[Congressional Bills 117th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Res. 718 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
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117th CONGRESS
2d Session
S. RES. 718
Designating the week of July 19 through July 25, 2022, as ``Black
Maternal Mental Health Awareness Week'' and supporting the goal of
raising awareness and understanding around maternal mental health
conditions as they affect Black individuals.
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IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
July 25, 2022
Mr. Ossoff submitted the following resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on the Judiciary
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RESOLUTION
Designating the week of July 19 through July 25, 2022, as ``Black
Maternal Mental Health Awareness Week'' and supporting the goal of
raising awareness and understanding around maternal mental health
conditions as they affect Black individuals.
Whereas 1 in 8 women and 1 in 6 Black women will suffer from a maternal mental
health condition at some point during their lifetimes;
Whereas maternal mental health and substance use disorder conditions initially
present during pregnancy or the year following childbirth, stillbirth,
or miscarriage, and include depression, anxiety, obsessive compulsive
disorder, psychosis, and other conditions;
Whereas suicide and overdose caused by a maternal mental health or substance use
disorder condition contribute to the rising maternal mortality rate;
Whereas non-Hispanic Black individuals are 3 times more likely to have a
maternal death than White individuals in the United States;
Whereas untreated maternal mental health conditions cost the United States
economy $14,200,000,000 each year due to productivity loss, preterm
births, child behavioral and developmental costs, and other health-
related costs;
Whereas maternal mental health conditions impair mother-infant interactions
causing negative behavioral, cognitive, and emotional impacts on the
infant;
Whereas untreated maternal depression during pregnancy leads to a higher risk of
preterm and low birth weight delivery and infant mortality;
Whereas many health professionals receive limited or no formal training on
providing culturally appropriate maternity care in diverse communities;
Whereas 50 percent of individuals with a maternal mental health condition never
receive treatment, and Black women are less likely than White women to
access or continue treatment, or refill a prescription for a maternal
mental health condition;
Whereas best practices for the prevention and treatment of maternal mental
health conditions include collaborative and culturally and
linguistically appropriate models of group prenatal or postpartum care;
Whereas addressing maternal mental health conditions is integral in reaching the
Healthy People 2030 goals of the Department of Health and Human Services
of a 10 percent reduction of the maternal mortality rate, maternal
illnesses and complications due to pregnancy, and the preterm live birth
rate; and
Whereas more research on Black maternal mental health outcomes and care,
existing State and other programs, and innovative maternity care models
designed to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in maternal health
outcomes is needed to inform evidence-based treatments, promote
prevention and recovery support efforts, facilitate early
identification, dispel stigmas and barriers to care, and provide insight
on illness causation and the effects of maternal mental health
conditions on infants and communities: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Senate--
(1) designates the week of July 19 through July 25, 2022,
as ``Black Maternal Mental Health Awareness Week'';
(2) supports the goals and ideals of Black Maternal Mental
Health Awareness Week to raise public awareness and
understanding around maternal mental health conditions and
their disproportionate impact on Black women and families;
(3) recognizes the need for culturally and linguistically
appropriate prevention, intervention, treatment, and recovery
support services for individuals affected by maternal mental
health conditions;
(4) acknowledges the need for further research on maternal
mental health treatment models that are effective in reducing
racial and ethnic disparities in health outcomes; and
(5) encourages Federal, State, and local governments and
citizens of the United States--
(A) to support Black Maternal Mental Health
Awareness Week through programs and activities; and
(B) to promote public awareness of maternal mental
health conditions as those conditions affect Black
individuals.
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