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INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE OF CHICAGO

  • 2 Aug 2024 12:32 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The March of Dimes report, shares how ob-gyn facility closings adversely impacted maternal health care especially Chicago's south and west side communities. These closings resulted in maternity care deserts, decreased access care, impaired the quality of care, and more. Recently, the AMA and Sinai Health Institute stated they agreed with this impact. 

    Policy and actions are needed to correct the problems created in part by the change in access and distribution of maternal care in the US including Chicago and the State of Illinois. 

    Download the March of Dimes report here>

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  • 1 Aug 2024 9:36 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Gov. JB Pritzker signed a new law Monday that advocates hope will close maternal health equity gaps by expanding coverage for services. [Health News Illinois]

    The law tasks insurers with covering all pregnancy, postpartum and newborn care provided by perinatal doulas and licensed certified professional midwives. 

    Coverage includes home births and home visits.

    Home visits by lactation consultants would also be covered, as well as recommended products like breast pumps and feeding aids.

    Insurance policies will have to cover up to $8,000 of home visits by a perinatal doula for each pregnancy and postpartum period.

    Medicaid will also cover certified professional midwife services.

    Pritzker said during a bill signing in Chicago that the law follows through on his promise earlier this spring to address disparities in maternal health, specifically among Black women.

    “Black women are three times more likely than white women to die from medical complications during pregnancy and childbirth,” he said, citing a Department of Public Health report released last year. “That is appalling, it's unacceptable and we're not going to let that happen anymore in the state of Illinois.”

    Sen. Lakesia Collins, a Democrat from Chicago who sponsored the legislation this spring, said the disparities can no longer be ignored.

    “This law was not just about healthcare — it's about justice, equality and the right of every mother and child to have access to the safest and most effective care,” she said.

    Stakeholders noted the law is part of a larger effort underway in Illinois to improve maternal health outcomes. 

    The current state budget includes $15 million to support home visiting expansion, $4 million to support IDPH’s assessment of the state’s maternal mortality rate and the creation of an action plan to serve affected communities, $5 million to expand the Department of Human Services’ home visitor program, and $1 million to fund a pilot program at DHS to provide diapers.

    It also includes capital grant funding to support birth centers trying to open in underserved areas as well as facilities that have seen an influx of patients in the two years since the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision.

    “There's more work to do, but this is an enormously important first and big step,” Pritzker said.

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  • 31 Jul 2024 5:34 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Homeless persons have a reduced life expectancy of roughly 20 years, according to a report released Tuesday by the Department of Public Health and the University of Illinois Chicago’s School of Public Health.  [Health News Illinois]

    Between 2017 and 2022, roughly 10,000 Illinoisans lived in shelters, on the street or in another place not meant for human habitation, such as a car or abandoned building.

    During that time period, homeless persons racked up more than $16 billion in hospital bills.

    The main diagnoses were related to drug abuse, hypertension, alcohol abuse, psychoses, chronic pulmonary disease and depression. 

    Per the report, 2,520 unhoused people died.

    "The majority were suffering from chronic conditions at their time of death,” said Lee Friedman, a professor at UIC and co-author of the report.

    The average age at the time of death was 56.3 years old, compared to 74.2 for the general population.

    Homeless persons were nearly 10 times more likely to die from drug-related overdoses, nearly three-and-a-half times more likely to die from traumatic injuries and 38 times more likely to die from excessive cold. 

    They were also nearly three times more likely to be murdered.

    Nearly all the individuals, 94.5 percent, died in urban counties, compared to about 84 percent of the general population.

    Additionally, the report found that between 111,000 and 239,000 Illinoisans each year lived with others, such as family or friends, in unstable arrangements.

    “We must choose to collectively chart a new path — one that strengthens communities by prioritizing access to housing, particularly for our most marginalized neighbors,” Illinois Chief Homelessness Officer Christine Haley said.

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  • 30 Jul 2024 9:25 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    (The Center Square) – Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has signed an amended version of House Bill 5142, which mandates that health insurance policies in the state pay for pregnancy and postpartum coverage. [Illinois- The Center Square]

    The governor said the law ensures competitive Medicaid reimbursement rates for doulas, lactation consultants, home visitors and other community-based providers.

    “Reproductive freedom and maternal health go hand-in-hand, and every time we make an advancement in the cause, I thank my mother,” Pritzker said.

    State Rep. C.D. Davidsmeyer, R-Murrayville, said that a nurse midwife is different than a midwife, and his biggest concern about the new law is bad outcomes.

    “My concern is, when you allow others to provide these types of care, do they really have the training if something were to go wrong?” Davidsmeyer asked.

