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Tag: maternal health

  • A terrible grade for DC in new health report on moms and babies – WTOP News

    A new report from the March of Dimes on preterm births is out and the D.C. area gets middle of the road to poor marks.

    A new report from the March of Dimes on preterm births is out and the D.C. area gets middle of the road to poor marks.

    The report gives D.C. a grade of “F,” as 898 babies were born premature in the District in 2024.

    The city ranks 45th of 52, including all states and Puerto Rico, with a preterm birth rate of 11.8%.

    By comparison, the country has a preterm birth rate of 10.4%, according to the report which gives the U.S. an overall grade of “D-plus.”

    “It’s a dark week for D.C., for moms and babies,” said Dr. Elizabeth Kielb, director of maternal and infant health for the March of Dimes in the D.C. area.

    Kielb said there’s a driving factor behind why the preterm birth rate is so high in D.C.

    “Almost a quarter of women are not receiving adequate prenatal care during their pregnancy, this is significantly higher than the national average of just over 16%,” she said.

    For Black mothers, the problem is even worse. The report shows in D.C., 30.2% of Black moms and their babies receive inadequate prenatal care.

    What care these moms are getting is often lacking, Kielb said.

    “Black moms especially, their concerns are dismissed when they are in the hospital. A lot of the time, they’re basically told they’re not in pain when they are in pain,” she said.

    In all three areas, Black babies were more likely to be preterm than all other babies.

    The preterm birth report card grades are not much better in Maryland and Virginia. Maryland received a “D-plus” and Virginia a “C-minus.”

    Kielb said systemic issues with the nation’s health care system are also to blame for the poor outcomes for mothers and newborns, and it’s really showing up in the D.C. region.

    “Maryland used to be significantly better, and now it’s D-plus,” she said.

    She said there several initiatives underway in the region to try and improve the situation, including new efforts in patient-centered care, policy at the state level and supporting the Maternal and Child Health force work group.

    “We have to do more. We have to address this here in our home, what we’re doing. And hopefully, this will spread,” Kielb said.

    Since 2008, the March of Dimes has released the report to educate and advocate for better mom and baby outcomes across the U.S.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Kyle Cooper

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  • Sunbury woman carried child for California couple suspected of scam

    SUNBURY — Sunbury resident Alexa Fasold thought she was helping a childless California couple when she agreed to be a surrogate, but learned they may be part of a nationwide scam before delivering the baby in October.

    The healthy infant boy has been placed with a foster family in Montour County while the FBI and California authorities investigate Silvia Zhang, 38, and Guojun Xuan, 65, the owners of Mark Surrogacy, an Arcadia, Calif.-based agency, who were accused of felony child endangerment and child neglect and later found to have 21 children between the ages of 2 and 13 — mostly toddlers delivered by surrogates — in their home or care.


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    By Marcia Moore mmoore@dailyitem.com

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  • Sunbury woman carried child for California couple suspected of scam

    SUNBURY — Sunbury resident Alexa Fasold thought she was helping a childless California couple when she agreed to be a surrogate, but learned they may be part of a nationwide scam before delivering the baby in October.

    The healthy infant boy has been placed with a foster family in Montour County while the FBI and California authorities investigate Silvia Zhang, 38, and Guojun Xuan, 65, the owners of Mark Surrogacy, an Arcadia, Calif.-based agency, who were accused of felony child endangerment and child neglect and later found to have 21 children between the ages of 2 and 13 — mostly toddlers delivered by surrogates — in their home or care.

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    By Marcia Moore mmoore@dailyitem.com

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  • Sunbury woman carried child for California couple suspected of scam

    SUNBURY — Sunbury resident Alexa Fasold thought she was helping a childless California couple when she agreed to be a surrogate, but learned they may be part of a nationwide scam before delivering the baby in October.

    The healthy infant boy has been placed with a foster family in Montour County while the FBI and California authorities investigate Silvia Zhang, 38, and Guojun Xuan, 65, the owners of Mark Surrogacy, an Arcadia, Calif.-based agency, who were accused of felony child endangerment and child neglect and later found to have 21 children between the ages of 2 and 13 — mostly toddlers delivered by surrogates — in their home or care.

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    By Marcia Moore mmoore@dailyitem.com

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  • Cimilre S6 & S6+ Adjustable Breast Pumps Wins Mom’s Choice Award(R)

    Press Release


    Nov 12, 2025 09:00 EST

    Mom-approved pumps recognized for comfort, quiet performance, and truly personalized sessions

     

    Cimilre is excited to announce that their S6 Adjustable Double Electric and S6+ Adjustable and Rechargeable Double Electric Breast Pumps received the Mom’s Choice Award® in the Gear & Accessories – Feeding category, recognizing products that meet high standards of quality, value, and family-friendly design.

    Built for real comfort (and real life)

    • GentleFlow Technology™: A unique quad-diaphragm motor creates smooth, quiet suction that feels more natural – without sacrificing performance.

    • Personalized control with 85 easy combinations: Both the S6 and S6+ let you adjust cycle speeds and suction strength in both Massage and Expression modes for a total of 85 setting combinations.

    • Quiet, discreet, and nighttime-friendly: With a motor rated under 45 dB and a built-in nightlight, late-night or shared-space pumping feels less disruptive.

    • Hospital-strength performance: Up to 285 mmHg suction provides the power parents look for when establishing and maintaining milk supply.

    • S6+ adds true portability: Everything moms love about the S6, plus a rechargeable battery for life on the go; commutes, travel, or pumping between meetings.

    Thoughtful touches that moms and lactation specialists appreciate

    • Get the Right Fit program offers an additional breast shield size FREE, because comfortable sessions and optimizing output start with the right size fit.

    • Backlit LCD + timer to track sessions at a glance, even during midnight feeds.

    • BPA/BPS/phthalate-free parts for peace of mind.

    • Single or double pumping flexibility for changing routines.

    “From day one, our goal with the S6 and S6+ has been simple: help moms feel more comfortable and in control of their pumping journey,” said Tabatha Young, CLC, and Marketing Manager at Cimilre. “This recognition validates what parents tell us every day, that a quiet, gentle pump with settings that adapt to you and your personal situation can make all the difference during pump sessions; empowering moms during this sensitive and incredibly important time.”

    About Cimilre
    Inspired by a team of CLC’s, Cimilre designs breastfeeding essentials that let parents personalize their pumping journey. From fully adjustable pumps with GentleFlow Technology™ to ultra-portable options the size of a sticky note, Cimilre focuses on comfort, confidence, and support for every family.

    The award-winning Cimilre S6 and S6+ are available now on the official Cimilre website and on Amazon, along with our other innovative products.

    Source: Cimilre Breast Pumps

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  • International Confederation of Midwives to Host Thousands of Delegates at Its 33rd Triennial Congress in Bali

    International Confederation of Midwives to Host Thousands of Delegates at Its 33rd Triennial Congress in Bali

    The International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) is excited to announce that the 33rd ICM Triennial Congress will take place in Bali from 11-14 June 2023. The event will bring together over 2,300 midwives, maternal health advocates, and healthcare professionals from around the world to share knowledge and best practices and to celebrate the crucial role of midwives in improving maternal and newborn health. 

    According to a recent study by the World Health Organization (WHO), one woman dies every two minutes from pregnancy or childbirth-related complications globally. This alarming statistic highlights the urgent need to invest in maternal healthcare and the critical role of midwives in ensuring safe and healthy childbirth, but also in providing essential reproductive health services. 

    “The 33rd Triennial Congress is a unique opportunity to bring together midwives from all over the world to collaborate and share evidence-based practices and experiences,” said Dr. Franka Cadée, President of the ICM. “We are delighted to be able to bring everyone together again after the pandemic, and we hope to raise awareness of the critical role of midwives in the reproductive health of women, gender-diverse people, and families globally.” 

