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Amid COVID, Programs Scramble To Provide Moms With Milk, Diapers And More

Aime'e Elliott, the mother of 5 month old Jacion, participates in the Indianapolis Healthy Start Program.
Aime'e Elliott
Aime'e Elliott, the mother of 5 month old Jacion, participates in the Indianapolis Healthy Start Program.

Earlier this year, Aime鈥檈 Elliott couldn鈥檛 keep any solid foods down while pregnant with son Jacion. So the 28-year-old Indianapolis woman called a community group before even considering her doctor.

Healthy Start advised Elliott to eat dry foods like cereal to calm her nausea. That worked.

It鈥檚 why she鈥檚 birthed four children with the group鈥檚 support. 鈥淭hey treat you as their own,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey treat you as family.鈥

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to hit marginalized families hard, Healthy Start and similar organizations that provide maternal and infant care are seeing a spike in calls.

Healthy Start offers free education and support services to pregnant women and their families in an effort to eliminate disparities in birth outcomes in Marion County. Since the pandemic began, more than 1,000 parents have received its services and they are often in need of diapers, cribs and utility assistance, organizers say.

Data for Marion County shows a stark racial disparity in infant mortality 鈥 and factors that contribute to it. Seventy-five percent of white women begin prenatal care in the first trimester, but that drops to 53% for Black women and 44% for Hispanic women.

鈥淲e lose about one school bus of infants each month,鈥 executive director Freedom Kolb says about Indiana鈥檚 mortality rate. 鈥淐an you imagine if one school bus were crashing every month? We would do something about it.鈥 

Giving nutrient-rich milk to babies who can鈥檛 always nurse is one way to improve outcomes, she says. The Milk Bank receives human milk from donors, then pasteurizes, freezes and distributes it, especially for premature or sick infants. Kolb says her non-profit is the state鈥檚 only donor human milk bank and has seen demand boom amid the pandemic.

She says social distancing measures at hospitals have sent some of the bank鈥檚 tiny clients home early with moms who, for various reasons, may be unable to produce enough milk.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e just receiving this big, wrap-around hug from all the moms still supplying their milk and finding safe ways to do that,鈥 Kolb says, reiterating how pasteurization inactivates the coronavirus.

The Milk Bank has helped more than 200 families this year. Typically, recipient fees are covered by hospitals for inpatient use. For families facing financial barriers, the organization offers help based on a sliding scale. The demand for financial aid has mirrored the timeline of the pandemic, but so has the benevolence of donors.

鈥淲e saw our moms step up and protect the state's babies almost like never before,鈥 Kolb says. 鈥淲e felt this collective force of 鈥榥ot on our watch.鈥欌

With more families requesting free milk, donor moms have produced more than 500,000 ounces this year 鈥 an 8% increase over last year. Kolb says those extra ounces can add up to 100,000 additional feedings for the most fragile infants.

On one Saturday this month, nearly 300 children got help from an organization that provides another vital childcare product: diapers.

A third of Hoosier families struggle to afford clean diapers, president and CEO Rachael Suskovich says.

鈥淵ou can't drop your child off at daycare without at least a full day's supply of diapers,鈥 she says. 鈥淐hild care workers in neighborhoods that are high need areas will agree parents are missing work. They're not dropping their children off because they don't have those diapers to send them to care.鈥

Suskovich says studies have shown children facing diaper shortages go to the doctor four times more often for urinary tract infections and diaper rashes. 

A clean diaper can also lower reduce the risk of child abuse, she says. 鈥淣obody wants to admit that they can鈥檛 provide clean diapers for their child. We have been struggling to keep up with the staggering need.鈥 

One Indianapolis mother who came to the diaper bank was wrapping her children in dish towels and grocery bags before receiving a donation this month, Suskovich says.

As Hoosiers families struggle with tight budgets during a pandemic that has shuttered businesses, she says the bank has been busier than ever. In March and April alone, it distributed 150,000 diapers 鈥 as many as it handed out in 2019.

In Marion County, the overall infant mortality rate improved in 2019 from the previous year, and the rate for Black babies was the lowest ever. Still, Black infants are two times more likely to die before age 1 than their white counterparts. 

Health advocates say they want more people to know about resources that can change outcomes. 

Elliott says she鈥檒l always turn to Healthy Start for a pregnancy.

Now, five-month-old Jacion is a cute reminder of Gov. Eric Holcomb鈥檚 goal for Indiana to have the lowest infant mortality rate in the Midwest by 2024. 

鈥淚t is for us,鈥 she says. 鈥淥ur black women in our community are the safety of us and our well-being, and that of our children.鈥 

Expectant women and new mothers can also call the MOMS Helpline at 1-844-MCH-MOMS (1-844-624-6667) to find resources available in their area.  

This story was reported as part of a partnership between WFYI, Side Effects Public Media and the Indianapolis Recorder.

Copyright 2021 Side Effects Public Media. To see more, visit .

Hilary Powell is an AP award-winning journalist. She is a health equity reporter for Side Effects, covering how health disparities impact Black and brown Hoosiers for WFYI and The Indianapolis Recorder. She鈥檚 also served as the first Video Journalist for the Associated Press in D.C. She has nearly a decade of experience in telling stories for television stations in The Nation's Capitol, North Carolina, Indiana and Illinois. She cut her teeth in network television as an intern for The Oprah Winfrey Show and worked her way up to being one of the youngest digital associate producers for The Oprah Winfrey Network. She's from Indianapolis, is a North Central High School Panther, and feels blessed to tell someone鈥檚 story each day.