PRAMS no more?

the top things to know in women’s health and wellness today: 

  • After oral arguments, it *seems* like the Supreme Court is leaning towards allowing people on Medicaid to go to Planned Parenthood for routine care.
     
  • In yesterday’s mass layoffs, the entire CDC team that worked on a decades-old pregnancy database (known as PRAMS) was let go. It’s unclear if the database will continue. 
     
  • The Atlantic’s Ashley Parker has a moving personal essay on what it’s like to experience a miscarriage–and why we should talk about it more often.

JUMP TO…

Pregnancy and Postpartum
Abortion Access
Metabolism + Weight Loss
 

PREGNANCY + POSTPARTUM

The Myths of Miscarriage

What: The Atlantic’s Ashley Parker writes a moving essay on what it was like to have a miscarriage, including how the “routine” parts of it felt nothing further routine, including learning that a D+C procedure, even for a miscarriage, is technically called an abortion. 

Key Line: “Every Wednesday night, I have a standing Zoom with five other women, all friends from college. …Between us, we have been pregnant 24 times and collectively given birth to 14 kids. This statistic—six women, 24 pregnancies, 14 kids—stops me cold every time it occurs to me, but it shouldn’t.”

Source: The Atlantic
 

Trump’s CDC Layoffs Ends PRAMS

What: Just one sliver of the CDC layoffs yesterday? The entire team that ran the PRAMS (Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System) database was let go. It was a decades-deep research set tracking infant and maternal health from pregnancy through the postpartum period. 

Key Line: “Today all CDC employees who worked at PRAMS were terminated (RIF’d). So while there hasn’t been any official announcement that the program is permanently shuttered, all the people who ran it are out as of today.”

Source: Talking Points Memo
 

ABORTION ACCESS
 

Supreme Court Leans Toward Backing Planned Parenthood

What: The Washington Post reports that the Supreme Court seemed likely to support Planned Parenthood in a case against South Carolina, where Medicaid patients are suing for the right to receive non-abortion health care services from the organization’s providers. Despite federal law already prohibiting Medicaid funds for abortions, Planned Parenthood faces challenges in receiving government money for other critical health services, like birth control and cancer screenings.

Key Line: “Nicole A. Saharsky, the lawyer for Planned Parenthood, said Congress did not want states to be able to cut off funding for certain providers for reasons unrelated to medical competency. Lawmakers, she said, were trying to ensure that people on Medicaid have the same right as privately insured patients to choose their providers, even if they don’t have the same ability to pay for that care.”

Source: Washington Post
 

Lizz Winstead Advocates for Abortion Rights Through Comedy

What: A podcast interview with Lizz Winstead, the co-creator of the Daily Show, who now uses comedy to educate people about abortion access and to support independent abortion providers. Through her Feminist Buzzkills podcast and the Abortion Access Front, she combines humor with activism.

Key Line: “‘I wanted to combine the effectiveness of using humor to expose hypocrisy and bad actors and then combine that with a call to action,’ Winstead says.”

Source: Mother Jones
 

METABOLISM + WEIGHT LOSS
 

Intermittent Fasting Beats Calorie Restriction in RCT

What: A randomized control trial with mostly women compared intermittent fasting to daily calorie restriction in a 12-month weight loss program. Those who fasted for three days of the week ultimately lost more weight than those counting calories, losing an average six pounds more.

Key Line: “Compared with [calorie restriction, intermittent fasting] resulted in modestly greater weight loss among adults with overweight or obesity enrolled in a 12-month, high-intensity, comprehensive behavioral weight loss program.”

Source: Annals of Internal Medicine

Meghan McCarthy

Maternie was founded in 2017 by Meghan McCarthy. Meghan has spent her career digging through information and breaking it down for readers. After spending seven years reporting on Capitol Hill, Meghan co-founded at Morning Consult, where she built and led the company's content operation. She also helped build and lead Courier Newsroom, a progressive media organization. Her work has been featured in the New York Times, the Washington Post, The Atlantic, NPR, and other national news outlets.