Our Impact
The work of the National Consumers League is making a difference in people’s lives across the country. Meet some of the consumers touched by our programs.
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Preventing yet another victim
Paige, 55, a Nashville wife and mother of two, answered an employment ad for secret shoppers. Before sending payment to the scammers, she reached out to NCL.
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Building a stronger generation
A grease fire flared up in Decklan’s kitchen. As his family scrambled and panicked, fearing that the whole house might erupt in flames, Decklan remained calm. He hurried over to the pantry, grabbed some baking soda, and dumped it on the fire quickly extinguishing the blaze.
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Script Your Future saved my life
Cincinnati resident Charles, 45, lost his computer business — and health insurance— during a time of economic downturn. A diabetic, Charles was now unable to afford his medication. He stopped taking it which made him seriously ill and put his life at risk.
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For a safer workplace
Jeremy is a fast-food worker who has been employed at a number of Chipotle restaurants in New York City. When he was just 20 years old, he took part in an NCL research project that revealed that management practices within the fast food chain were putting workers—and food safety for customers—at risk.
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June Member meeting summary
On June 11, NCL hosted a panel discussion on the maternal health crisis and its disparate impact on birthing people of color. Panelists included:
- Zsakeba Henderson, Deputy Chief Medical & Health Officer, March of Dimes
- Christina Wurster, CEO, the Society for Maternal and Fetal Medicine
- Natasha Bonhomme, Founder, Expecting Health
- Jamarah Amani, Co-Founder, National Black Midwives Alliance
- Alyson Northrup, Associate Director of Government Affairs, the Association of Maternal & Child Health Programs
Below is a summary of the discussion. To view the recording, click here.
Panel: Maternal Health Disparities
Dr. Zsakeba Henderson, Deputy Chief Medical & Health Officer, March of Dimes
Dr. Henderson provided an overview of the dismal state of maternal health in the United States, compared to other developed nations. Dr. Henderson’s presentation lifted up March of Dimes’ Nowhere to Go report, which demonstrates that in the U.S., 7 million women live in maternity care deserts, or counties with no hospital offering obstetric services. This lack of maternal healthcare, compounded by the aggregate disparities experienced by birthing people of color has contributed to Black women facing a maternal mortality rate that is tripled to that of women of other ethnicities. Dr. Henderson shared March of Dimes’ commitment to ending the maternal health crisis via strategic advocacy, greater implicit bias training for maternity care providers, and deploying real-world data to address maternal mortality from an equity lens.
Jamarah Amani, Co-Founder, National Black Midwives Alliance
Ms. Amani joined our maternal panel from the road, as she was on her way to Louisiana to film a documentary raising awareness on black midwives. Ms. Amani discussed the Black Midwives Care initiative, which is a model developed by the National Black Midwives Alliance that is designed to meet the social needs of pregnant, birthing, and postpartum Black mothers/parents. The Black Midwives Care model is needed because research shows us consistently that the specificity of the Black experience in America has implications for perinatal outcomes. Ms. Amani also discussed the concept of Birth Justice, which is a movement to reintegrate midwifery care back into communities of color, to help encourage greater cultural competency in maternal care.
Christina Wurster, CEO, the Society for Maternal and Fetal Medicine
Ms. Wurster presented on SMFM’s COVID-19 response and overcoming vaccine hesitancy among expecting mothers. Throughout the pandemic, SMFM has developed resources to support healthcare providers, patients, and families to help encourage equitable care during COVID-19 for the maternal health community. Through the V-safe pregnancy registry, SMFM has been using real-world data to help overcome misconceptions regarding vaccines among people of reproductive age. Ms. Wurster provided an overview of SMFM’s Maternal Mortality Scorecard, which has identified five critical ways that states are addressing the rising rates of maternal mortality, which include Medicaid expansion and data disaggregation.
Alyson Northrup, Associate Director of Government Affairs, the Association of Maternal & Child Health Programs
Ms. Northup presented on AMCHP’s priorities to extend postpartum Medicaid as a foundation tool to improve maternal health outcomes. Currently, there are 31 bills in Congress that aim to addressing maternal health disparities. AMCHP has developed a maternal health bill tracker that helps advocates keep up with advancing legislation. Ms. Northup made the case for Medicaid extension for postpartum patients, as patients who are on Medicaid for pregnancy-related reasons, lose their coverage 60 days from the end of pregnancy. Disruption in insurance poses challenges for care coordination, leading to delayed or forgone care and greater complications.
Natasha Bonhomme, Founder, Expecting Health
Ms. Bonhomme helped provide the patient perspective with regard to disparities in children’s’ health and pregnancy-related risks. Ms. Bonhomme explored how media coverage regarding racial injustice and maternal mortality affect the maternal psyche and how the decentralization of individuals in their own stories affects their overall health outcomes. Expecting Health’s objective is to make moms the main character in the experiences they have. Ms. Bonhomme also shared Expecting Health’s support and partnership in NCL’s Preterm Birth Prevention Alliance and its efforts to addressing the disproportionate impact on women of color who are facing preterm birth.