Black maternal mortality in New Hampshire
Status
Data pending expert review
We were unable to confirm a primary-source race-stratified figure for in this state from the usual CDC WONDER / Census / KFF feeds. Our editorial team reviews this monthly; the page will publish the number as soon as the upstream dataset reports it with sufficient statistical reliability.
What this means for Black residents
The maternal mortality figure for Black residents of New Hampshire varies by year and reporting cell. See the CDC WONDER Multiple Cause of Death dataset for the latest.
Maternal mortality is the single most widely studied Black-white health disparity in the United States. In New Hampshire, the gap reflects a combination of provider workforce distribution (obstetric hospitals closing in rural and Black-majority counties), insurance churn (Medicaid eligibility that ends post-delivery in non-extension states), and chronic undertreatment of pain and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. National evidence from the CDC MMRC Data System and the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative shows that implicit-bias training, standardized hemorrhage and preeclampsia protocols, and Medicaid-covered doula support each measurably reduce preventable deaths. Louisiana, Mississippi, and Georgia — consistently the three highest-rate states — have each piloted at least two of these interventions, but uptake is uneven.
The figures on this page are drawn from CDC WONDER Multiple Cause of Death, which is the canonical public dataset for this indicator. See the References section below for supporting citations from MMWR, NEJM, and JAMA where the underlying drivers have been studied.
Policy actions
New Hampshire has adopted Medicaid expansion, meaning low-income Black women can access prenatal care through Medicaid from the first trimester regardless of employment. 12-month postpartum Medicaid extension is active, keeping coverage in place through the post-delivery period when more than half of maternal deaths occur.
Medicaid does not yet cover doula services in this state. Residents can contact their state Medicaid director and legislative health committee to advocate for a Section 1115 waiver or state plan amendment to add doula coverage — a growing number of states have done so since 2020.
Where to get help in your state
- Find a Black OB-GYN or certified nurse-midwife in New Hampshire: Black Health provider directory
- Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) in New Hampshire: browse sliding-scale clinics
- Postpartum Support International Helpline: Call or text 1-800-944-4773 (English/Spanish, 24/7)
- Black Mamas Matter Alliance resource hub: blackmamasmatter.org
References & primary sources
- Primary dataset: CDC WONDER Multiple Cause of Death
- Petersen EE et al. Vital Signs: Pregnancy-Related Deaths, US, 2011–2015 and Strategies for Prevention. MMWR. 2019. mmwr.mm6818e1
- Howell EA. Reducing Disparities in Severe Maternal Morbidity and Mortality. Clin Obstet Gynecol. 2018. PubMed ID: 29346121
Data refreshed: