
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Maternal care is at a breaking point: delivering hospitals are disappearing while deaths that could be prevented keep climbing. We pull back the curtain on how structural racism, policy headwinds, and technology blind spots compound risk for birthing people—especially Black, Hispanic, rural, and low‑income patients—and what it takes to change the trajectory now.
We start by naming the problem with data: stable birth rates alongside a steep decline in maternity units have created care deserts. From there, we dig into disparities in obstetric anesthesia, including lower neuraxial labor analgesia use and higher rates of general anesthesia for cesarean delivery among Black and Hispanic patients. Drawing on ASA recommendations, we outline practical actions that reduce harm: accurate documentation of race, ethnicity, and language; disparities dashboards; education on bias and structural racism; shared decision making; and proactive epidural management to improve conversion to surgical anesthesia without general anesthesia.
Then we turn to implementation science—the missing link between guidelines and reliable practice. We map a simple decision pathway from efficacy to effectiveness to context and strategy, and we share the real levers that move systems: targeted education, inter‑institutional collaboration, policy mechanisms like bundles, and the business case that earns C‑suite commitment. When leaders see the return on investment in safety, liability reduction, and community trust, sustained resources follow.
Finally, we explore technology as an equity engine. AI‑guided ultrasound can extend expertise in low‑resource settings. Predictive analytics may flag fetal heart rate decelerations before they turn critical. And we confront the accuracy gaps in pulse oximetry tied to skin pigmentation and low perfusion, especially during the neonatal transition. With vendor accountability, rigorous validation across diverse populations, smarter sensor selection and placement, and frontline education, monitoring can serve every patient equally.
If this conversation resonates, help us spread the word. Subscribe on Spotify or YouTube, share this episode with a colleague, and leave a review so more clinicians can join the effort to make labor and delivery the safest unit in the hospital. Your feedback and stories shape where we go next.
For show notes & transcript, visit our episode page at apsf.org: https://www.apsf.org/podcast/278-transforming-maternal-care-through-equity-science-and-tech/
© 2025, The Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation
By Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation4.4
2323 ratings
Maternal care is at a breaking point: delivering hospitals are disappearing while deaths that could be prevented keep climbing. We pull back the curtain on how structural racism, policy headwinds, and technology blind spots compound risk for birthing people—especially Black, Hispanic, rural, and low‑income patients—and what it takes to change the trajectory now.
We start by naming the problem with data: stable birth rates alongside a steep decline in maternity units have created care deserts. From there, we dig into disparities in obstetric anesthesia, including lower neuraxial labor analgesia use and higher rates of general anesthesia for cesarean delivery among Black and Hispanic patients. Drawing on ASA recommendations, we outline practical actions that reduce harm: accurate documentation of race, ethnicity, and language; disparities dashboards; education on bias and structural racism; shared decision making; and proactive epidural management to improve conversion to surgical anesthesia without general anesthesia.
Then we turn to implementation science—the missing link between guidelines and reliable practice. We map a simple decision pathway from efficacy to effectiveness to context and strategy, and we share the real levers that move systems: targeted education, inter‑institutional collaboration, policy mechanisms like bundles, and the business case that earns C‑suite commitment. When leaders see the return on investment in safety, liability reduction, and community trust, sustained resources follow.
Finally, we explore technology as an equity engine. AI‑guided ultrasound can extend expertise in low‑resource settings. Predictive analytics may flag fetal heart rate decelerations before they turn critical. And we confront the accuracy gaps in pulse oximetry tied to skin pigmentation and low perfusion, especially during the neonatal transition. With vendor accountability, rigorous validation across diverse populations, smarter sensor selection and placement, and frontline education, monitoring can serve every patient equally.
If this conversation resonates, help us spread the word. Subscribe on Spotify or YouTube, share this episode with a colleague, and leave a review so more clinicians can join the effort to make labor and delivery the safest unit in the hospital. Your feedback and stories shape where we go next.
For show notes & transcript, visit our episode page at apsf.org: https://www.apsf.org/podcast/278-transforming-maternal-care-through-equity-science-and-tech/
© 2025, The Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation

1,868 Listeners

320 Listeners

545 Listeners

82 Listeners

47 Listeners

1,467 Listeners

2,442 Listeners

3,342 Listeners

1,155 Listeners

282 Listeners

249 Listeners

216 Listeners

19 Listeners

280 Listeners

6 Listeners