    The Congress will feature plenary sessions, interactive workshops, and poster presentations covering a wide range of topics related to midwifery, including maternal and newborn health, family planning, and midwifery education and regulation. Participants will have the opportunity to network with colleagues from around the world and share their knowledge and experiences. It will also provide a platform for midwives to advocate for increased investment in the profession and to advance midwife-led education and integration into health systems worldwide. 

    “Together with all midwives in Indonesia, it is an honour to host this sharing and learning session, especially with the charm of the island of Bali, whose nature, culture, and beauty are nothing short of inspirational,” said Emi Nurjasmi, President of the Indonesian Midwives Association and ICM Board Member representing Southeast Asia. “With delegates, speakers, and exhibitors from around the world, this Congress is designed not only to support the growth of the midwifery profession, but also to encourage midwives and women to come together, build relationships, grow ideas, and identify pathways for advancement.” 

    For more information about the 33rd ICM Triennial Congress, please visit the Congress website at https://midwives2023.org/

    ICM is pleased to provide complimentary media passes to journalists interested in covering the Congress. Submit a request for accreditation of media representatives at the link below: 

    https://midwives2023.org/media/

    The International Confederation of Midwives is an international, accredited non-governmental organisation that supports, represents and works to strengthen professional associations of midwives throughout the world.

    Source: International Confederation of Midwives

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  • A Republican Congresswoman’s Lasting Regret

    A Republican Congresswoman’s Lasting Regret

    Among the things Jaime Herrera Beutler remembers about January 6, 2021, is that her husband managed to turn off the television just in time.

    He was at home with their three young children in southwestern Washington State when the riot began. It had taken him a few moments to make out the shaky footage of the mob as it tore through the Capitol. Then he started to recognize the hallways, the various corridors that he knew led to the House floor, where his wife was preparing to break from her party and speak in favor of certifying the 2020 presidential election for Joe Biden. He grabbed the remote before the kids could register what was about to happen.

    It was a few moments later that Herrera Beutler, huddled among her Republican colleagues, heard the door. “I will never forget the pounding,” she told me recently: Boom, boom, boom.

    Before January 6, Herrera Beutler was a purple-district congresswoman who had spent most of her 12-year tenure removed from controversy, passing legislation on bipartisan issues such as maternal health and endangered wildlife while maintaining a social conservatism that kept her in good standing with the base. In the weeks that followed the insurrection, however, when she and nine other House Republicans voted to impeach President Donald Trump, the 44-year-old found herself the pariah of a party whose broader membership, for most of her career, had not precisely known she existed. Today, when the 118th Congress is sworn in, she, like all but two of the Republicans who voted to impeach, will find herself out of office.

    In an interview with The Atlantic about her six terms in the House and the Trump-backed primary challenge that ousted her, Herrera Beutler remained convinced of Trump’s culpability for the events of January 6. Yet she appeared still bewildered that a crisis of such magnitude had come to pass, and that not even her own constituents were immune to Trump’s propaganda about the 2020 election and the insurrection itself. “I didn’t know that I had so many people who would be like, ‘What are you talking about? This was a peaceful protest,’” she told me. “I had no idea the depth of misinformation people were receiving, especially in my own home.”

    Throughout our conversation, it was clear that the insurrection’s fallout hadn’t changed Herrera Beutler the way it had Liz Cheney or Adam Kinzinger, the two Republicans who sat on the January 6 committee and who have publicly committed themselves to keeping Trump out of office. These and other Republicans who retired or lost their seats after voting to impeach Trump have seemed liberated to speak about the GOP’s widespread delusion over election fraud. But Herrera Beutler is different: refusing to say that the forces of Trumpism have triggered a fundamental shift in her party, even as her own career was upended by them. Despite two years of hindsight, she seems to have rationalized her party’s continued promotion of lies concerning January 6 as a function of tactical error—believing that had Republicans and Democrats agreed to proceed with witnesses during Trump’s impeachment trial, and had she communicated the stakes differently back home, her base would have rejected the conspiracy theories and accepted Trump’s guilt. “I know a majority of the Republicans who disagree with me on impeachment, had they seen and talked to the people that I had, and had they seen what I saw—I have no doubt about where they would have come down,” she said. “I really don’t.”

