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Maternity care is disappearing as birth rates continue to fall
Life Site News ^ | January 2, 2026 | Steven Mosher and Samantha Lejeune

Posted on 01/02/2026 10:23:32 PM PST by Morgana

(LifeSiteNews) — Samantha recently became pregnant and, as her baby grew, eventually had to admit that regular jeans were not going to cut it. So she set out to buy a few maternity basics, only to find that every department store she walked into had quietly ditched its maternity section. Stores that used to have full aisles now had nothing but one sad little rack. Plus-sized clothing now hung where expectant mamas once shopped.

As an employee of the Population Research Institute (PRI), she was well aware of the falling fertility rate in the U.S. She also knew that supply follows demand – stores stock what sells. But she hadn’t noticed how the birth dearth was changing the world around her until she needed maternity clothes herself. The reality of it was jarring for all of us.

And it turns out clothing options for expectant mothers aren’t the only thing disappearing. Maternity care is too.

A March of Dimes 2024 Report brings this reality into sharp focus. Across the nation, it reports, “maternity care deserts” are spreading. These “deserts” refer to counties with no hospital or birthing center that delivers babies and no OB/GYNs or certified nurse midwives. More than a third of counties in the United States fall into this category, and plenty more barely meet the threshold for limited access.

In other words, millions of American women live in places where access to prenatal care and delivering their baby safely is far harder than it should be.

Why? Because their local hospital quietly closed its labor and delivery unit upon deciding it was not financially viable.

This is not just a statistic. It changes the entire experience of pregnancy – for the worse. Women living in “maternity care deserts” tend to start prenatal care later, have fewer total appointments, and face higher risks of complications. Many moms have to drive up to an hour, or even more, for basic checkups, and end up delivering far from home. And they are more likely to have their babies prematurely or give birth to low-birth-weight babies.

These are not small inconveniences. They add stress as expectant moms and dads imagine an hour-long drive to the hospital while in the throes of labor. They add cost in terms of travel expenses and lost wages. And, in some cases, they constitute a real danger to the health of both mother and child. Taken together, they send a message to couples thinking about starting a family that bringing a child into the world is not supported.

Since the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the pro-abortion media has spread the narrative that pro-life legislation is to blame for “maternity care deserts,” claiming that states which value life have driven away doctors. But while it is true that some medical residents prefer training in states with permissive abortion laws, this is not the whole picture. The Association of American Medical Colleges admits, “Nationally, the number of residency applicants continues to exceed the number of training slots available,” including all states with pro-life legislation in place.

The reason maternity units are closing right now is basic economics. Birth numbers are falling, there are fewer trained staff, and the labor and delivery wards of hospitals often lose money. As Trilliant Health notes, “The strain for L&D units is exacerbated by slowing population growth, declining birth rates and the limited scalability of smaller, low-volume hospitals.”

Making the problem even worse, many states also heavily restrict midwives and birthing centers, further limiting mothers’ access to maternity care.

This all goes back to depopulation, the issue that PRI has been warning about for decades. The U.S. fertility rate has been dropping for decades. There are many reasons why many Americans have become averse to having children, including the rising cost of housing and other financial pressures, not to mention a popular culture that devalues marriage and family.

But we rarely talk about how disappearing maternity care plays into this decline.

If starting a family means hours of driving for each and every prenatal appointment, or if birth means delivering a baby in a hospital two counties away, it absolutely affects how couples think about children. Feeling supported in pregnancy matters. Feeling like your community is set up to support a growing family matters.

What makes this even more striking is that rural communities, which have higher birth rates than the American average, are losing maternity services the fastest. Hundreds of rural hospitals have shut down their maternity wards and stopped delivering babies. Rural families are still choosing life, but the health care infrastructure to support their choice is crumbling at the very moment they need it most.

If we want to reverse declining fertility, we have to support expectant moms from conception through birth – and after. Pregnancy is challenging enough already without the added fear of financial setbacks, or the worry that you might be giving birth in the back seat of your car because the hospital is so far away.

