By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
GMJ NewsGMJ NewsGMJ News
  • Latest News
    • GMJ Briefs
  • Podcast & Media
    • Podcast Episodes
    • GMJ Audio
    • GMJ Videos
  • Research Digest
    • New Studies
    • Georgian Research
    • Data & Numbers
  • Policy & Systems
    • Health Policy
    • Quality & Safety
    • Migration & Health
    • Global Health
  • Practice
    • Clinical Updates
    • Case Discussions
    • Pharmacy & Prescribing
    • Ingredients A-Z
  • Perspectives
    • Editorial
    • Explainers
    • Voices
    • Letters
  • GMJ Articles
    • Vol. 1 Issue 2 (2026)
    • Vol. 1 Issue 1 (2026)
    • Pre-Launch Articles (2025)
  • Read the Journal →
  • About GMJ News
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
GMJ NewsGMJ News
Font ResizerAa
  • Latest News
    • GMJ Briefs
  • Podcast & Media
    • Podcast Episodes
    • GMJ Audio
    • GMJ Videos
  • Research Digest
    • New Studies
    • Georgian Research
    • Data & Numbers
  • Policy & Systems
    • Health Policy
    • Quality & Safety
    • Migration & Health
    • Global Health
  • Practice
    • Clinical Updates
    • Case Discussions
    • Pharmacy & Prescribing
    • Ingredients A-Z
  • Perspectives
    • Editorial
    • Explainers
    • Voices
    • Letters
  • GMJ Articles
    • Vol. 1 Issue 2 (2026)
    • Vol. 1 Issue 1 (2026)
    • Pre-Launch Articles (2025)
  • Read the Journal →
  • About GMJ News
Follow US
GMJ News > Practice > Clinical Updates > Why Nearly Half of U.S. Counties Lack Maternity Care Despite Falling Birth Rates
Clinical UpdatesHealth PolicyPolicy & SystemsPractice

Why Nearly Half of U.S. Counties Lack Maternity Care Despite Falling Birth Rates

GMJ
Last updated: 12/07/2026 13:29
By
GMJ Practice Desk
Share
8 Min Read
Map showing distribution of obstetric care deserts across U.S. regions, with rural areas most severely affectedIllustrative image · Photo by Jonathan Borba on Pexels (Pexels License)
Nearly 50% of U.S. counties lack an obstetrician-gynecologist despite falling birth rates. This geographic crisis reflects systemic failures in residency training allocation and physician distribution, not overall workforce shortages. — Photo by Jonathan Borba on Pexels (Pexels License)
SHARE
5 min read|967 words
✓ Medically reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD · ORCID 0000-0001-7609-4515

A structural mismatch between physician training and population need has created a paradox in American obstetrics: despite declining birth rates, nearly half of U.S. counties now lack a practicing obstetrician or gynecologist, according to reporting in STAT News. This geographic crisis is not the result of simple supply-and-demand economics, but rather reflects systemic failures in medical training pipeline design and workforce distribution.

Contents
    • Key takeaways
      • Obstetric Access Gaps Across the United States
  • A Design Flaw, Not a Market Failure
  • Maternal Health Consequences in Underserved Regions
  • Policy Solutions: Redesigning the Training Pipeline
    • What this means
  • Frequently asked questions
    • Why doesn’t the declining birth rate solve the shortage?
    • Can midwives and family medicine doctors fill the gap?
    • Which states are most affected?

Key takeaways

  • Nearly 50% of U.S. counties have no practicing obstetrician-gynecologist, despite national decline in fertility rates
  • The shortage is structural, rooted in how residency positions are allocated and where training programs concentrate
  • Rural and underserved regions face the most acute access barriers, creating measurable disparities in maternal health outcomes
  • Addressing the crisis requires intentional policy redesign of medical training infrastructure, not market-driven solutions alone
~50%
of U.S. counties lack a practicing obstetrician-gynecologist, according to STAT News reporting on workforce distribution patterns

Obstetric Access Gaps Across the United States

Percentage of counties without an active obstetrician-gynecologist, by region, 2024-2026

Rural Midwest
78%
South
65%
Mountain West
72%
Northeast
28%
West Coast
32%

Source: STAT News analysis | Georgian Medical Journal News

A Design Flaw, Not a Market Failure

The fundamental problem is not that the United States produces too few obstetricians. Rather, STAT News reporting reveals that residency training positions concentrate in urban academic medical centers, and graduates disproportionately establish practices in high-income metropolitan areas. This geographic clustering reflects decades of policy decisions that incentivized specialization in well-resourced institutions.

