CARE for Moms Act
Summary
What This Bill Does
The CARE for Moms Act responds to maternal mortality findings with several programs. HHS through CDC must create a State-Based Perinatal Quality Collaborative grant program, with awards up to $250,000 per year, to sustain perinatal quality collaboratives in every State, D.C., and eligible territories. HHS must support regional centers of excellence for implicit bias, cultural competency, and respectful-care education for health professionals. It appropriates $50 million for fiscal year 2026 for grants or contracts to grow and diversify the full-spectrum doula workforce through training, scholarships, and recruitment from underserved communities. HRSA must run rural obstetric mobile health unit grants for States to purchase and equip units, train obstetric providers, address social determinants and wraparound services, protect personally identifiable information from law enforcement disclosure, report results, and support evaluation. Hospitals must notify HHS at least 90 days before obstetric unit closure and analyze community impact and service-gap mitigation. HHS must report within 24 months on where maternal health needs are greatest, Federal spending from 2000 through 2024, funding barriers, unsuccessful applications, and disaggregated data. The bill also raises and equalizes excise taxes across cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, discrete nicotine units, and other tobacco products.
Who Benefits and How
Pregnant patients, postpartum patients, infants, Black mothers, American Indian and Alaska Native mothers, and rural communities benefit from quality collaboratives, bias training, doula workforce investments, mobile obstetric services, closure notices, and maternal-needs analysis. Doulas, health professions schools, community health centers, Tribes, Native Hawaiian organizations, and community-based organizations benefit from grant and contract opportunities. Public-health agencies benefit from better data on maternal needs and tobacco-tax revenue or deterrence.
Who Bears the Burden and How
HHS, CDC, HRSA, Treasury, IRS, hospitals, States, and grant recipients must implement multiple grant, training, reporting, privacy, closure-notice, evaluation, and tax changes. Hospitals planning obstetric unit closures must provide 90 days notice and community-impact reports. Tobacco manufacturers, importers, distributors, retailers, and consumers face higher excise taxes and new categories such as discrete single-use units. Federal taxpayers fund the maternal-health appropriations.
Key Provisions
- Establishes State-Based Perinatal Quality Collaborative grants of up to $250,000 per year for every State, D.C., and eligible territories.
- Creates regional centers of excellence for implicit bias, cultural competency, and respectful-care education in maternal health.
- Appropriates $50 million in fiscal year 2026 to grow and diversify the full-spectrum doula workforce.
- Creates HRSA rural obstetric mobile health unit grants with privacy protections, State reporting, and Federal evaluation.
- Requires hospitals to notify HHS at least 90 days before closing obstetric units and explain community impacts and service-gap plans.
- Requires a maternal-health needs and Federal spending report covering 2000 through 2024.
- Raises and equalizes tobacco excise taxes across cigarettes, cigars, smokeless tobacco, discrete nicotine units, and other tobacco products.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Creates and funds maternal-health programs for perinatal quality collaboratives, implicit-bias training centers, doula workforce development, rural obstetric mobile units, obstetric-unit closure notices, maternal-health needs reporting, and tobacco tax increases.
Key Policy Areas
Healthcare, Maternal Health, Tax
Primary Purpose
Creates and funds maternal-health programs for perinatal quality collaboratives, implicit-bias training centers, doula workforce development, rural obstetric mobile units, obstetric-unit closure notices, maternal-health needs reporting, and tobacco tax increases.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Pregnant patients
- Postpartum patients
- Infants in rural communities
- Black mothers
- American Indian and Alaska Native mothers
- Full spectrum doulas
- Rural obstetric care providers
Identified Costs
- Department of Health and Human Services
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Health Resources and Services Administration
- Hospitals closing obstetric units
- State health agencies
- Tobacco manufacturers
- Internal Revenue Service
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeMs. Kelly of Illinois introduced the following bill; which was …
Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in …
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Black mothers, Full spectrum doulas, Hospitals closing obstetric units
Positive-direction: Full spectrum doulas, Maternal health grant applicants, Postpartum patients in underserved communities, Pregnant patients in hospital service areas, Rural obstetric care providers, Rural pregnant patients, Underserved communities with high maternal mortality
Negative-direction: Hospitals closing obstetric units
Congressional health committees, Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration
Positive-direction: Congressional health committees
Negative-direction: Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration, Internal Revenue Service
Community-based organizations, Public health organizations
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology