Texas
Why are pregnancy and childbirth killing so many Black women in Texas?
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Nakeenya Wilson was at a gathering of Texas’ maternal mortality evaluate committee when she acquired the decision: Her sister, who had lately had a child, was having a stroke.
Wilson raced to the hospital, abandoning a stack of recordsdata documenting the tales of girls who had died from being pregnant and childbirth problems. Most of the girls in these recordsdata have been Black, identical to Wilson, who skilled a traumatic supply herself.
“The entire thing simply jogged my memory, if you happen to change the identify on these recordsdata, it might be me. It might be my sister,” stated Wilson, who serves because the committee’s neighborhood consultant.
A decade in the past, when Texas first shaped the Maternal Mortality and Morbidity Assessment Committee, Black girls have been twice as probably as white girls, and 4 instances as probably as Hispanic girls, to die from being pregnant and childbirth.
These disparities haven’t improved, in response to the committee’s newest report, printed Thursday.
In 2020, pregnant Black girls have been twice as prone to expertise vital well being points like hemorrhage, preeclampsia and sepsis. Whereas problems from obstetric hemorrhage declined general in Texas in recent times, Black girls noticed a rise of practically 10%.
Wilson stated these statistics present the affect of a well being care system that’s biased towards Black girls.
“We’re nonetheless dying and being disproportionately impacted by hemorrhage when everyone else is getting higher,” Wilson stated. “Not solely did it not enhance, it didn’t keep the identical — it acquired worse.”
The causes of those disparities aren’t at all times easy to establish, they usually’re even tougher to repair. It’s a mixture of diminished well being care entry, systemic racism, and the affect of “social determinants of well being” — the circumstances during which somebody is born, lives, works and grows up.
Wilson stated she and her sister are prime examples. They grew up in poverty, with out medical insurance, routine physician’s visits or constant entry to wholesome meals.
“We began behind the ball,” she stated. “We’ve had so many exhausting issues occur to us which have contributed to our well being by the point we’re of childbearing age.”
Maternal well being advocates in Texas say addressing these disparities will take greater than fixing labor and supply practices. It is going to require constructing a complete well being care system that addresses a neighborhood’s wants throughout the board, beginning lengthy earlier than being pregnant.
In the long run, Wilson’s sister survived her postpartum well being scare. However the expertise reminded Wilson why she volunteers her time to learn, evaluate and analyze tales of girls who’ve died from being pregnant and childbirth.
“While you take a look at the work marginalized individuals do, they do it as a result of they don’t really feel like they’ve any alternative,” she stated. “If we need to see issues change, and we need to be secure, we have now to advocate for our personal security.”
Implicit bias
For greater than three months, D’Andra Willis had been ready for the discharge of the state’s maternal mortality report. As a doula with The Afiya Middle, a Black-led reproductive rights group in North Texas, Willis has been a vocal advocate for Black maternal well being. Doulas are educated professionals who help pregnant girls, bodily and emotionally, throughout childbirth.
However when the report was lastly launched Thursday, Willis didn’t rush to learn it. She was busy making an attempt to persuade considered one of her pregnant shoppers to go to the hospital, and he or she didn’t want any extra proof that the well being care system was stacked towards Black girls, she stated.
Her shopper had different children to juggle and, after earlier experiences, was nervous about how she’d be handled on the emergency room.
“She’s scared to go, and he or she must go,” Willis stated. “She’s preventing for her life. … I see how this occurs.”
For the primary time, the evaluate committee thought of discrimination as a contributing issue to maternal dying, discovering it performed a task in 12% of deaths in 2019. Wilson stated that’s probably simply the tip of the iceberg.
“That’s 12% as definable by the system we at the moment use,” she stated. “Does that seize all the things? Most likely not.”
Dr. Rakhi Dimino, an OB-GYN in Houston, stated discrimination typically exhibits up in delicate ways in which will not be obvious to a well being care supplier — however make a huge effect on the affected person.
“In the event you requested a hospital, ‘Do you could have an worker on workers who’s racist?’ they might say, ‘No, we might by no means permit that,’” she stated. “However it’s not at all times these apparent conditions. It’s within the smaller conversations, within the notes, within the chart, and that may be simply as harmful.”
She stated sufferers are generally recorded as noncompliant, or leaving towards medical recommendation. However when medical doctors take time to speak with them, they be taught that they must be house to fulfill the varsity bus, or can’t get transportation to a specialist’s workplace throughout city.
“These are obstacles we will resolve for, if we’re open to doing so,” she stated.
One of many committee’s suggestions was to diversify the state’s maternal well being workforce. Willis additionally needs to see extra Black girls utilizing doulas, who can advocate for a pregnant affected person who could also be experiencing discrimination.
State Rep. Shawn Thierry, D-Houston, has launched a invoice for the upcoming legislative session that might require well being care suppliers and medical college students to be educated in cultural competency and implicit biases.
“In observe, a lot of that is taking place on the unconscious, on the unconscious degree,” Thierry stated. “We’re by no means going to have the ability to appropriate it till we start to establish it. It’s the elephant within the room.”
Well being care entry
Nearly two-thirds of Black girls are on Medicaid after they give beginning, in contrast with lower than a 3rd of white girls. The report discovered girls with out private-pay medical insurance have been at a very elevated danger for extreme maternal morbidity.
Ladies with out constant medical insurance are much less prone to entry well timed prenatal care, contributing to being pregnant and childbirth problems, and extra prone to produce other well being problems, together with weight problems and gestational diabetes.
Till lately, girls who delivered on Medicaid in Texas misplaced their medical insurance after two months. The report discovered that 15% of maternal deaths occurred greater than 43 days after childbirth.
In 2021, the Texas Home voted to broaden postpartum Medicaid for 12 months, the maternal mortality committee’s prime suggestion. The Senate knocked it down to 6 months; the federal authorities has stated that proposal is “not approvable” in its present kind.
At the moment, nobody is being moved off of Medicaid as a result of pandemic public well being emergency, giving lawmakers a second probability at passing 12 months of postpartum Medicaid earlier than anybody loses protection.
Thierry stated this proposal must be a straightforward win for lawmakers and Black girls alike.
“Nevertheless, our work doesn’t cease there,” she stated. “It’s extremely vital that the Texas Legislature perceive that that’s not sufficient.”
Thierry is making ready what she’s calling the “Momnibus” — a package deal of payments geared toward increasing well being care entry, gathering higher info and strengthening the maternal mortality evaluate course of. The payments are geared toward bettering maternal well being throughout the board, however with particular consideration to the experiences of Black girls.
“Black girls shouldn’t be a footnote on this report,” she stated. “We’re the report. That’s my takeaway.”
Thierry, who’s Black, has firsthand expertise with these points. Whereas she was present process an emergency C-section, a health care provider positioned the epidural too excessive. She knew one thing wasn’t proper and begged to be put below anesthesia, which probably saved her life, she stated.
For years, she blamed herself and saved quiet about her expertise. It wasn’t till she was elected to the Texas Legislature in 2017 and skim the maternal mortality report that she began to place her experiences in a bigger context.
“I virtually died. I used to be handled terribly. Nobody noticed me,” she stated. “I don’t suppose a girl ought to must be a sitting member of the Texas Legislature to really feel comfy sharing their story.”
Publish-Roe laws
The info within the newest maternal mortality report is from 2019, virtually three years earlier than Texas turned the most important state within the nation to ban practically all abortions. These bans are anticipated to have a disproportionate affect on Black girls, who nationally account for about 40% of all abortions.
One examine from the College of Colorado Boulder estimates {that a} nationwide abortion ban would result in a 24% improve in maternal mortality, with Black girls experiencing the sharpest improve, at 39%.
A specific concern is the remedy of ectopic pregnancies, which happen when a fertilized egg implants outdoors the uterus and are life-threatening if left untreated. Ruptured ectopic pregnancies have been the main explanation for obstetric hemorrhage deaths in Texas in 2019, the report discovered.
Whereas ectopic pregnancies are particularly exempt from Texas’s abortion legal guidelines, medical doctors are reportedly delaying care of those nonviable pregnancies as a consequence of confusion and concern. Based on a letter from the Texas Medical Affiliation, one Central Texas doctor was instructed by their hospital to not deal with an ectopic being pregnant till a rupture occurred.
Dimino, the Houston OB-GYN, stated the brand new legal guidelines are making medical doctors further cautious, which inevitably results in delays.
“We’re taking these additional out than we used to, as a substitute of offering remedy primarily based on the very best proof that we have now,” she stated. “If a girl is at house, over every week’s time, this being pregnant can develop and burst open, and you find yourself with a life-threatening or life-ending scenario.”
Qiana Arnold, a doula with The Afiya Middle, stated she’s notably anxious, in gentle of the brand new abortion bans, to see what occurs to the variety of girls who die as a consequence of murder or suicide. In 2019, violence accounted for 27% of pregnancy-related deaths.
“Persons are going to kill themselves,” she stated. “Folks will kill themselves as a result of they didn’t need to have that youngster.”
Within the first post-Roe legislative session, which begins Jan. 9, Democrats are hopeful that proposals to enhance maternal well being will get extra traction than earlier than.
“It’s my hope that every one of my colleagues within the Legislature will stand and say it’s time to prioritize Black moms,” Thierry stated. “These are the ladies which can be bearing life, however they need to not have to take action in change for their very own.”
Disclosure: The Texas Medical Affiliation and The Afiya Middle have been monetary supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan information group that’s funded partly by donations from members, foundations and company sponsors. Monetary supporters play no position within the Tribune’s journalism. Discover a full checklist of them right here.
Texas
Texas Longhorns In The NFL: Cameron Dicker, Bijan Robinson Have Games To Remember
The Texas Longhorns had a great weekend in the College Football Playoffs and the NFL. Multiple former players scored touchdowns, sacks and even made interesting kicking history.
Here are some of the top performances for former Longhorns in the NFL:
Jones tried his best for Denver against the Los Angeles Chargers having his third game of the season with ten tackles (seven solo). He even added his tenth pass deflection of the year, the first time he has had 10+ pass deflections in his five-year NFL career.
The Broncos however dropped to 9-6, losing 34-27.
The other Longhorn in the Broncos secondary also had a good game to a lesser extent. Locke got six tackles (two solo) which was third on the team. The Broncos next play the Cincinnati Bengals on Dec. 28th.
Now going to the winning side of Thursday Night Football, Dicker knocked down both of his field goal attempts, including a rare fair catch free kick from 57 yards out to cut the Chargers’ deficit to 21-13.
That kick was his second longest of the season, Dicker also knocked down a 37-yarder earlier in the second quarter as well and knocked both of his extra-pointers. The Chargers are now 9-6 this season.
Worthy has seen his production increase for the Chiefs in recent weeks. And on Sunday against the Houston Texans, Worthy had a career-high seven receptions for 65 yards and a touchdown. The touchdown came in the third quarter to give the Chiefs a 24-16 lead. Kansas City went on to hold on 27-19 to continue to a league-best 14-1 record.
That’s Worthy’s fifth touchdown of the season which ties him for first on Kansas City in receiving touchdowns with Noah Gray.
Tucker has struggled a tiny bit in recent weeks but he bounced back strongly in the 34-17 win against the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Tucker tried and succeeded with a 51-yarder late in the second quarter to extend the lead 17-7, and then he hit a 23-yarder to put the game to rest in the fourth and make it 34-17.
Tucker also knocked his four extra point attempts as the Ravens won a crucial game, and moved to 10-5.
