Maternal Health (Follow-Up)

Issued Date
April 16, 2026
Agency/Authority
Health, Department of

Objective

To assess the extent of implementation, as of March 2026, of the one recommendation included in our initial audit report, Maternal Health (2022-S-25).

About the Program

One key indicator of the overall health of a population is its occurrence of maternal mortality and morbidity. Maternal mortality refers to deaths of pregnant persons during pregnancy or within a year of the end of pregnancy. Morbidity refers to having a disease or a symptom of disease, or to the amount of disease within a population; whereas severe maternal morbidity (severe morbidity) is defined as unexpected outcomes of pregnancy, labor, or delivery that result in short- or long-term consequences to a person’s health, including postpartum depression and any life-threatening medical complications or the need for life-saving interventions during delivery. 

According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 2023 data, the United States has a maternal death rate of 18.6 deaths per 100,000 births. There are also persistent racial and ethnic disparities in these deaths, with Black women dying nationally at a rate three times higher than White and Hispanic women. These disparities were exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic.1

New York has made progress in comparison to other states: Once ranked 46th among other U.S. states in 2010, it climbed to 17th with a maternal mortality rate of 22.4 deaths per 100,000 live births for 2018 to 2022. However, despite this progress, Black women were still dying at a rate over three times higher than White women. The cesarean section rate is also a significant factor in maternal deaths. According to CDC data, New York’s cesarean section rate improved slightly from 34.1% in 2021 to 33.9% in 2023, but it is still higher than the national rate of about 32% for both these years. According to a June 2023 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services press release, nationally, severe morbidity cases are on the rise, increasing from 146.8 per 10,000 discharges in 2008 to 179.8 per 10,000 discharges in 2021—a 22% increase.

To address these alarming rates, New York established the Taskforce on Maternal Mortality and Disparate Racial Outcomes (Taskforce) in April 2018, which produced 10 recommendations to reduce maternal mortality rates and racial disparities. Two of these recommendations called for DOH to convene a statewide expert work group (Work Group) to optimize postpartum care and for New York State to establish a maternal mortality review board (Board). In 2019, Public Health Law Section 2509 officially established the Board and an advisory council on maternal mortality and morbidity. Generally, the Board is required to review all maternal deaths in New York State to determine cause and preventability; report its findings, recommendations, and best practices to DOH’s Commissioner; and issue a public report at least every 2 years. The report, released in April 2022, reviewed 2018 maternal deaths and included 14 additional recommendations. The recommendations required a collaboration between public and private entities, with DOH being a main player in the majority of the recommendations. Further, the Work Group ultimately issued four recommendations in January 2021.

New York State’s 2019–2024 Prevention Agenda (Prevention Agenda), developed by the State’s Public Health and Health Planning Council and DOH, is New York State’s health improvement plan—the blueprint for State and local action to improve the health and well-being of all New Yorkers and to reduce health disparities for populations who experience them. One focus in DOH’s Prevention Agenda is maternal and women’s health, including a goal to reduce maternal mortality and morbidity in New York and an objective to decrease the rate of severe morbidity.

The objectives of our initial audit, issued on July 30, 2024, were to determine whether DOH had implemented recommendations with the goal of reducing maternal mortality and morbidity in New York State; and whether DOH was effectively monitoring related actions and outcomes to ensure rates of maternal mortality and morbidity are improving. The audit covered the period from January 2018 through December 2023. The initial audit found that while DOH had made progress in addressing the recommendations to improve maternal health in New York State, data from the CDC and DOH showed that maternal mortality and morbidity rates in New York State had not decreased since the Taskforce was established in 2018, and the maternal mortality rate had actually increased, along with increasing racial disparities statistics. We found that DOH needed to do more to ensure that maternal mortality and morbidity rates decline. DOH had not evaluated all of its maternal health programs and, therefore, was unable to determine whether its efforts had made an impact on improving maternal health outcomes. In addition, DOH did not collect severe morbidity data and had no analytic strategy to evaluate it, thus limiting its ability to effectuate change. Further, DOH conducted limited outreach with other agencies and private sector partners to understand their lack of participation in DOH maternal health programs. More robust outreach would likely increase participation of these programs and positively affect mortality and morbidity rates.

Key Finding

DOH officials made significant progress in addressing the issues we identified in the initial audit report. The one recommendation in the initial report was implemented.

1 U.S. Government Accountability Office. Maternal Health: Outcomes Worsened and Disparities Persisted During the Pandemic. October 19, 2022

Nadine Morrell

State Government Accountability Contact Information:
Audit Director
: Nadine Morrell
Phone: (518) 474-3271; Email: [email protected]
Address: Office of the State Comptroller; Division of State Government Accountability; 110 State Street, 11th Floor; Albany, NY 12236