An Initiative to Improve Maternal Health
Focusing on Improving Maternal Health Outcomes
In 2019, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) awarded the National Healthy Start Association (NHSA) with a cooperative agreement for a five-year project focused on improving maternal health outcomes across the United States. This program would become the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health Community Care Initiative (AIM CCI).


Goals of the Project
AIM CCI’s goal is to reduce maternal mortality and morbidity through the development and implementation of non-hospital focused maternal safety bundles across community and outpatient settings. These safety bundles are sets of evidence-based practices meant to improve maternal health outcomes. The bundles are created to address specific areas of need in communities that experience high rates of maternal mortality and morbidity.
AIM CCI also seeks to address poor health outcomes in maternal mortality. Black and Native women are around three times more likely to die from pregnancy complications than non-Hispanic White women. The root causes of these differences in outcomes in maternal health care must be uncovered and addressed.
Why Focus on the Community?
The community and outpatient setting were deliberately chosen to help address regions with poor health outcomes for pregnant and postpartum women. Community organizations know women in their region best—they are in more frequent contact and communication with them no matter where they are on the pregnancy or postpartum continuum. They also understand the specific challenges women in their region face. If community organizations and traditional health care structures can connect and communicate, public health interventions can be tailored to meet the specific needs of women in a particular region and outcomes can be improved.

The AIM CCI Team
As a part of NHSA, the AIM CCI team is composed of experts in the maternal and child health fields with decades of experience. Learn more about the qualifications of the AIM CCI team here.