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Black women in the Delta with cervical cancer more likely to die because of health system failures

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mississippitoday.org – Simeon Gates – 2025-02-06 04:00:00

Systemic failures have led Black women in the Mississippi Delta to have disproportionately high death rates from cervical cancer, a new report concludes.

The Southern Rural Black Women’s Initiative for Economic & Social Justice and Human Rights Watch collaborated on the report. It is the result of publicly available information, and interviews with 49 experts and 159 Black women from Bolivar, Washington and Humphreys counties.

Oleta Fitzgerald, the initiative’s co-founder and regional administrator, explained the significance of the issue. “It is a cancer that is preventable and highly treatable if people have access to the right kind of medical professionals and screenings and the HPV vaccination,” she said. “It is also a cancer that is rampant and particularly and indiscriminately in Black women in the rural areas where we work, and there is something we can do about it.”

The American Cancer Society predicts about 4,320 women will die from cervical cancer in 2025. Black women are 75% more likely to die from cervical cancer than white women. 

The report found that issues such as lack of access to health care, poverty, racism and lack of education are the main culprits. 

A panel discussion titled “No Excuse – Inadequate Cervical Cancer Prevention and Care for Black Women in the Mississippi Delta,” explored the impact of the disease on women in the Delta, the lack of care and the impact of racism regarding that care. It was held at the Jackson Medical Mall, Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2025. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

Mississippi is one of the poorest states in the nation with some of the worst health indicators, and has one of the highest rates of uninsured people. According to KFF, 9.5% of Americans between zero and 64 years old were uninsured in 2023. In Mississippi, it’s 12.6%. 

The Mississippi Cancer Registry found that between 2017 and 2021, the cervical cancer death rate for Black women in the Delta was 1.4 times higher than white women’s.

The report found that the lack of Medicaid expansion led to people not having health care coverage, a situation exacerbated by a  shortage of OB-GYNs and more rural hospital closures. Eight of the 18 Delta counties are maternity care deserts.

Without health insurance or Medicaid, many women can’t afford regular check-ups, cancer screenings and follow-ups necessary to catch cervical cancer early. They may also not have transportation, public or private, to get to the doctor’s office. 

Dr. Thomas Dobbs, the former state health officer, explained that the lack of OB/GYNs is part of a national trend. “There’s been a transition in the medical environment where physicians coming out to practice don’t locate to rural areas as much,” said  Dobbs, now dean of the school of population health at the University of Mississippi Medical Center. 

The Association of American Medical Colleges Research and Action Institute found that states with strict abortion bans, like Mississippi, get fewer applicants for residency programs.

Racial discrimination in the health care system has caused Black women to distrust medical providers. Leland resident and substitute teacher Stacy Wiggins recalled how many people she knew avoided going to the doctor because of how poorly they were treated. She didn’t understand what they meant until she had her own battles with cancer.

“When I got down sick, that’s when I saw that the health care in my area is not equipped to handle a lot of situations,” she said. 

Wiggins survived both thyroid and ovarian cancer. Before being diagnosed with cancer, she had health insurance through her job at Family Dollar. She did not qualify for Medicaid or the low premiums under the Affordable Care Act.

Before her cancer diagnosis, her doctor advised her to seek treatment outside of the county. She took the physician’s advice, and was treated for both cancers in Jackson. She believes if she hadn’t, she would not be alive today.

Wiggins, whose cancer is in remission, gets assistance from Medicaid’s Elderly and Disabled Medicaid Waiver program, which covers transportation and an aide.

There is also a dearth of education on reproductive and sexual health. One of the strongest tools against cervical cancer is the HPV vaccine. Some HPV infections can lead to certain cancers. It’s recommended that children ages 9 to 14 get two doses over 6 to 12 months, and three doses over six months at ages 15 to 26. People can receive the vaccine up to age 45.

Mississippians have some of the lowest HPV vaccination rates in the country. In 2023, about 38% of Mississippi teens received all doses of the HPV vaccine. 

