In an ectopic pregnancy, when the growing embryo causes a uterine tube rupture like the one in this micrograph, the patient could die from internal bleeding or infection without emergency surgery. Cultura RM Exclusive/Michael J. Klein, M.D./Image Source via Getty Images
An ectopic pregnancy occurs when a fertilized egg implants outside the uterus. This happens in roughly 2% of pregnancies.
As a nurse-midwife and reproductive health researcher, I think it is critical to understand this relatively common pregnancy complication.
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Normally, egg and sperm meet and combine inside a uterine tube. The fertilized egg travels through the tube and into the uterus, implants in the uterine lining and grows. But sometimes the fertilized egg doesn’t make it all the way to the uterus, implanting in the tube instead. The egg can also end up in an ovary, the cervix or the abdomen. Fertilized eggs have even implanted in scars from previous Caesarean births or other surgeries. But more than 90% of ectopic pregnancies are tubal.
Carrying tubal pregnancies to term is nearly impossible because a fertilized egg won’t survive long attached to locations outside the uterus. Other structures in the body simply can’t protect or nourish an embryo.
People at greatest risk for ectopic pregnancy have had one before. The risk is also higher in those with previous pelvic infections or past uterine surgeries. In vitro fertilization also increases the risk. Half of ectopic pregnancies, however, occur in people with no risk factors at all
In more than 90% of ectopic pregnancies, the fertilized egg implants in one of the uterine tubes. Veronika Zakharova/Science PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images
Why ectopic pregnancy matters
Ectopic pregnancy is dangerous. The implanted embryo just keeps growing in the narrow uterine tube. By about the third week after implanting, the embryo is large enough to put pressure on the tube from inside.
As the pressure builds, the patient typically has symptoms like one-sided lower abdominal pain, vaginal bleeding and fainting. When pressure from the growing embryo ruptures the tube, the patient feels stabbing or tearing pain on one side of the abdomen near the groin, along with a blood pressure drop and other symptoms of shock. Rupture causes hemorrhaging that can be deadly if untreated by surgery. Ectopic pregnancies are the leading cause of first-trimester maternal mortality.
Treatment depends on the patient’s health history and a medical assessment of their condition. Healthy individuals at low risk of imminent rupture may receive a gluteal injection of methotrexate. A drug that also treats cancers and autoimmune disorders, methotrexate makes it harder for cells to form DNA or to multiply. The embryo stops growing, and the body eventually reabsorbs it. One or two doses is usually effective.
If the uterine tube has ruptured, the patient needs emergency surgery. Through a small incision, the surgeon removes the embryo from the uterine tube, sometimes with all or part of the tube itself.
Treating this condition ends the pregnancy, which is why some people conflate ectopic pregnancy treatment with elective abortions. But with or without intervention, ectopic pregnancies won’t survive past the first few months. Instead, they end long before a healthy birth is possible.
It’s also impossible to “save” an ectopic pregnancy by moving the embryo to the uterus. Removing the embryo from the implantation site causes irreparable damage to the embryo. That’s why, despite the claims behind recent failed legislation, doctors cannot move an ectopic pregnancy from its original location to the uterus.
Amy Alspaugh does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
States where the most people live in maternal health care deserts
States where the most people live in maternal health care deserts

Compared to other developed nations, the United States regularly ranks among the worst countries for maternal and infant health outcomes. Childbirth outcomes are often tied to a birthing parent’s circumstances, fueling wide disparities at the geographic, demographic, and income levels.
Research has shown that access to prenatal care, family planning services, and other contraceptive resources decreases maternal and infant mortality. However, an increasing number of counties throughout the country are losing access to obstetric care. Aging populations, limited staff, and low reimbursement rates for Medicaid patients are factors that have made rural hospital birth units costly to operate.
Even in areas with access to maternal care, other challenges like poverty, limited transit, lack of insurance, and systematic racism can put families at risk of poor maternal and infant health outcomes. Estimates from the CDC show that 60% of pregnancy-related deaths in the U.S. are preventable, but inadequate treatment and identification of health risks contribute to hundreds of maternal deaths annually.
Pregnant Black people face disproportionate risks when giving birth. The infant mortality rate for Black children in the U.S. is double the rate for white children. Maternal mortality rates show similarly grim patterns, with 44 deaths per 100,000 live births among Black people compared to 17.9 per 100,000 live births for white people.
Stacker followed the March of Dimes’ definition of a maternity care desert, including counties with no hospitals with obstetric care, OB/GYNs, or certified nurse-midwives. To identify affected counties, Stacker analyzed the Area Health Resource Files from the Health Resources and Services Administration and merged this data with county-level birth data collected by the National Vital Statistics System to calculate how many births in each state are to parents who live in maternal health care deserts.
Stacker also used 2020 Census population data to calculate what percentage of a state’s population lives in counties without access to maternal health care. Stacker used population data across all sexes and ages to include county-level demographic data and more deeply compare racial disparities—although maternal health care deserts have a disproportionate impact on people between the ages 15–44, who can become pregnant.
Keep reading to learn about the challenges facing maternal health care in 15 states and how state policies and community-driven programs seek to bridge rural and demographic health care disparities.
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#15. Idaho

