergency responders arrived at the apartment, he said. Ultimately, the grand jury decided there wasn’t probable cause to proceed with a criminal trial, he said. โI respect the grand jury’s opinion.โ
Marsh’s case is a โprime example of how pregnancy loss can become a criminal investigation very quickly,โ said Dana Sussman, senior vice president ofย Pregnancy Justice, a nonprofit that tracks such cases. While similar cases predate the Supreme Court’sย Dobbsย decision, she said, they seem to be increasing.
โTheย Dobbsย decision unleashed and empowered prosecutors to look at pregnant people as a suspect class and at pregnancy loss as a suspicious event,โ she said.
Local and national anti-abortion groups seized on Marsh’s story when her name and mug shot were published online byย The Times and Democratย of Orangeburg. Holly Gatling, executive director ofย South Carolina Citizens for Life,ย wrote a blog postย about Marsh titled, in part, โOrangeburg Newborn Dies in Toiletโ that was published by National Right to Life. Gatling and National Right to Life did not respond to interview requests.
Marsh said she made the mistake of googling herself when she was released from jail.
โIt was heartbreaking to see all those things,โ she said. โI cried so many times.โ
Some physicians are also afraid of being painted as criminals. The nonprofit Physicians for Human Rightsย published a reportย on Sept. 17 about Florida’s six-week abortion ban that included input from two dozen doctors, many of whom expressed fear about the criminal penalties imposed by the law.
โThe health care systems are afraid,โ saidย Michele Heisler, medical director for the nonprofit. โThere’s all these gray areas. So everyone is just trying to be extra careful. Unfortunately, as a result, patients are suffering.โ
Chelsea Daniels, a family medicine doctor who works for Planned Parenthood in Miami and performs abortions, said that in early September she saw a patient who had a miscarriage during the first trimester of her pregnancy. The patient had been to four hospitals and brought in the ultrasound scans performed at each facility.
โNo one would touch her,โ Daniels said. โEach ultrasound scan she brought in represents, on the other side, a really terrified doctor who is doing their best to interpret the really murky legal language around abortion care and miscarriage management, which are the same things, essentially.โ
Florida is one of the 10 states with a ballot measure related to abortion in November, although it is the only Southern state with one. Others are Montana, Missouri, and Maryland.
โI Found My Strength’
Zipporah Sumpter, one of Marsh’s lawyers, said the law enforcement system treated her client as a criminal instead of a grieving mother. โThis is not a criminal matter,โ Sumpter said.
It was not just the fraught climate around pregnancy that caused Marsh to suffer; โrace definitely played a factor,โ said Sumpter, who does not believe Marsh received compassionate care when she went to the hospital the first or second time.
The management of Regional Medical Center, where Marsh was treated, changed shortly after her hospitalization. The hospital is now managed by the Medical University of South Carolina, and its spokesperson declined to comment on Marsh’s case.
Historically, birth outcomes for Black women in Orangeburg County, where Marsh lost her pregnancy, have ranked among the worst in South Carolina. From 2020 through 2022, the average mortality rate for Black infants born in Orangeburg County was more than three times as high as the average rate for white infants statewide.
Today, Marsh is still trying to process all that happened. She moved back in with her parents and is seeing a therapist. She is taking classes at a local community college and hopes to reenroll at South Carolina State University to earn a four-year degree. She still wants to become a doctor. She keeps her daughter’s ashes on a bookshelf in her bedroom.
โThrough all of this, I found my strength. I found my voice. I want to help other young women that are in my position now and will be in the future,โ she said. โI always had faith that God was going to be on my side, but I didn’t know how it was going to go with the justice system we have today.โ
KFF Health News Florida correspondent Daniel Chang contributed to this article. KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFFโan independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.
Mississippi Today’s Kate Royals contributed to this report.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1961
Oct. 4, 1961
More than 100 students walked out of Burglund High School in McComb, Mississippi, to protest the killing of Herbert Lee and the expulsion of student Brenda Travis, who was given a year behind bars for ordering a hamburger at an all-white lunch counter.
They marched to city hall, where they knelt in prayer. SNCC leaders who accompanied them โ Bob Moses, Chuck McDew and Bob Zellner โ were beaten and arrested for contributing to the delinquency of minors.
Behind bars, Moses wrote, โThis is Mississippi, the middle of the iceberg. โฆ There is a tremor in the middle of the iceberg โ from a stone that the builders rejected.โ
SNCC started its own high school for the students. Moses taught math, Dion Diamond handled science, and Chuck McDew informed students about history.