Greenville nurse practioner Patricia Barber, who was attending to her patients, joined the discussion at the Jackson Medical Mall via virtual call, exploring the impact of cervical cancer on women in the Delta, the lack of care and the impact of racism regarding that care. It was held at the Jackson Medical Mall, Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2025. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

Greenville family nurse practitioner Dr. Patricia Barber said that a lack of awareness is a serious problem. “I really think a lot of it is a lack of information because every time I talk to my patients about the HPV vaccine, they’re very receptive,” she said.

The Delta’s demographics also play a role. Census data from 2023 shows that in the three counties studied, Black residents make up 64 to over 73% of the population, and women make up over 53%. The counties’ combined population is 75,130.

The report makes several recommendations for state lawmakers. Expanding Medicaid, adopting “rights-based, scientifically accurate” sex education in schools, and increasing awareness of HPV vaccines were among them. They also support more funding and improvements for telehealth, community-based health centers and county health departments.

Advocates are still pushing for Medicaid expansion in the current legislative session. The House and the Senate both passed Medicaid expansion “dummy” bills. These bills are meant to be placeholders while state lawmakers wait to act until the Trump administration weighs in.

Fitzgerald says that members of Southern Rural Black Women’s Initiative are part of the efforts to expand Medicaid and will continue working to improve outcomes across the state.

“This environment will be more difficult because policymakers are moving in lock-step with the national policy agenda,” she said. “But we never give up.”
Dobbs recommended that people take advantage of the Mississippi Medicaid Family Planning Waiver, a limited benefit that pays for women’s health care, including pap smears. The Mississippi Department of Health also has a program that covers breast and cervical cancer screenings for women who meet income and age requirements.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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‘How can we stand by?’: Moms worry Medicaid cuts will hurt their children

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mississippitoday.org – Sophia Paffenroth – 2025-03-11 16:20:00

Advocates, Medicaid recipients and their family members gathered outside the Capitol Tuesday to urge both state and federal lawmakers to “protect and expand Medicaid now.” 

Speakers, who held signs with slogans such as “pro-life span,” included representatives from the Mississippi Coalition for Citizens with Disabilities, members of Care4Mississippi, parents of children on Medicaid and one 9-year-old girl. 

Their presence was in response to recent federal action that threatens Medicaid funding nationwide. In February, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a budget resolution that calls for the committee that oversees Medicaid and Medicare to cut $880 billion over 10 years. 

“This budget may not explicitly mention Medicaid, but the math is clear,” said Pam Dollar, executive director of the disability coalition. “Lawmakers cannot meet their aggressive cuts without slashing Medicaid or Medicare. Even if they cut everything unrelated to health care, they would still be $600 billion short. In a state that prides itself on being pro-life, how can we stand by and allow this to happen?”

There are currently over 600,000 Mississippians enrolled in the program. Medicaid covers half of Mississippi’s children, three in four of its nursing home residents and three in eight people with disabilities, according to KFF

Susan Stearns traveled from Oxford to speak at the rally. She’s used to driving – and routinely makes a two-hour round-trip car ride every time her son Oscar is in need of a pediatric specialist. 

Oscar and his twin were born prematurely, causing Oscar to develop cerebral palsy, a seizure disorder and blindness. The Stearns’ first medical bill from their sons’ stay in the neonatal intensive care unit was $5.7 million. 

Susan Stearns speaks during a press conference advocating to protect Medicaid at the Mississippi Capitol in Jackson, Miss., on Tuesday, March 11, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

Stearns, a professor at the University of Mississippi, and her husband work full-time and have private insurance, which does apply to Oscar – but doesn’t address the gamut of his needs. 

“Commercial insurance is designed for helping when you’ve broken a leg, or you need your gallbladder removed,” Stearns explained. “It is not prepared to deal with long-term, intensive care needs.”

Oscar accesses Medicaid through what’s called a disabled child living at home waiver, which helps pay for nursing care and therapy for Oscar during school. It also pays for equipment and services that allow the Stearns to give their son care at home. Without it, Oscar would need to go to a pediatric nursing home – of which there are currently none in Mississippi, though one is projected to open in Jackson later this year. 

