90.5 F
Virginia
Thursday, June 19, 2025

Va. education department plans to launch Office of Excellence and Best Practices

The Virginia Department of Education is preparing to launch a new Office of Excellence and Best Practices by hiring an executive director who will be responsible for fostering innovation, highlighting high-performing schools, and directing resources toward initiatives with a proven track record of improving student outcomes.

Mike Chapman, Virginia’s Sheriff Keeping Streets Safe Through Enforcement of the Law

Traffic stops and searches of motorists in Loudoun County have increased dramatically the first three months of this year compared to the same period in 2024, sparking complaints from activists and some residents.

Jason Miyares focuses on law and order ahead of the 2025 elections

In an extensive interview conducted at his Richmond office earlier this week by Miyares - the son of Cuban refugees and the first Hispanic Virginian to be elected statewide - he insisted that the current situation in California was the result of poor leadership.

Virginia launches new dashboards to track maternal deaths, improve pregnancy outcomes

Virginia is rolling out a new set of tools aimed at tackling one of the most urgent disparities in the country.

Gov. on Thursday announced the release of two new dashboards — one tracking maternal mortality and the other pregnancy-associated deaths — alongside an upgraded Maternal and Child Health (MCH) Dashboard that breaks down preterm birth, infant mortality, low birthweight and prenatal care data by region, race, and ethnicity.

“More moms are alive today because of the unprecedented work of the Department of Health, the Virginia Department of Medical Assistance Services, providers and community partners,” Youngkin said in a statement.

“Today’s launch is another key step to provide the data needed for this all-hands-on-deck mission. We are making significant strides, but we will not stop working until every baby in Virginia is born to a healthy mom.”

Preliminary numbers from the Virginia Department of Health (VDH) show encouraging signs: maternal mortality in 2023 and 2024 was half what it was during the height of the crisis in 2021, when 47 deaths were reported among more than 95,000 births.

But state officials and advocates say there is still a long way to go, especially for Black mothers, who face significantly higher risks of complications and death during .

“Pregnancy and new motherhood should be a sacred time in the life of a mom and her baby. Last year, for more than 20 women and their , it was a time of tragedy and loss,” said Virginia Health Secretary Janet Kelly. “With accurate, actionable data we can help providers all across the commonwealth do more to support healthy and healthy mothers and prevent these tragedies in the future.”

The dashboard upgrades are part of Executive Directive Eleven, signed by Youngkin in December, which directs state agencies to improve maternal health outcomes through better data, expanded access to quality care and increased public awareness. That order built on Executive Order 32, which revived Virginia’s Task Force on Maternal Health Data and Quality Measures last summer.

State Health Commissioner Dr. Karen Shelton, an OB-GYN, said many maternal deaths are linked to conditions like mental health challenges, cardiac issues, and chronic disease — areas where early intervention can save lives.

“For too many women, mental health, cardiac disease and other chronic diseases create difficulties during pregnancy that can lead to death,” Shelton said. “As an OB-GYN, I am grateful for the collaborative effort that has already saved lives and believe the new Maternal and Child Health dashboards will improve transparency, ensure data-driven decision-making and help us achieve even better results in the years ahead.”

The new dashboards are being released during Black Maternal Health Week, a nationwide campaign founded by the Black Mamas Matter Alliance to raise awareness and push for systemic changes to improve maternal outcomes for Black women.

In Virginia and across the country, are using the week to call for stronger protections and better access to care for communities disproportionately impacted by maternal mortality.

Virginia’s updated dashboards allow users to filter by year, region, race/ethnicity, and locality, providing a granular look at key indicators like maternal smoking rates, prenatal care access and birth outcomes.

The dashboards were developed through collaboration between the VDH Office of Family Health Services, the Division of Population Health Data, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, and the Office of Information Management.

Though Virginia’s overall maternal and infant health stats track closely with national averages, state officials say the goal is to close the persistent racial and geographic gaps that leave some mothers more vulnerable than others.

“Healthy moms mean healthy babies,” Youngkin said. “And healthy babies are the foundation of a strong and thriving Virginia.”

Last updated 5:22 a.m., Apr. 18, 2025

NEWSLETTER SIGNUP

Subscribe to our newsletter!  Get updates on all the latest news in Virginia.

Originally written for VirginiaMercury and it originally published as Virginia launches new dashboards to track maternal deaths, improve pregnancy outcomes

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Check out our other content

Check out other tags:

Most Popular Articles

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
×