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Journal of women's health · Dec 2022
A National Communication Effort Addressing Maternal Mortality in the United States: Implementation of the Hear Her Campaign.
- Brittany Behm, Heather Tevendale, Sarah Carrigan, Christina Stone, Kelly Morris, and Jackie Rosenthal.
- Division of Reproductive Health, National Centers for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
- J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2022 Dec 1; 31 (12): 167716851677-1685.
AbstractMore than 700 women die each year in the United States from complications related to pregnancy, and considerable racial and ethnic disparities continue to exist. Recognizing the urgent maternal warning signs of pregnancy-related complications, getting an accurate and timely diagnosis and quality care can save lives. In August 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Reproductive Health launched a national communication campaign called "Hear Her" to raise awareness of urgent maternal warning signs during pregnancy and in the year after pregnancy and improve communication between pregnant or postpartum people and their support systems and health care providers. Storytelling is a central strategy to the campaign, which features video stories of women's experiences with pregnancy-related conditions to bring voices to the statistics and to help motivate action. These stories and additional campaign resources are disseminated through a website, digital media, organic (free) and paid social media, earned media, public service announcement distribution, and partners, with increased outreach to disproportionately affected communities. Partners in maternal and child health played an important role from campaign development to outreach and message dissemination. In the first year of the campaign, there were >390,000 unique visitors to the Hear Her website and 180 million impressions (number of times that content was displayed to a user) from digital and social media. Digital media allowed the campaign to reach priority audiences at a time when news and social media had a number of other urgent public health messages related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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