    Insurance policies in Illinois are also required to cover abortions and pregnancy-ending medications.

    When signing the Birth Equity Initiative, Pritzker said that Black women are three times more likely than White women to die from pregnancy-related causes.

    More>

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  • 29 Jul 2024 1:53 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    CDC says a glitch in its bird flu test hasn't harmed the agency's outbreak response, but it has ignited scrutiny of its go-it-alone approach in testing for emerging pathogens.

    The agency has quietly worked since April to resolve a nagging issue with the test it developed, even as the virus swept through dairy farms and chicken houses across the country and infected at least 13 farmworkers this year.

    At a congressional hearing on July 23, Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.) asked about the issue. "Boy, that rings of 2020," he said, referring to when the nation was caught off guard by the COVID-19 pandemic, in part because of dysfunctional tests made by the CDC. Demetre Daskalakis, MD, MPH, director of the CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, responded that the agency rapidly developed a workaround that makes its bird flu test reliable.

    "The tests are 100% usable," he later told KFF Health News, adding that the FDA studied the tests and came to the same conclusion. The imperfect tests, which have a faulty element that sometimes requires testing a sample again, will be replaced soon. He added, "We have made sure that we're offering a high-quality product."

    Still, some researchers were unnerved by the news coming 4 months after the government declared a worrisome bird flu outbreak among cattle. The CDC's test is the only one available for clinical use. Some researchers say its flaws, though manageable, underscore the risk of relying on a single entity for testing.

    More>

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  • 29 Jul 2024 9:29 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Your chances of developing long COVID have significantly decreased since the pandemic began, offering a glimmer of hope and a sign of progress in the ongoing battle against the virus. [Medscape]

    That's according to a new study published in The New England Journal of Medicine. Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis, who conducted the study, said that the drop was caused by vaccinations and changes in the virus itself. 

    "You can see a clear and significant difference in risk during the delta and omicron eras between the vaccinated and unvaccinated," Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, director of the Clinical Epidemiology Center at the VA St. Louis Health Care System and head of the research and development service, said in a statement. "So, if people think COVID is no big deal and decide to forgo vaccinations, they're essentially doubling their risk of developing long COVID."

    More>


  • 26 Jul 2024 2:21 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The funding opportunities will expand access to women's behavioral health services and enhance the capacity of providers to identify and address mental health conditions, substance use, and gender-based violence. [ NIH]

    The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has pledged $27.5 million worth of funding opportunities to research programs aimed at improving women’s behavioral health across the United States. This significant investment underscores the Biden Administration’s commitment to addressing the unique mental health and substance use treatment needs of women. It also represents important progress in the White House Initiative on Women’s Health Research, which has committed to prioritizing investments in women’s health research, integrating women’s health across the federal research portfolio, and galvanizing new research on women’s health.

    The funding opportunities will expand access to women’s behavioral health services and enhance the capacity of providers to identify and address mental health conditions, substance use, and gender-based violence.  

    More>

  • 25 Jul 2024 7:56 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Infant mortality rates in the United States increased by 3% in 2022, according to a new federal report published early Thursday morning. [KFF and ABC News]

    Researchers from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) National Center for Health Statistics looked at linked birth and death data sets -- information from the death certificate linked to the information from the birth certificate -- from the National Vital Statistics System.

    Data showed the rate increased from 5.44 infant deaths per 1,000 live births in 2021 to 5.61 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2022. This equates to a total of 20,577 infant deaths reported in 2022, up 3% from 2021.

    More>

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  • 24 Jul 2024 9:17 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    President Joe Biden tested positive for covid-19 last week, but his symptoms were reportedly mild. With covid still circulating and putting Americans at risk, KFF Health News reviews the latest safety guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. [KFF Health News}

    More info here>

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  • 23 Jul 2024 12:47 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The Chicago Department of Public Health will partner with the West Side Heroin/Opioid Task Force over the next 10 weeks to share resources with the communities most impacted by opioid-related overdoses in recent years. [Health News Illinois]

    The health agency said it will send trained outreach workers to neighborhoods on the city’s west side, with the goal to cover nearly 1,300 blocks that experienced at least one overdose-related emergency medical service response last year.

    Along with offering harm reduction kits that include Narcan and test strips to check for the presence of fentanyl, workers will also educate individuals on a state program that offers free, same-day access to medications to treat opioid use disorder.

    “We have tools to help prevent fatal overdoses,” Commissioner Dr. Olusimbo Ige said in a statement.

    There were 1,397 opioid-related deaths in Chicago in 2022.

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