Zamone Perez, Reporter
Friday, May 30, 2025
Maryland ranks better than many states for the quality of its maternal mental-health care - but it could be doing more.
Maryland receives a "C" grade on a report card by the Policy Center for Maternal Mental Health. The country as a whole gets a "C-minus."
Caitlin Murphy, a research scientist at the center, said screenings are necessary to diagnose and treat maternal mental-health issues. However, fewer than one in five women who are Medicaid enrollees - and only one in ten who have private insurance - are screened for these issues, during and after pregnancy.
"It's becoming increasingly well-known that the scope of maternal mental health need in the U.S. is massive," she said. "Right now, maternal mental-health disorders do impact one in five mothers in the U.S., and currently, maternal mental-health conditions are the leading cause of maternal mortality in the U.S., as well."
One step she recommended is that Maryland require Medicaid insurers to track rates of maternal mental-health screenings. The report said only 22% of women who screened positive for depression received mental-health treatment.
Maryland helps set the curve in a couple of areas, including the number of prescribers with specific training in maternal mental health. Murphy said the state also does particularly well in an area that's new in this year's report card - providing enhanced reimbursements for group prenatal care for expectant mothers.
"And that actually creates a peer support system and built-in social supports, so that moms are able to connect with one another, not only during their pregnancy but then also postpartum," she said. "And these programs have been shown to be really effective at supporting moms' mental health."
Nineteen states received a failing grade in the report, and only seven received a better grade than Maryland.
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