– Percent of state’s births to parents who live in maternal health care deserts: 9.9% (2,142 births)
– Population who lives in maternal health care desert: 10.3%
— 10.3% of state’s white population
— 2.5% of state’s Black population
— 10.0% of state’s Native American population
— 12.5% of state’s Hispanic population
— 4.4% of state’s Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander population
— 3.2% of state’s Asian population
With obstetric services limited in rural areas, research has shown that accredited, midwife-led birth centers offer patients with low-risk pregnancies meaningful options outside of a hospital setting. However, Idaho is one of 11 states that don’t regulate birth centers, meaning Medicaid and some commercial insurances won’t cover the costs of childbirth. Although birth centers are the setting for only a tiny portion of the state’s births, midwives in Idaho and other Western states are working to improve health care access for rural, low-risk patients.
#13. Louisiana

– Percent of state’s births to parents who live in maternal health care deserts: 11.2% (6,434 births)
– Population who lives in maternal health care desert: 11.7%
— 13.6% of state’s white population
— 9.5% of state’s Black population
— 14.6% of state’s Native American population
— 7.6% of state’s Hispanic population
— 8.7% of state’s Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander population
— 3.5% of state’s Asian population
Louisiana was one of the first states to implement a nurse-family partnership program. In 90% of the state’s parishes, eligible people pregnant for the first time are paired with specially trained nurses until the child’s second birthday. Most participants are enrolled in Medicaid, and the median household income is $6,000 annually. 88% of babies in the program were born full-term, compared to the state’s average of 86.9% across all income levels.
Other efforts specifically target Black parents, who are four times more likely to die from pregnancy complications than white people in Louisiana. The first Black-owned birth center opened in Lafayette this year. The Maternal and Child Health Coalition in New Orleans has advocated for municipal/state health care policies and inclusive hospital hiring practices.
#11. Iowa

– Percent of state’s births to parents who live in maternal health care deserts: 14.7% (5,444 births)
– Population who lives in maternal health care desert: 15.6%
— 17.3% of state’s white population
— 2.6% of state’s Black population
— 7.8% of state’s Native American population
— 8.2% of state’s Hispanic population
— 9.0% of state’s Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander population
— 3.4% of state’s Asian population
In 2019, Iowa was one of nine states to receive a grant from HRSA to address disparities in maternal health. The state has seen rising maternal death rates over the past two decades, and over 30 hospital birth units have closed in the state since 2000. The 2020 census revealed a declining birth rate across America, and in Iowa counties with aging populations, hospitals lose money in the operation of local birth centers. It’s an issue that’s even more prevalent in counties where a high proportion of births are funded through Medicaid since private insurance payments to hospitals are often greater than Medicaid rates.
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#10. Alabama

– Percent of state’s births to parents who live in maternal health care deserts: 15.3% (8,703 births)
– Population who lives in maternal health care desert: 16.2%
— 17.9% of state’s white population
— 13.2% of state’s Black population
— 19.1% of state’s Native American population
— 13.1% of state’s Hispanic population
— 8.9% of state’s Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander population
— 5.7% of state’s Asian population
Alabama finally decriminalized midwifery in 2016, after the practice had been illegal for over four decades, although certified nurse-midwives were allowed to work in hospital settings. This decriminalization has promoted the resurgence of Alabama’s rich midwifery history. Under Jim Crow laws, Black parents couldn’t access white hospitals, and Black midwives played a crucial role in overseeing births. Today, in a state where Black people are nearly five times more likely to die during pregnancy than white people, reproductive justice advocates believe historic midwifery models of care could better serve pregnant Black patients, especially in rural areas.
#8. Oklahoma

