For most of the American medical system, the story of a pregnancy ends in the delivery room. The months of prenatal appointments, the monitoring, the careful attention to fetal development, all of it builds toward a single event. Once the baby arrives and the mother leaves the hospital, the level of care drops sharply.
That drop is killing people.
Two thirds of maternal deaths in the United States occur after childbirth, during the weeks that follow a woman home from the hospital and into a period the healthcare system has never adequately tracked or treated. The country spends more on healthcare than any comparable nation and still produces maternal mortality rates that trail behind dozens of countries with far smaller budgets. The postpartum period is a significant reason why.
The numbers behind the crisis
The data is difficult to look past. Roughly 40% of mothers in the United States skip any postpartum clinical visit entirely after being discharged from the hospital. Among mothers covered by Medicaid, that figure climbs to 60%. These are not women who do not care about their health. They are women navigating newborns, financial pressure, transportation barriers, and a system that scheduled one appointment six weeks out and called it sufficient.
The consequences show up in hemorrhage rates, infection rates, and maternal mental health crises that go undetected until they become emergencies. Postpartum depression affects a significant share of new mothers and remains dramatically underdiagnosed in the United States, particularly among low-income and minority women who already face compounding disadvantages in accessing care.
Olivia Walton, founder of Healthy Moms, Healthy Babies America, has been direct about what the gold standard of postpartum care actually looks like. A home visit by a registered nurse within the first two weeks after birth gives providers the earliest possible window to identify complications before they escalate. That model exists in scattered programs across the country but has never been adopted at scale.
What Arkansas is trying
Arkansas has consistently ranked among the worst states in the country for maternal mortality, a fact that pushed Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders to act early in her tenure. Rather than approach the problem through a purely political lens, she convened a strategic working group that brought together medical professionals, community advocates, and political voices from across the spectrum.
The group produced the Healthy Moms, Healthy Babies Act and a series of supporting programs. The most innovative of these is the Proactive Postpartum Call Center, operated through the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. The center contacts new mothers weekly during the first six weeks after delivery, checking in on physical recovery and mental health, answering questions, and flagging situations that need clinical follow-up.
The call center model addresses one of the core logistical barriers to postpartum care. It does not require a mother to arrange transportation, find childcare, or take time off work. It meets her where she is. For a state with significant rural populations and limited healthcare infrastructure in many counties, that accessibility matters enormously.
Maryland’s financial approach
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore approached the same problem from a different direction. His Bridge Program provides direct cash assistance to low-income mothers covering both the prenatal and postnatal periods, launching initially with 150 families in areas of the state that have faced long-term concentrated poverty.
The reasoning is straightforward. Financial stress during pregnancy and early parenthood compounds every other health risk a mother faces. A mother who cannot cover basic expenses is less likely to attend appointments, fill prescriptions, or prioritize her own recovery when a newborn is consuming every available resource. Removing some of that financial pressure does not solve the postpartum care gap on its own, but it removes one of the most consistent barriers standing between mothers and the care they need.
Moore has also connected maternal health outcomes directly to childhood poverty, arguing that the two cannot be separated. A mother who survives and recovers fully from childbirth is better positioned to provide stability for her child. Investing in her health is investing in the next generation.
A problem with a fixable solution
What makes the postpartum crisis particularly frustrating is that the solutions are not complicated or prohibitively expensive. Home visits, phone check-ins, modest financial assistance, and extended Medicaid coverage past the six-week mark are all interventions with documented track records. The barrier has never been knowledge. It has been will.
The economic argument is as compelling as the moral one. Preventing a single catastrophic postpartum complication saves state Medicaid programs tens of thousands of dollars in emergency readmission costs. Proactive outreach and modest support programs pay for themselves many times over in avoided crises.
What Arkansas and Maryland are building are blueprints, not experiments. The question now is whether other states are paying attention.