“Without the waivers, where can these kids and their families look for the support they need?” Stearns asked. “How can their parents hope to keep their families together and their children happy and healthy? How will Mississippi have failed them?”

Luciana Pendleton, 9, shares her personal experience during a press conference advocating to protect Medicaid at the Mississippi Capitol in Jackson, Miss., on Tuesday, March 11, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

One 9-year-old girl named Luciana gave testimony of how Medicaid helps her. She’s aware that the conditions she has – including autism and ADHD – are expensive. She says Medicaid saved her life during her stay in the NICU and now helps pay for medication that helps her think. 

“If I didn’t have my medicines I’d feel like a blank piece of paper without any drawings,” she told the crowd. 

Since Mississippi has not expanded Medicaid, advocates fear that any cuts to the federal program will affect the poorest of the poor, pregnant women, children, seniors and those with disabilities in Mississippi. 

“It is long past time to stop using the most vulnerable to subsidize the least vulnerable,” said Jayne Buttross of the disability coalition. 

The group will hold another rally on the south steps of the Capitol on March 18 at 1 p.m. 

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Feds ask Mississippi to repay $101 million in misspent welfare money

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mississippitoday.org – Anna Wolfe – 2025-03-11 14:20:00

The federal welfare agency is finally asking Mississippi for its money back – a long-anticipated next step in rectifying the state’s squandering of millions of tax dollars meant to reduce poverty.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services sent a penalty notice to Mississippi in December. The agency determined the state must pay back nearly $101 million in welfare money it says officials misused during former Gov. Phil Bryant’s administration.

The letter represents the first time since the scandal broke in 2020 that HHS has confirmed rules were broken when Mississippi spent welfare money on things such as building a volleyball stadium and a million-dollar public speaking contract with a celebrity athlete. HHS is the federal agency that oversees the $16.5-billion annual Temporary Assistance for Needy Families block grants to states.

The Mississippi Department of Human Services, which administers the federal funds for the state and is still suing dozens of defendants over the misspending in ongoing civil litigation, has disputed the amount.

The welfare scandal took down a former state agency director, two nonprofit directors and a few others who pleaded guilty to federal crimes including fraud and bribery. They still await sentencing for their roles in the scheme, which involved diverting money from the poor to the pet projects of their friends, family and famous athletes.

But the penalty notice seeks administrative relief separate from criminal proceedings, signaling the next stage of the federal government’s response to the scandal.

The federal government used a combination of findings from the Office of State Auditor’s 2019 annual audit of federal funds released in May 2020 and a forensic audit commissioned by the state welfare agency released in October 2021 to arrive at a total penalty of $100,880,029.

The Office of Family Assistance inside HHS’s Administration for Children and Families is handling the matter for the federal government.

In response, Mississippi Department of Human Services Director Bob Anderson said he and the agency “appreciate the gravity of the suggested penalty,” but asked for additional time to fully respond.

“Through our ongoing discovery efforts, we have been attempting to validate the allowability or the misuse of a large portion of the funds,” Anderson wrote in a February letter. “Thus, it is the position of the agency that the amount of penalty proposed by OFA is based on insufficient information and is disputed by the agency.” 

The audits categorize misuse in several ways. Of the total $101 million, $12.5 million was deemed fraud, waste or abuse – primarily because of conflicts of interest or favoritism by former Mississippi Department of Human Services Director John Davis.

Most of the penalty instead consists of “unallowable” purchases. This is spending that either did not comply with federal regulations or did not come with proper documentation. The forensic audit notably lacked records to account for $40 million in TANF spent by Mississippi Community Education Center – the nonprofit at the center of some of the most attention-grabbing purchases – lumping the entire expenditure as a “questioned cost.”

Some purchases that make up the overarching welfare scandal figure may have been legal, but five years later, state officials are still seeking documentation to parse that out and potentially reduce the penalty.

Mississippi Today requested the penalty letter and response, as well as any other follow up communications, from the state welfare agency but was told any additional correspondence was exempt due to attorney-client privilege. 