– Percent of state’s births to parents who live in maternal health care deserts: 16.7% (8,205 births)
– Population who lives in maternal health care desert: 18.0%
— 19.7% of state’s white population
— 7.9% of state’s Black population
— 27.3% of state’s Native American population
— 11.1% of state’s Hispanic population
— 4.4% of state’s Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander population
— 3.4% of state’s Asian population
Since 2010, 14 hospital birth centers have closed in Oklahoma. In rural hospitals across the country, balancing the cost of keeping trained obstetric staff on call with the dwindling birth rates in rural areas has left large swaths of the state without hospitals with birth units. Oklahoma is also one of the worst states for maternal mortality, with 2018 data showing 30.1 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, compared to 17.4 nationally. A recently formed maternal mortality review committee reviewed eight maternal death incidents in the state and found that seven of those cases were preventable with timelier interventions.
#7. Missouri

– Percent of state’s births to parents who live in maternal health care deserts: 17.9% (12,881 births)
– Population who lives in maternal health care desert: 17.9%
— 20.7% of state’s white population
— 3.9% of state’s Black population
— 22.0% of state’s Native American population
— 11.1% of state’s Hispanic population
— 22.2% of state’s Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander population
— 3.7% of state’s Asian population
A report from Missouri’s Office of Rural Health revealed that pregnancy-related deaths were 47% higher in rural areas than urban areas. Nine of the 10 Missouri counties with the highest infant mortality rate are considered rural. As an increasing number of hospitals close, nonprofit health care systems like Missouri Highlands have sought to expand their presence in rural parts of the state. Missouri laws now allow nurse practitioners to work up to 75 miles away from a collaborating physician, expanding a clinic’s rural reach.
#6. North Dakota

– Percent of state’s births to parents who live in maternal health care deserts: 19.7% (2,072 births)
– Population who lives in maternal health care desert: 21.1%
— 21.6% of state’s white population
— 3.8% of state’s Black population
— 36.0% of state’s Native American population
— 15.6% of state’s Hispanic population
— 7.4% of state’s Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander population
— 6.7% of state’s Asian population
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#2. South Dakota

– Percent of state’s births to parents who live in maternal health care deserts: 23.2% (2,715 births)
– Population who lives in maternal health care desert: 22.6%
— 21.8% of state’s white population
— 4.8% of state’s Black population
— 41.2% of state’s Native American population
— 15.7% of state’s Hispanic population
— 25.2% of state’s Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander population
— 5.8% of state’s Asian population
In 2016, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe sued the federal government for closing the emergency department of the reservation’s only hospital. Services like obstetric care were disrupted, and patients were diverted to alternative facilities ranging from 45–220 miles away. A federal appeals court recently ruled in the tribe’s favor, but the legal battle highlighted the challenges facing underfunded Indian Health Service hospitals.
Across South Dakota, pregnant Native Americans face poorer outcomes than pregnant white people. The maternal mortality rate for Indigenous people is 121 per 100,000, compared to 44 per 100,000 among white parents in the state. Access to transportation, eligibility for Medicaid, and systematic racism are some of the core factors causing this disparity. Proposed solutions to these complex challenges include reservation-based birthing centers, supporting traditional birth methods, and deploying telemedicine.
#1. Mississippi

– Percent of state’s births to parents who live in maternal health care deserts: 23.6% (8,484 births)
– Population who lives in maternal health care desert: 23.5%
— 23.8% of state’s white population
— 23.9% of state’s Black population
— 51.3% of state’s Native American population
— 19.1% of state’s Hispanic population
— 11.9% of state’s Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander population
— 5.6% of state’s Asian population
According to the CDC, Mississippi has the country’s highest infant mortality rate, at 9.7 deaths per 1,000 live births. A report from the state’s department of health shows that the high mortality rate connects to a large number of preterm births. Effective ways to reduce preterm births include screening pregnant people for conditions that may put them at a higher risk.
Community-driven health measures have been shown to improve infant health outcomes, and Mississippi has begun pilot programs to coordinate prenatal support for pregnant people living in poverty. However, Mississippi is also at the center of a major Supreme Court battle over whether it is constitutional to ban abortion after 15 weeks.
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