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New US partnership to address racial disparities in maternal health
Black women are three times more likely to die from pregnancy complications than their white counterparts

The US maternal health company Cayaba Care has announced a partnership with the women’s healthcare group Axia to address health inequities and improve maternal health outcomes.
This announcement coincides with Black Maternal Health Week, a week dedicated to raising awareness and strengthening support for black maternal health.
The US has a higher maternal mortality rate than any other developed country. Research has shown the national maternal mortality rate has nearly doubled in the last three years, with black women being three times more likely to die from pregnancy complications than white women.
However, 80 per cent of pregnancy-related deaths are preventable, data has also suggested, highlighting the need for better access to care.
“At Axia Women’s Health, we are passionate about addressing these health disparities and improving the current state of maternal health in the United States. It’s time to move beyond awareness and into action in transforming care for those at highest risk,” said Dr Gaurov Dayal, Axia Women’s Health CEO.
“That’s why we’re proud to be partnering with organisations like Cayaba Care to help us bridge the gaps in care and better support those who had previously been underserved.”
Through this partnership, select Axia Women’s Health patients will gain access to the Cayaba Care programme that supports pregnant and recently pregnant women with in-home and virtual services.
The maternal health company provides services, including emotional and mental support, help with hospital appointments, symptom management and benefit navigation.
Additionally, the programme will give women access to a care team that includes registered nurses, nurse practitioners, social workers, lactation consultants, and registered dietician nutritionists.
“As a black father and husband, I experienced firsthand that despite my family’s education and income, we still needed additional support in-between OB visits and during delivery,” said Dr Olan Soremekun, Cayaba Care co-founder and CEO.
“We founded Cayaba Care to be accessible and to provide every black woman the holistic support needed to achieve equity in maternal outcomes.”
Dr Mary Fleming, co-founder and senior VP of health equity accountability, said: “We are committed not only to helping each patient have a safe birth, but also a dignified and positive pregnancy journey that takes into account their overall long-term physical, mental, and emotional health.
“We commend the team at Axia Women’s Health for their focused efforts in this collaboration aimed at reducing racial disparities in maternal health, while improving access to care and promoting a positive patient experience.”
The programme will initially launch in Pennsylvania, as the two companies expand their impact to tackle racial disparities in underserved communities across the US.
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Endometriosis documentary profiles stars including Marilyn Monroe and Amy Schumer

A non-profit has launched an endometriosis documentary featuring Amy Schumer and Marilyn Monroe as it pushes for changes in how the condition is treated and understood.
The Endometriosis Collective has launched to change how endometriosis is researched, treated and understood, starting with a documentary featuring stories from people including Amy Schumer and Marilyn Monroe.
The feature-length documentary, “End of the Cycle”, will premiere in New York on Tuesday, and The Endometriosis Collective is making the film free to stream online.
Schumer, a comedian, writer and actor, has previously spoken of how endometriosis left her “on the floor in pain, vomiting from the pain, the pain that nobody can see.”
Schumer is one of several celebrities featured in the documentary. Other contributors include dancer Julianne Hough, Olympic medallist Brittany Brown and actors Janel Parrish and Folake Olowofoyeku.
The Endometriosis Collective timed the documentary premiere to coincide with the 100th anniversary of Marilyn Monroe’s birth.
Monroe, who died in 1962, starred in films such as “Some Like It Hot” and “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.”
According to a biography published in 1985, Monroe’s endometriosis was so severe that it destroyed her marriages, her wish for children, her career and ultimately her life.
The Endometriosis Collective said the documentary shares newly uncovered information about Monroe’s experience with endometriosis.
The non-profit said the information connects Monroe’s story to the experiences of women across generations, highlighting how far awareness, research and care still have to go.
A representative of the Marilyn Monroe Estate said: “By sharing this part of her story through ‘End of the Cycle,’ we hope to honour her legacy in a way that brings visibility to endometriosis, encourages more open dialogue and helps inspire the research needed to create change.”
As part of the premiere, The Endometriosis Collective is holding a panel discussion.
Schumer, Brown and Olowofoyeku, the documentary’s co-directors Sammy Jaye and Soraya Simi, and medical experts are due to be part of the premiere.
AbbVie’s Orilissa and Sumitomo Pharma’s Myfembree are among the approved drugs for endometriosis pain.
Hough, one of the participants in the documentary, starred in an Orilissa campaign in 2017.
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