“We can’t speak to ongoing negotiations in a legal matter,” said agency spokesperson Mark Jones.

The Mississippi Attorney General’s Office similarly would not comment. A spokesperson for the Governor’s Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Mississippi Today.

The notice from HHS was more than four years in the making, achieved right at the close of the Biden administration. Many of the top level officials at the Office of Family Assistance are no longer with the agency after Donald Trump took office in January.

Federal welfare officials had been holding off on making a request of repayment until they secured more information, or until getting clearance from the U.S. Department of Justice, which was conducting a parallel criminal investigation. 

“There are several ongoing federal and state investigations, which will likely mean a lengthy process before we can make our determination,” the federal agency told Mississippi Today in 2020, while Trump was still in his first term, “however, we are eager to come to a final penalty resolution and ensure that the state replaces any misused federal TANF funds with its own state fund.”

Federal prosecutors eventually charged five people in the welfare scandal: Davis, former professional wrestlers-turned-state contractors brothers Brett and Ted “Teddy” DiBiase, nonprofit director Christi Webb and Florida-based neuroscientist Jake Vanlandingham.

Separately, federal prosecutors charged nonprofit founder Nancy New and her son Zach New – operators of Mississippi Community Education Center – for defrauding the state of public education dollars.

Teddy DiBiase is the only one who has fought the federal charges. His trial was most recently set for this August, with additional delays possible.

The penalty Mississippi received is unprecedented. The rules around states doling out TANF funds to nonprofits are so lax, and the federal government’s authority to regulate the spending so weak, that states are rarely, if ever, held accountable for misspending. States have been penalized for failing to meet requirements for distributing direct cash to poor families, such as meeting a threshold for recipients who are working or come from two-parent households.

One expert said she was unaware of the federal government ever sending a penalty notice to a state for using TANF money on prohibited outside purchases.

“To the best of my knowledge this is the first one,” said Elizabeth Lower-Basch, a longtime economic justice advocate who has spent her career working on policy within TANF, including 10 years at the federal welfare agency.

The letter is one step in the federal government’s administrative process for recouping the funds and will result in a back and forth negotiation before the state must actually pay the penalty. 

“First, you may dispute the penalty … if you think the information or method that we used were in error or insufficient or that your actions in the absence of federal regulations, were based on a reasonable interpretation of the statute,” the letter from HHS reads.

Once negotiations are complete, the federal government will begin reducing the $86.5 million Mississippi is allotted in TANF money each year and require the state to make up the difference with state money until the penalty is paid.

Mississippi’s widespread TANF misspending was first revealed through arrests by the Office of State Auditor in February of 2020 after an eight-month investigation, starting with a tip that a former agency employee brought to Gov. Bryant in June of 2019 about an alleged kickback to Davis. The state had been approving as little as 2% of people applying for direct cash assistance through the TANF program, and while the recipient rolls dropped, private organizations received an unchecked windfall of money to provide ancillary services.

Annual audits of federal grant spending called the “single audit,” which the state auditor conducts on the federal government’s behalf each year, had not flagged the significant abuse that Davis and others were carrying out in the TANF program from 2016 to 2018. If not for the internal tip, it may have never been uncovered.

“HHS has very limited ability to research what states are doing that basically they’re required to rely on the state single audit for misuse of funds,” Lower-Basch said. “So unless something is directly brought to their attention, they’re not allowed to go poking into the state’s funds on their own.”

Meanwhile, this flexibility in TANF has not changed. Proposed federal rule changes to TANF published in 2023, which would have tightened regulations on how states could spend non-cash assistance funds, are dead after the Biden administration withdrew them last fall. 

“There are a lot of things I don’t think Congress intended for TANF to be used for, and in some cases I don’t think is the highest priority for the use of TANF funds, but it is lawful,” Lower-Basch said. “The idea that what very low-income people, who are struggling to keep their kids housed and fed and going to school, need is someone rich and famous telling them to work harder is disgusting, but it’s allowed.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Starkville policies shaped by MSU-induced seasonal influx of people

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mississippitoday.org – Lynn Spruill – 2025-03-11 11:09:00

Starkville policies shaped by MSU-induced seasonal influx of people

Editor’s note: Lynn Spruill is the second term mayor of Starkville. This piece is part of an ongoing Mississippi Today Ideas series showcasing perspectives of mayors across the state.