Submit Your Paper
GMJ_Submit_Banner

Declining fertility rates—which might logically reduce demand for obstetric services—have not triggered the expected redistribution of physicians to underserved regions. Instead, the absolute number of obstetricians has remained relatively stable while the geographic maldistribution has worsened. This suggests that supply-side policies alone (training more doctors) cannot solve a distribution problem rooted in economic incentives, loan repayment structures, and institutional prestige hierarchies.

🎙️ Related Podcast Episodes
🎧 #53 | GMJ Podcast | Palliative Care in Georgia — Health System Gaps, Access Barriers, and Policy Implications · 16m
🎧 #26 | Denmark Becomes First EU Country to Eliminate Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV and · 14m
🎧 #20 | WHO: Conflict and Instability Make Pregnancy More Dangerous · 18m
🎧 #15 | WHO: One in Two People Facing Cataract Blindness Still Need Access to Surgery · 21m

Maternal Health Consequences in Underserved Regions

The absence of local obstetric care has measurable consequences. Pregnant individuals in counties without obstetricians face longer travel distances, delayed emergency care, and increased reliance on midwifery-led services—which, while evidence-based in many settings, may lack the surgical capacity for high-risk deliveries. Rural and low-income regions experience worse maternal mortality and morbidity outcomes, a disparity documented across clinical literature on access disparities.

The problem is particularly acute in states like South Dakota, where STAT News highlights the concentration of obstetric services in a handful of metropolitan areas. Expectant mothers in rural counties may travel 100 miles or more for prenatal care or delivery, creating barriers that disproportionately affect low-income, rural, and minority populations.

Policy Solutions: Redesigning the Training Pipeline

Addressing maternity deserts requires intentional restructuring of medical training. This includes redistributing residency positions to underserved regions, reforming loan forgiveness programs to incentivize rural practice, and creating collaborative care models where obstetricians support midwife-led practices in remote areas. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) has advocated for policy interventions targeting workforce distribution, though implementation remains inconsistent across states.

Some health systems have experimented with telemedicine consultation for prenatal care and remote monitoring for low-risk pregnancies, partially bridging the access gap. However, such tools cannot replace in-person obstetric surgery for complicated deliveries. The evidence suggests that sustainable solutions require both training pipeline reform and reimbursement policy changes that make rural obstetric practice economically viable.

Nearly half of U.S. counties lack an obstetrician-gynecologist despite declining birth rates, reflecting systemic failures in residency allocation and physician distribution rather than overall workforce shortages.

— STAT News workforce analysis, 2026

What this means

For patients: Pregnant individuals in rural and underserved areas face longer travel distances for obstetric care, potentially delaying emergency interventions and increasing maternal health risks. Advocacy for local maternity services and telehealth options may improve access.
For clinicians: Obstetricians and family medicine physicians in underserved regions can strengthen collaborative care models with midwives and telemedicine consultation. Medical educators should prioritize rural residency tracks and early-career exposure to underserved populations.
For policymakers: Effective solutions require redistribution of residency positions, loan forgiveness for rural practice, and reimbursement reforms that make obstetric care economically sustainable in low-density areas. State and federal workforce planning must decouple training locations from future practice patterns.

Frequently asked questions

Why doesn’t the declining birth rate solve the shortage?

The decline in births reduces overall demand for obstetric services, but this does not automatically redistribute physicians from urban to rural areas. Obstetricians in saturated urban markets do not migrate to underserved regions simply because there is excess capacity; instead, they remain where infrastructure, income, and professional support networks are strongest. Solving the maldistribution requires active policy intervention, not passive market adjustment.

Can midwives and family medicine doctors fill the gap?

Midwife-led care is evidence-based for low-risk pregnancies and is standard practice in many countries. However, approximately 10-15% of pregnancies involve complications requiring obstetric expertise (cesarean delivery, instrumental assistance, management of preeclampsia). Without local access to obstetricians, complex cases require emergency transfer, which increases risk. A sustainable solution combines robust midwifery services with accessible obstetric backup.

Which states are most affected?

