Black women less likely to receive higher level antihemorrhagic interventions

Black women experiencing postpartum hemorrhage requiring blood transfusion were less likely to receive higher levels of antihemorrhagic intervention compared with their white counterparts.
The findings were presented at the Society for Reproductive Investigation Annual Meeting.
“Research nationwide has repeatedly shown that Black women experience greater maternal morbidity and mortality,” Carolyn S. Guan, an MD candidate at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, and Arthur (Jason) Vaught, MD, director of labor and delivery and assistant professor of gynecology and obstetrics at Johns

Black women experiencing postpartum hemorrhage requiring blood transfusion were less likely to receive higher levels of antihemorrhagic intervention compared with their white counterparts.
The findings were presented at the Society for Reproductive Investigation Annual Meeting.
“Research nationwide has repeatedly shown that Black women experience greater maternal morbidity and mortality,” Carolyn S. Guan, an MD candidate at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, and Arthur (Jason) Vaught, MD, director of labor and delivery and assistant professor of gynecology and obstetrics at Johns