BHMB Webinar Series: Core Principles in Action

The AHA’s Better Health for Mothers and Babies Initiative’s approach to improving maternal and infant outcomes is guided by four core principles:

  • Examine quality and outcomes data to guide strategy.
  • Consider the causes of disparities in health outcomes.
  • Involve patients and community in their own care.
  • Engage the workforce.

This webinar series showcases stories of how hospitals and health care organizations are putting each principle into action to improve outcomes for moms and their babies.


Transforming Data into Action to Improve Maternal Health

Learn how Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Association, Tuba City Regional Health Care Corporation and Regional One Health in Memphis, Tenn. are collecting and transforming data into strategies that enhance care quality, safety and outcomes for birthing and postpartum experiences.

Key Takeaways

Arizona’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee found that 89% of maternal deaths in the state were preventable, with American Indian and Alaska Native women facing three times the rate of severe complications compared to white women.

Through the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health (AIM), hospitals implemented maternal safety bundles — standardized, evidence-based practices that improved hypertension treatment compliance from 6% to 80% of women within a year. These women had two consecutive blood pressures of either 160 for systolic or 110 diastolic and were treated within 60 minutes.

Tuba City Regional Healthcare Corporation achieved 100% on time hypertension treatment by combining rigorous training with patient-centered outreach.

Regional One Health implemented a nurse-driven protocol that empowered nurses to treat severe hypertension immediately. The protocol allows nurses to administer medication to treat those women with two blood pressure measures of either 160 systolic or 110 diastolic within the hour and seek physician guidance when needed. In 2025, the nurses treated 100% hypertension cases within 60 minutes.

Speakers

Katherine Glaser, M.D., MPH

Katherine Glaser, M.D., MPH

Tuba City Regional Health Care Corporation

Vicki Buchda

Vicki Buchda, MS, R.N., NEA-BC

Arizona Hospital and Healthcare Association

Lauren Russell

Lauren Russell, MSN-Ed, RNC-OB, IBCLC

Regional One Health


Designing Maternal Care to Address Disparities 

Carle Health in Champagne, Ill., and MedStar Health in Washington, D.C., share programs that address disparities and other upstream factors influencing maternal health outcomes.

Key Takeaways

MedStar’s Safe Babies, Safe Moms program provides a comprehensive continuum of care — from pre-pregnancy wellness through a child’s 3rd birthday. The model offers 70 interventions that integrate obstetrics, pediatrics, behavioral health, psychiatry and social services while partnering with local organizations like Community of Hope Federally Qualified Health Center and Georgetown University. The hospital has reduced disparities, maternal morbidity and preterm births through notable innovations including trauma-informed socioeconomic screening, a medical-legal partnership that recovered over $160,000 in benefits, integrated maternal mental health services and remote monitoring for hypertension and diabetes.

Carle Health’s Healthy Beginnings program connects nurses, social workers and early childhood educators to families from early pregnancy through the child’s 2nd birthday. This program centers the family’s voice through embedded long-term home visiting services for at-risk, expectant families, shared governance and continuous feedback loops Since October 2017, the program has enrolled over 1,000 families and 900 babies. Outcomes include early identification and management of clinical and socioeconomic conditions, as well as increases in referrals, child wellness exams and timely immunizations. It achieved 100% prenatal care initiation, 85% postpartum follow-up, 86% breastfeeding initiation and decreased NICU and ED utilization.

Speakers

Tamika C. Auguste, M.D., FACOG

Tamika C. Auguste, M.D., FACOG

MedStar Health

Loral Patchen, Ph.D., MSN, MA, CNM

Loral Patchen, Ph.D., MSN, MA, CNM

MedStar Health

Kristen Farney, MSN, R.N., NE-BC

Kristen Farney, MSN, R.N., NE-BC

Carle Health

Ashley Polnitz, MSN, NE-BC, CLC

Ashley Polnitz, MSN, NE-BC, CLC

Carle Health


Elevating Patient and Community Voices in Maternal Care

Learn how leaders at District of Columbia Hospital Association, Temple Health in Philadelphia, University School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington, D.C., and Mama’s Voices in Washington, D.C., are pursuing patient and community experiences to co-develop innovative solutions, enhance community partnerships and build trusting provider-patient relationships.

Key Takeaways

By listening to patients, District of Columbia Perinatal Quality Collaborative redesigned communication tools, created empathetic post-hemorrhage scripts and improved postpartum follow-up from 9% to 73%.

Temple Health designed its Temple Women’s and Families Hospital entirely around patient feedback. The facility offers services from labor and delivery to menopause care, with behavioral health and WIC services integrated onsite. Innovative tools like the LENA App guide patients through their pregnancy journey, while the MAMA Model pilot uses a team of nurses, social workers and community health workers to address food insecurity and transportation barriers.

Speakers

Sheetal Sheth, M.D.

Sheetal Sheth, M.D.

The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences

Yolette A. Gray, MPH, CHES

Yolette A. Gray, MPH, CHES

District of Columbia Hospital Association

Leigh K. Sims, M.Ed

Leigh K. Sims, M.Ed

Mama’s Voices

Sharon Kurfuerst, EdD, OTR/L, FACHE

Sharon Kurfuerst, EdD, OTR/L, FACHE

Temple Women & Families

Lakisha Sturgis

Lakisha Sturgis, R.N., BSN, MPH, CPHQ

Temple Health