We need to rebuild a reliable maternity care system nationwide that lets women start pregnancy with confidence.

And while we are at it, let’s Make Birth Free by mandating that insurance cover all the costs of birth. There is legislation before Congress to do exactly this.

When couples know that maternity care is accessible and affordable, higher birth rates will follow naturally. Strong families will be formed and America’s future will be assured.

And, as Samantha notes, while we are fixing that, it would not hurt to bring back a few decent maternity clothing sections too.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: birthrates; maternity; prolife

1 posted on 01/02/2026 10:23:32 PM PST by Morgana
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To: Morgana

Well this isn’t good.


2 posted on 01/02/2026 10:36:14 PM PST by Whatever Works
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To: Morgana

But there seems to be a lot of money to be made in the child care business.


3 posted on 01/02/2026 10:49:45 PM PST by aquila48 (Do not let them make you "care" ! Guilting you is how they control you. )
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To: Morgana

Oh good grief. Do they not take into account womens shopping habits have changed? Amazon is full of all this stuff, as well as ebay and other online sites. And there are plenty of local places that carry it, heck even thrift stores have decent secondhand itmes if you have to have it that second.

Talk about a first world problem.


4 posted on 01/02/2026 10:50:19 PM PST by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: Secret Agent Man

There are still those who don’t like to shop online and would rather shop in a store. Main thing is to try stuff on, more so when you are pregnant.

I have to agree here on this one why no maternity section?

Dawg Minnesota has a day care on every block but not one maternity clothing store? Something is very wrong here.


5 posted on 01/02/2026 11:28:02 PM PST by Morgana ( “Abortion is the ultimate exploitation of women.” — Alice Paul 🇺🇸 )
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To: Morgana

There’s always something to whine about.


6 posted on 01/03/2026 5:59:35 AM PST by webheart (Notice how I said all of that without any hyphens, and only complete words? )
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To: Morgana

Article:

“Make Birth Free”

Another article favoring looting for a “good cause”.


7 posted on 01/03/2026 6:02:22 AM PST by cgbg ("Your identity is how power treats you.")
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To: Morgana

Maternity sections disappeared a long long time ago. Like in the 90s. Because dedicated maternity/ prenatal/ baby stores rose up. A couple of aisles couldn’t compete with whole stores, so the aisles went away.


8 posted on 01/03/2026 6:07:03 AM PST by discostu (like a dog being shown a card trick)
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To: Morgana

Another side effect of the decades-long offshoring of durable goods manufacturing jobs.Family men need jobs that won’t disappear after a few years, and that start at a given time of day and end after a given number of hours on their shift, so they can also head their families and provide.

Ever since “planning” and MBAs started running the economy, the middle class has declined. Without a middle class, we cannot be a free republic.


9 posted on 01/03/2026 8:48:51 AM PST by Albion Wilde (Yesterday only comes one time. —Richard Starkey)
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To: Whatever Works

Well this isn’t good.

It is also incorrect.

The American Birth Rate is not falling.

U.S. birth rate for 2025 was 11.99, a 0.12% decline from 2024.
U.S. birth rate for 2024 was 12.01, a 12.23% increase from 2023.
U.S. birth rate for 2023 was 10.70, a 2.73% decline from 2022.
U.S. birth rate for 2022 was 11.00, a 0% increase from 2021.

Crude birth rate indicates the number of live births occurring during the year, per 1,000 population estimated at midyear.

Also the number of births is holding steady for the last three years at 3.6 million a year (using an average of the first ten months for the last two months) after dropping from 3.9 million in 2016.

The number of births per year for the last three years are 100,000 below the ten year average of 3,712,479.

Lastly, a bit of trivia. Apparently, December is the most active month for procreation as the most births are in August. July and then September are second and third for births.


10 posted on 01/03/2026 10:02:58 AM PST by Steven Scharf
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