local health jurisdictions and to work collaboratively with state and local Black Infant Health programs for the purpose of improving Black infant birth outcomes and reducing infant mortality.
shall be used by local health jurisdictions for any of the following purposes:
evidence-informed group prenatal care program that has shown promise in reducing the incidence of adverse birth outcomes and that includes, but is not limited to, improvement in health provider preterm birth screening and ongoing, risk-appropriate care for Black women to better identify and prevent preterm births.
(ii) Pregnancy intentionality, preconception, and interconception care programs.
(iii) Fatherhood or partnership initiatives that support engagement of partners in pregnancy and childbearing.
(iv) Evidence-based or evidence-informed home visitation programs inclusive of case management to increase advocacy and empowerment for Black women and to ensure linkages to prenatal care, monitoring, life planning,
birth spacing, infant development, and well-being.
local health jurisdiction determines that the strategy combines social interventions with medical interventions, including integration of mental health services in perinatal health care and other wraparound services, including, but not limited to, assessment, personalized case management, doulas, patient navigator services that increase patient empowerment, and access to and utilization of evidence-based interventions that reduce preterm birth and infant mortality, and that the strategy is evidence-based or evidence-informed in relation to reducing adverse birth outcomes.
(B) Providing technical assistance to recipients of local grants, and coordinating with local partners, such as hospitals, federally qualified health centers, health centers that are closely related to federally qualified health centers, county clinics, and
other community-based organizations.
(C) Carrying out local public awareness efforts around birth outcome inequities and the importance of preconception health, group prenatal care, evidence-based interventions to prevent preterm births, and social support during pregnancy, and to promote the role of fathers and partners as supports for women during and after pregnancy.
(D) Participating in collaborative statewide learning efforts and sharing best practices.
(E) Collecting and reporting data and information on process and outcome measures regarding the programs and activities carried out with allocated funds.
implementing the initiative, consult with stakeholders, including, but not limited to, representatives of county health departments, current or former
participants in the strategies described in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (3) of subdivision (b), health providers, or organizations representing health providers that provide services to improve Black infant health outcomes, advocates, and any appropriate state department or agency.
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