    That Herrera Beutler has arrived at this conviction might seem naive but is in many ways understandable. For the better part of 12 years, she has been reinforced in the idea that the Republicans in her district are ideologically independent, cocooned from the national party as it leaps from one identity to the next. In her first bid for Congress, at the height of the Tea Party wave, she easily beat challengers from the right to become, at just 31 years old, the first Hispanic to represent Washington State in Congress. She had barely unpacked before the media christened her the future of her party. To the disappointment of the Republican leadership, however, the young and charismatic statehouse veteran wasn’t terribly interested in developing a national profile. Over the next several years, Herrera Beutler instead oriented her office around the hyperlocal work her constituents seemed to prefer—efforts such as expanding the forest-products industry and protecting the Columbia River’s salmon and steelhead runs from sea lions.

    On January 6, Herrera Beutler’s career moved onto alien terrain. Immediately after the insurrection, she directed her staff to start making calls, to find out where Trump had been during the rioting and why. Late that afternoon, she texted White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows for answers—“We need to hear from the president. On TV,” she sent, to no response—and, on January 11, two days before the impeachment vote, she privately pressed Kevin McCarthy for his impression of Trump’s culpability. During their conversation, the House minority leader confessed that the president had refused his pleas over the phone to call off the rioters—that as they smashed the windows of McCarthy’s office, Trump accused him of not caring enough about purported election fraud. For Herrera Beutler, it was enough to prove Trump’s guilt. In a press release the next day, and later a town hall back in her district, she invoked the conversation with McCarthy to explain her decision to vote to impeach.

    At the time, she hadn’t thought twice about airing the details of the Trump-McCarthy call. In the context of the various other things that she and the public had learned by that point, she told me, “I didn’t think it was unique or profound.” In fact, for McCarthy’s reputation, it was. The California Republican would soon make something of a penance visit to Trump at Mar-a-Lago, despite having been, according to Herrera Beutler and other (anonymous) Republican members who were privy to details of the call, terrified and livid at the height of the insurrection, acutely aware of Trump’s real-time recognition of the danger and refusal to do anything about it. Before long, Herrera Beutler’s revelation about the Trump-McCarthy call became the lead story on CNN. Jamie Raskin, the House Democrat managing Trump’s impeachment trial in the Senate, suddenly wanted to know everything about this congresswoman he had hardly heard of.

    For Herrera Beutler, the attention was unlike anything she’d experienced. “I wasn’t trying to insert myself into the national conversation,” she told me. “I wasn’t trying to be the, you know …” She trailed off, seemingly trying to say something like the truth teller. She was open to testifying in the impeachment trial and contacted Nancy Pelosi’s counsel about how to proceed, according to reporting by Rachael Bade and Karoun Demirjian in Unchecked, yet the House speaker’s attorney never relayed the message to Raskin and his staff. With zero surefire commitments from Republican witnesses to Trump’s conduct during the riot, and facing pressure from his own party not to gum up the 46th president’s honeymoon period with proceedings against the 45th, Raskin rushed the trial to a close.

    If Herrera Beutler had pushed more publicly to testify, would Raskin have charged ahead and subpoenaed others? Would it have changed the final vote in the Senate? It’s impossible to say. But for Herrera Beutler, the outcome remains bound up in regret. She said it was “overwhelming” when she began to realize “that good people, honest people, amazing people that I knew” believed, for example, that antifa had orchestrated the riot. “Because, at that point, what could I do?” In retrospect, she believes that pushing ahead with a full trial, before public opinion about January 6 could “bake,” as she puts it, might have plugged the flow of conspiracies in her district and elsewhere. The implication, left unsaid, is that it also might have changed the outcome of her primary. “Had we made everything as public as we could at that moment, I think that we could have come to a better agreed-upon actual history of what happened,” she said. “That’s the only thing that I wish I had known—I moved into this thinking we all had the same information, and we didn’t.”

