Healthy Births and Strong Beginnings

Laying the foundation for a brighter future begins well before birth. The prenatal period is critical to a child’s outcomes during infancy, throughout early childhood, and even into adulthood.

During pregnancy, a woman’s health status and behavior can affect her growing fetus and have long-term physical and cognitive effects on her child post-delivery. Access to high-quality, consistent prenatal care, including medical examinations and health education, can help ensure a safe, healthy pregnancy and childbirth experience for mothers and support positive developmental outcomes for their children.

After birth, access to high-quality, consistent medical care and nurturing care is critical for infants’ wellbeing. Babies who are physically and emotionally healthy are more likely to become healthy, stable, successful adults. The healthcare system touches nearly all babies, and many, including our Foundation, recognize it as an important entry point and pathway to improved health and early childhood outcomes for children.

Pregnant women who do not receive or do not have access to prenatal care are 3x more likely to deliver a baby with low birthweight.25

Women who access less prenatal care or seek care later in their pregnancy have a greater risk of preterm birth. In the United States, preterm births cost $26.6 billion each year, or $51,600 per infant born preterm.26

98% of births
occur in hospitals.27

90% of families attend
well-child visits.28

79% of parents want more parenting
guidance from their doctor.29

Access to high-quality prenatal and postnatal care:

  • Supports a healthy and equitable pregnancy and childbirth experience

  • Improves infant and parental health outcomes

  • Builds the foundation for healthy brain development and secure parent-child attachment

In their first three years of life, children attend as many as 13 well-child visits, making pediatric care an important and near universal touchpoint for parents and families. For new parents across socio-economic status and racial and ethnic groups, pediatric clinics have been cited as one of the most trusted resources, second only to immediate family.

Parents need support in the postnatal period as well. When parents and caregivers are at their best, they are better able to provide the types of safe, stable, and nurturing relationships needed for healthy cognitive, social, and emotional development. Research underscores the importance of supporting parental wellbeing, showing that a parent’s health is one of the strongest predictors of a child’s health outcomes. Indeed, parental health is more strongly associated with a child’s health than many other socio-economic or demographic factors, including family income, family structure, parents’ level of education, and the child’s sex, age, or race.

To support strong beginnings for children and families, the Burke Foundation invests in community-led promising and evidence-based programs that:

  • Increase prenatal and postnatal support for pregnant women

  • Improve infant and parental health

  • Reduce parental stress by connecting families to community resources

  • Increase the effectiveness of important early childhood touch points

  • Support policies and systems to increase prenatal and pediatric healthcare access and affordability, food security, and food nutrition