The Falcons dominated on all cylinders with new QB Michael Penix against the New York Giants, and Bijan Robinson helped a lot with it.
He rushed for 94 yards on 22 attempts, scoring two touchdowns, one in the second and one in the third. Robinson is now at 11 touchdowns this season for the Falcons as they win 34-7 and improve to 8-7.
The Browns struggled, losing 24-6 to the Cincinnati Bengals. But Hicks led the team in tackles with nine (seven solo).
But the Browns move to 3-12 after losing their fourth straight.
On the other sideline, Ossai had his best game of the season, having a season-high in tackles with five (four solo) and also getting his fourth sack of the season.
Ossai capped off his dominant performance with his first forced fumble as well as the Bengals win their third straight, and go to 7-8.
Monday Night Football between the Green Bay Packers and the New Orleans Saints will only have one former Longhorn with Saints linebacker Jaylan Ford, has only four tackles all season for them.
That game will start at 7:15 p.m. CT on ESPN.
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Texas
Texas vs South Dakota State: Longhorns head into holiday break with a 46-point win
Texas women’s basketball nonconference schedule
Texas women’s basketball nonconference schedule
After a 103-57 win over South Dakota State on Sunday, the Texas Longhorns will head into their holiday break on a high note.
Sunday’s lopsided win at Moody Center came five days after Texas beat La Salle by a 111-49 score. Texas hadn’t scored 100 points in consecutive games since it did so against McNeese State and UTSA in November 2017.
Texas never trailed on Sunday, and freshmen Jordan Lee and Justice Carlton served as first-half catalysts for the No. 6 team in the USA Today Sports Coaches Poll. Lee started and scored 10 first-quarter points while Carlton came off the bench to score 17 first-half points on 7-of-9 shooting. Combined, Lee and Carlton had 29 points in the first half. South Dakota State’s entire team had 26.
While Texas built its 53-26 lead in the first half, eight of the nine Longhorns who played scored. The surprising exception was All-American Madison Booker, who distributed three assists and grabbed three rebounds but missed her three shots.
A perennial NCAA tournament qualifier that had split its prior games against ranked Creighton and Duke teams, South Dakota State (10-3) never cut into its 27-point halftime deficit in the second half.
Here are three observations from Sunday’s 46-point rout:
Mwenentanda remains patient with her process
Carlton finished with 19 points and nine rebounds while senior forward Taylor Jones had 15 points, 11 rebounds and four blocks. Lee and senior guard Rori Harmon respectively added 14 and 13 points for a Texas team that shot 53.9% from the field. Booker was limited to nine points, but Harmon pointed out after the game that Booker’s +/- of 41 was the best among the Longhorns.
Ndjakalenga Mwenentanda was the fifth Longhorn to record a double-digit scoring total. Over 11 minutes, Mwenentanda scored 10 points on 5-of-6 shooting.
Mwenentanda grew up in South Dakota and was that state’s Gatorade Player of the Year in 2022. The school in Sioux Falls where she won a state championship is about an hour drive from South Dakota State’s campus. Mwenentanda was recruited by the Jackrabbits but she said that she was attracted to what Texas could offer her athletically and academically.
Since arriving on campus, Mwenentanda has shown glimpses of her potential since arriving at Texas, but she has mainly been a role player for the Longhorns. Sunday was the 11th time that she scored at least 10 points in a game. Just twice in her career has she played more than 25 minutes.
Mwenentanda sees herself as a Swiss Army Knife on the Texas roster. She’s listed as a 6-foot-2 guard on the team’s roster, but Vic Schaefer has mainly used her as a “4” player this season. Mwenentanda played some in the paint last season, but she got more playing time as a guard. Training more with the post players this offseason has helped her adjust to that role this season.
“I physically prepared for it, I mentally prepared for it. I’m enjoying it,” Mwenentanda said.
Schaefer praised the play of Mwenentanda in his postgame press conference on Sunday. Earlier in the week, Mwenentanda said that she was staying patient with her process.