    Though she said she appreciates the “sense of duty” of the lawmakers on the January 6 committee—whose final report was published just before we spoke—Herrera Beutler was pessimistic about the resonance of their work. “The challenge for me with the committee was that the 70 million people who voted for Trump are never going to get anything out of that,” she said. “And that’s who I wanted to move.”

    This past August, a Trump-backed Republican and former Green Beret named Joe Kent, who had promoted the former president’s lies about the 2020 election, defeated Herrera Beutler in the Third Congressional District’s jungle primary. (Two months later, Kent narrowly lost the general election to Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, who will be the first Democrat in the seat since Herrera Beutler took office in 2011.) On the one hand, Herrera Beutler seems clear-eyed about the forces behind her loss. “It’s just turned into such a tit-for-tat on personality things, and I think my base has definitely at times wanted to see more of that from me,” she said. “And that’s probably part of why the guy in my race made it as far as he did, because that was his oxygen—scratching that itch and making people feel justified in their ideas.”

    On the other hand, Herrera Beutler at various times in our conversation expressed an optimism about the future of Republican politics that seemed unmoored from the fact that her party’s base had rejected her. In criticizing both Republican and Democratic lawmakers she called “members in tweet only,” she said she often wondered what their constituents think “when they don’t get anything done—like when they can’t help a local hospital with a permit, or when Grandma can’t get her spouse’s disability payment from the VA.” “I don’t know if they just speechify when they go home,” she said, “but I know that the American people are going to get tired of that. It’s just a question of when, and under what circumstance.” The broader results of the midterm elections, in which numerous Republicans in the mold of Kent ultimately lost to Democrats, would seem to prove her point. But the results of countless Republican primaries, including the victories of election deniers such as Kari Lake in Arizona, indicate that the “when” is likely still far off.

    Perhaps one reason Herrera Beutler insists that a “restoration is coming” for the Republican Party: She’s probably going to run again. She won’t say so definitively; she told me she’s looking forward to living in one place with her family and “just being functional.” “I mean, would I be shocked if I ran for something? At some point in my future? No,” she said. The sheer possibility might explain her unwillingness to speak candidly about her party’s current leaders, even two years after the cumulative letdown of January 6. Reports have suggested that her long and friendly relationship with McCarthy, for instance, ruptured after she inadvertently exposed his two-faced response to the insurrection. Bade and Demirjian have written that the House Republican leader exploded at Herrera Beutler, making her cry. (In a joint statement, McCarthy and Herrera Beutler denied that this happened.) When I asked Herrera Beutler for her thoughts about McCarthy’s current bid for the speakership, she demurred, saying, “I don’t want to be the one who comments on that.”

    It wasn’t her place, she reasoned. She no longer has a voice in how the House Republican conference chooses to lead. And in the end, even if she is reluctant to acknowledge it, few things constitute more of an indictment of her party than this. All of the qualities that once fueled Herrera Beutler’s rise are still there. She is still a young Hispanic woman in a party that skews old, white, and male. She still rhapsodizes about individual liberty, still considers herself a social conservative in a moment when the Republican stance on abortion seems as unpopular as it ever has. But in little more than a decade, Herrera Beutler has gone from being the future of the party to a casualty of one vote.

    Three thousand miles away from Capitol Hill, she begins the work of moving on. She wants to continue to serve the public, she told me, but as a private citizen for the first time since her 20s, she’s still trying to figure out what that means. “I need a cause, something that gives me something to fight for,” she said. “And I just don’t know yet what that’s going to be.”

    Elaina Plott Calabro

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