Booker, Pressley Reintroduce MOMMIES Act to Confront Maternal Mortality Crisis and Expand Lifesaving Care

| Booker, Pressley Reintroduce MOMMIES Act to Confront Maternal Mortality Crisis and Expand Lifesaving Care |
| WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D‑NJ) and U.S. Representative Ayanna Pressley (D‑MA-07) reintroduced the Maximizing Outcomes for Moms through Medicaid Improvement and Enhancement of Services (MOMMIES) Act, a sweeping bill designed to reverse the nation’s rising maternal mortality rates and close the deadly racial gaps that disproportionately harm Black, Indigenous, and other women and birthing people of color.
Medicaid covers nearly half of all births in the United States, yet millions of pregnant and postpartum people still face gaps in coverage, limited access to providers, and barriers to essential care. The MOMMIES Act directly confronts these failures by expanding Medicaid postpartum coverage, guaranteeing comprehensive benefits, and strengthening access to primary, reproductive, and community‑based care. “It is unacceptable that, year after year, more mothers continue to die as a result of our nation’s inequitable and failing health care system — especially women of color,” said Senator Booker. “The MOMMIES Act is a critical step toward building an equitable, high‑quality maternal health care system that protects every mother in America.” "The maternal morbidity crisis that plagues our nation is as unjust as it is unnecessary," said Representative Pressley. "Our nation has the ability to support equitable, comprehensive, culturally-congruent healthcare for all—and that must include reproductive and maternal care for all people, and in particular communities of color who bear the brunt of this morbidity crisis. My paternal grandmother died during childbirth in the 1950s, and it is unacceptable that the statistical odds of a Black person's safe passage through childbirth remain much the same as the days of my Grandma Carrie. The MOMMIES Act is an essential step towards improving maternal health outcomes and saving lives." Between 2000 and 2014, the U.S. maternal mortality rate increased by 26 percent, even as rates declined in most other developed nations. Black women remain more than three times as likely to die from pregnancy‑related causes as white women. For every death, dozens more experience severe complications with lasting consequences for their health and economic security. What the MOMMIES Act would do:
The full text of the legislation is available here. ###
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