“Everybody’s process is different. I feel like comparing myself to other people’s process would be one reason to give up,” Mwenentanda said. “Everybody on this team are great players, are great women so even though this process is a little bit different for me, it’s not something I look at negatively because I know everybody’s working hard and everybody’s pitching in.”
Status for sidelined Laila Phelia remains unclear
Texas senior Laila Phelia missed her third straight game on Sunday. Phelia suffered a detached retina during the offseason. Texas has not announced a timeline for her return, but Schaefer has said the program will soon release an update.
The leading scorer at Michigan last season, Phelia has played in just eight of the Longhorns’ 13 games. She is averaging 6.1 points and 19.4 minutes per game while shooting 40.5% from the field.
What’s next for Texas? Rest and one final tune-up
Next on the schedule for Texas is a home game against UTRGV (6-6) on Dec. 29. That will be the Longhorns’ final game until their Southeastern Conference debut at Oklahoma on Jan. 2, 2025.
But first, the Longhorns will get some rest. Mwenentanda won’t be able to fly back to South Dakota until Monday morning, but the rest of the Longhorns headed home after Sunday’s win. The Longhorns will return to practice on Dec. 27.
How will the Longhorns spend their break? The three players who attended Sunday’s postgame press conference – Carlton, Harmon and Mwenentanda – said they’d take some time off, but they added that they’ll get some workouts in with family and hometown trainers.
As for Schaefer? He’ll do some work over the break, but he won’t be in his office.
“I’m going to be standing in about knee-deep water in the morning calling a duck and having my son (Logan) with me and my dog, my hunting dog, not my show dog. We’ll enjoy some time together in the morning and then we’ll wet a line and fish in the afternoon,” Schaefer said. “I’ll probably sit in my bow stand a couple of nights with my computer in my lap and watch film. I don’t really care if I see anything or not, but I usually see a lot. I get more work done sitting in a bow stand in a bow blind than I do a lot of times sitting at my desk.
“I’ll just enjoy time with family. I’m really blessed with Holly and Logan and Blair here and we’re all together at Christmas, and it’s just a special time for us. We really embrace the Christmas season.”
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Texas
Former Colorado defensive end Dayon Hayes transfers to Texas A&M
Former Colorado Buffaloes defensive end Dayon Hayes is set to continue his collegiate career at Texas A&M after transferring following a season-ending injury. Hayes, a 6-foot-3, 265-pound defender, began his journey at Pitt, where he played from 2020 to 2023, accumulating 13 sacks and 80 tackles over four seasons.
At Pitt, Hayes showcased his potential in his sophomore and junior years, logging around 500 combined snaps and producing 30 pressures. His breakout came in 2023 when he amassed 44 pressures and a 13% pass rush win rate, ranking 12th in the ACC. Hayes also demonstrated solid run defense, posting an average tackle depth of 1.6 yards and recording 10.5 stops for loss. His ability to set the edge and prevent runners from escaping outside made him a critical piece of Pitt’s defense.
Following his success at Pitt, Hayes transferred to Colorado as a highly sought-after addition to Deion Sanders’ revamped Buffaloes roster. He made an immediate impact, registering two sacks and 3.5 tackles for loss in Colorado’s first three games. However, his promising start was cut short by a knee injury in the fourth game, sidelining him for the rest of the season.
Deion Sanders says he won’t attend the 2025 NFL Draft in Green Bay
Despite the setback, Hayes’ strong early performance likely earned him a medical redshirt, granting him another year of eligibility. With his final collegiate season on the horizon, Hayes opted to join Texas A&M, bringing his pass-rushing skills to the SEC. The Aggies, coming off an eight-win season, are set to face USC in the Las Vegas Bowl. Hayes’ ability to pressure quarterbacks and defend the run should bolster Texas A&M’s defensive front, adding experience and depth to their edge rotation for the 2024 season.
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