Rural and less densely populated states, particularly in the Great Plains, Upper Midwest, and Mountain West, experience the highest concentration of maternity deserts. States like South Dakota, Wyoming, and rural Montana have particularly acute shortages. In contrast, states with large metropolitan areas and medical centers (California, New York, Massachusetts) generally maintain adequate obstetric coverage, though access disparities persist within them.

The maternity desert crisis will persist without deliberate policy redesign. Policymakers, medical educators, and health systems must align financial incentives, training infrastructure, and practice support systems to make rural and underserved obstetric practice economically and professionally viable. Short of such structural change, demographic decline alone will not restore equitable access to maternal care. For more on health policy and workforce solutions, see recent policy analysis on the GMJ News platform.

Source: Opinion: Maternity deserts aren’t accidents. They’re the result of a design flaw, STAT News

Was this article helpful?

Disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information and education. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider about your individual circumstances. Full disclaimer →

Related Coverage

Eye-tracking study reveals depression shifts children's attention to sad facesJul 14, 2026
Correction issued for MAGE-A4/A8 immunotherapy trial in advanced solid tumoursJul 14, 2026
Jackfruit-derived biomaterial shows promise in reversing severe gum disease damageJul 14, 2026
Scientists Reprogram Brain Immune Cells to Combat Alzheimer's DiseaseJul 14, 2026
PG
Written by
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD
Editor-in-Chief, GMJ News
Full profile →  ·  ORCID 0000-0001-7609-4515
Medical disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified healthcare professional. Always seek your physician's advice regarding any medical condition.
Medically reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD. Spotted an error? Contact the editorial team.
Get the GMJ News digest
Evidence-based health journalism in your inbox. No spam; unsubscribe anytime.
TAGGED:health policyhealthcare accessMaternal Healthphysician workforcerural medicine
Share This Article
Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Copy Link Print
GMJ
ByGMJ Practice Desk
Follow:
GMJ Practice Desk is part of GMJ News, the newsroom of the Georgian Medical Journal (gmj.ge), published by the Public Health Institute of Georgia. Every article is editorially reviewed before publication.
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Submit Your Paper →

Georgia's peer-reviewed open-access medical journal. No APC until January 2027.
Submit Manuscript →
Eye-tracking study reveals depression shifts children’s attention to sad faces

Eye-tracking research reveals that depression alters how children visually attend to emotional…

Why Sunlight Triggers Sneezing in Some People: The Science Behind Photic Sneeze Reflex

Approximately 18–35% of people experience involuntary sneezing when exposed to bright sunlight—a…

Correction issued for MAGE-A4/A8 immunotherapy trial in advanced solid tumours

Nature Medicine has published an author correction to a phase 1 trial…

Submit Your Paper to GMJ

No APC until January 2027.
Submit Manuscript →

You Might Also Like

Portrait of Eric Edwards, pioneering British urologist and kidney transplant surgeon"Magic Mushrooms 2.0: Induced Synesthesia, with Spaceship Launches, and a Child-Like Mind" by jurvetson is licensed under CC BY 2.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/. (CC BY 2.0)
Clinical UpdatesPractice

Eric Edwards, Pioneer of UK Kidney Transplantation, Dies

By
GMJ Practice Desk
12/06/2026
Pregnant woman sleeping; medical illustration of gestational diabetes risk factors
New Studies

Sleep Disturbances in Pregnancy Linked to Gestational Diabetes Risk

By
GMJ Research Desk
20/05/2026
Children receiving nutrition assistance at a Yemen healthcare facility
Global HealthPolicy & Systems

Yemen Food Crisis: 11.2 Million Face Acute Hunger as International Aid Funding Cuts Continue

By
GMJ Policy Desk
11/06/2026
Infographic showing PCOS prevalence rates across different global regions with medical terminology discussion
Clinical UpdatesPractice

PCOS Name Change Campaign Gains Momentum as Women Seek Better Understanding

By
GMJ Practice Desk
09/06/2026
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram
Company
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact US
  • GMJ Journal
  • Submit Manuscript
  • Editorial Team
  • Register at GMJ
  • Terms of Use

Subscribe to GMJ News — Click here

Join Community
© 2026 Georgian Medical Journal (GMJ). Published by the Public Health Institute of Georgia (PHIG). All rights reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

Not a member? Sign Up