โNonviolent Highโ inspires the creation of โFreedom Schoolsโ during Freedom Summer. A half-century after the protest, district officials honored the protesting students and awarded Travis, a longtime civil rights veteran, an honorary degree.
She told the Associated Press, โYou know what the beauty of it is? They made a scapegoat of me, but the students continued to come.โ
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Catherine Crews: I only have months left to live. Hereโs why I cast my vote for Kamala Harris.
Catherine Crews, a retired Oxford resident, was given just six months to live in May. She wanted to live long enough to cast her vote in the 2024 presidential election, which she did when the absentee voting period began on September 23. Below is her story in her own words.
Ever since our children were very young, we made it a tradition in our family to vote together on Election Day, whether it be a local, state or national election.
We would get up early, before school and work, go to our voting location together and vote as a family. We followed that with a quick breakfast at our favorite local restaurant before taking the children to school. We instilled in them the importance of voting.
Now that our three children are grown, with children of their own, my husband Billy and I still plan our day around voting when any election comes around.
Throughout our 45 years together, we have also placed importance in supporting candidates who run for office at every level. Although we tend to vote more frequently for Democrats, Billy is fond of saying, โWe are Jack Reed Republicans, and William Winter Democratsโ. (Jack Reed ran for governor in 1987 and William Winter became our beloved governor in 1979.) To us, the person running for office is more important than their political party.
Fast-forward to this year’s election โ one of the most important of my lifetime, I believe โ I found myself in a different situation. After surviving a rare and aggressive cancer (NUT Carcinoma) in 2013, where I had a 3% chance of survival, the effects of 32 radiation treatments wreaked havoc on my mouth. Over the last 10 years I have undergone nine mouth surgeries, including two jaw transplants.
Earlier this year, my health took a turn for the worse. Bone deterioration from all the radiation and infection developed in my lower right jaw. Surgery is not an option for me. My doctors told me I would have six months to live.
After receiving this news from my doctors on May 23, Billy and I sat in shock and sadness. The effects of this cancer caught up with me. My thoughts immediately went to, โWhat do I need to do in the six months I have left?โ As lists of things to accomplish scrolled through my mind, voting was among some of my top priorities. We laugh about this now, but from my hospital room, I insisted that Billy call our circuit clerk’s office in Oxford and find out the first available date for absentee voting. His friend and our Circuit Clerk Jeff Busby told him, โSeptember 23.โ I remember thinking I would not make it until then because the last two infections I’ve had this year have come on hard and fast.
Well, here I am. I made it. On Monday, Sept. 23, I got to absentee vote on the first day available to Mississippians. After our weekly visit from our hospice nurse, Billy and I walked up to the Lafayette County Courthouse, just a few blocks from our home, and I cast my vote. I was so happy to have made it to this point and to share with my friends on Facebook, just as I’ve done regularly with those who have โwalked with meโ and supported me since 2013.
To me, it was like any other heartfelt Facebook post I had written about my health journey. But this time, something different happened. Friends kept sharing it and sharing it, and the next thing I knew, it had gone viral. Our friend, Brandon Presley, who came so close to winning his bid for governor of our great state, shared it with people in higher places. Another dear friend, Emily LeCoz, shared it with USA Today. The next thing I knew, Michael Collins, White House correspondent for USA Today, called me for a 45-minute interview to write an article, and vice presidential hopeful Tim Walz was reading my Facebook post at a campaign event in Minneapolis.
Here is the essence of my Facebook post and motivation for voting:
In this presidential election of 2024โฆ
- I cast the last vote of my lifetime to preserve democracy in the United States of America and around the world.
- I cast the last vote of my lifetime to protect the Constitution of the United States of America, and the rule of law.
- I cast the last vote of my lifetime for honesty, decency and integrity.
- I cast the last vote of my lifetime for loving my neighbor, regardless of their race, their religion, and who they love.
- I cast the last vote of my lifetime for innocent immigrants who want to live, and contribute, and be a part of this great country, but who have been targets of political hate and rhetoric.
- I cast the last vote of my lifetime for women to have the right to make decisions about their own body.
- I cast the last vote of my lifetime for the building up of poor and middle-class Americans.
- On behalf of our six precious grandchildren, I proudly cast the last vote of my lifetime for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz.
The deadline to register to vote is Monday, October 7 at 5 p.m. Please exercise your right and privilege to have a voice in this election.
Take it from me: Few things are more important.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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