Starkville was founded in 1835 and Mississippi State University was founded as a land grant college in 1878. We have virtually come of age together. Our goal is to be a place where people want to live, work, play and learn.

Like our good friends to the north and south, as college towns we enjoy the cyclical fortune of having much of our community geared to the excitement of youth, learning, sports, and the rise and fall of population driven by the regular beat of each semester. I would venture to say that of the three, Starkville has the distinction of being even more impacted by Mississippi State’s ebb and flow than our counterparts because of our somewhat less diverse business population.

With that seasonal influx of students, comes the challenge of expanding our services to reflect that increased population without breaking the fiscal bank. This means being prepared for those events that bring not just the students but the alumni and visitors to our doorstep. Every city department rises to that challenge through their own respective techniques of excellent planning and execution.

The city of Starkville has one of Mississippi’s few nationally and state accredited police departments. That accreditation keeps our police force on the cutting edge of both the use of technology and the current norms for interaction with our residents, students and visitors.

Starkville Mayor Lynn Spruill

Policing is one of the most critical and fundamental requirements of a city. For a city that sees large influxes of visitors throughout the year, having an innovative police department is even more crucial.

One of the ways that we have managed that challenge and have pledged to continue to manage it is the heavy use of security cameras throughout our community. This force multiplier gives us great and lasting budgetary advantages over the ever-escalating cost of personnel and vehicles. The Board of Aldermen has adopted the recommendations of the police chief to invest in security cameras and the operations center that oversees the cameras so that our forces can be deployed quickly and efficiently to areas that become hotspots.

Our fire department is rated a 3. Only Biloxi and Gulfport have better class ratings with ratings of 2. The cities of Hattiesburg, Southaven, Columbus and Jackson are the only other 3 rated fire departments in the state.

That rating is important as it creates an understanding in the community for the businesses and the residents that we are capable of protecting with the highest order of first responders. The rating is a testament to the training equipment, personnel and water service capabilities that the city has invested in over the past 10 years. The challenge of training and equipment and pay remains a constant and must be evaluated every budget year.

The infrastructure that lies underground is one of the greatest challenges of any older municipality. Each city in Mississippi that is over 100 years old is facing the same issues of how to replace aging water, sewer and storm water lines.

In 2018 the city developed plans to replace an entire neighborhood’s water and sewer lines. We were spending an excessive amount of manpower hours on repairs in this neighborhood. This was eroding the public trust in our city services. The best and most efficient way to address this was to totally replace the water and sewer lines. We have not had a maintenance call in that neighborhood since the replacements. We have since completed two other neighborhoods and the plan is to evaluate each remaining neighborhood based on the data and begin those remedial efforts in a methodical method as we are able to afford them.

Fresh asphalt overlays are always a politician’s best friend, but they are budget busters if you have multiple miles of roads to address. Starkville recently enlisted a company called Civil Link to assess all our streets and provide us with a status of the streets on a scale of 1 to 10.

The goal is to bring all our streets up to a minimum of a 5 and keep them there. The options for extending the life of our streets include various cost-effective treatments. These treatments extend the life of the streets and, in some cases, cost one-third of what the traditional mill and overlay costs.

Our parks are the other aspect of what makes a city a place where people want to live. We have pledged to invest over $40 million in new and updated parks in the coming three years. Starkville has a 2% food and beverage tax that allows us to both pay for and pledge toward bonds for updating our older parks and constructing new ones. We conducted a master planning effort in 2016 and set about implementing it in 2017. Our success has been a testament to the participation of our community in helping us address their needs and desires.

Listening and understanding, communicating and acting are what is expected of any local government.

I believe that Starkville is succeeding because we are making positive things happen and not simply letting things happen to us. We are always looking for new ways to improve on our basic obligations of public safety and the provision of services.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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