# Structural and Social Determinants of Maternal Mental Health, Morbidity, and Inequities in COMBO

> **NIH NIH R01** · COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES · 2021 · $881,466

## Abstract

ABSTRACT
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted and exacerbated health disparities related to structural racism and
discrimination (SRD), economic marginalization, and other social determinants of health (SDOH). Pregnant
and postpartum women face unique social and health vulnerabilities related to the pandemic, including risk for
stigma, housing, food, income and employment insecurity, psychological distress, and even mortality – risks
and consequences which are disproportionately significant and adverse for women of color and low
socioeconomic status (SES). However, the collision of these multiple intersecting 21st century public health
crises have not yet been empirically or rigorously studied for inequities in maternal mental health and severe
morbidity. The COVID-19 Mother Baby Outcome (COMBO) initiative is a large multidisciplinary collaborative
established at Columbia University Irving Medical Center to follow SARS-CoV-2 exposed laboring mothers and
their newborns and compare their long-term health and wellbeing to case-matched dyads without prenatal
exposure. The focus of the parent NIMH ‘COMBO’ R01 MH126531 is to understand the effects of SARS-CoV-
2 on mother-infant brain-behavior functioning in a subset of 100 COMBO-enrolled dyads with and without
prenatal SARS-COV-2 infections. Responding to key priorities of NOSI NOT-OD-21-071 and leveraging
COMBO’s robust infrastructure, this administrative supplement (PA-20-272) expands the parent R01 to study
the independent and interactive effects of SRD/SDOH and SARS-CoV-2 on inequities in maternal mental
health, taking advantage of COMBO’s unique setting (first pandemic epicenter) and understudied socially
disadvantaged sample (>600 mother-infant dyads enrolled to-date, with 63% mothers identifying as
racial/ethnic minority and/or low-SES women). By expanding parent R01 brain imaging, surveys, semi-
structured interviews, and electronic health record (EHR) extraction, we will test the overarching hypothesis
that SRD/SDOH and SARS-CoV-2 independently and additively increase risk of adverse maternal mental
health outcomes, with the magnitude of the negative impact being greatest for women of social disadvantage
and the health disparity gap ballooning during – and persisting post – the pandemic. Findings will inform
patient-centered, multi-level interventions to ameliorate the intersecting epidemics of SRD/SDOH and SARS-
CoV-2 and their mental health sequelae for women of social disadvantage in NYC and beyond.

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10393379
- **Project number:** 3R01MH126531-01S1
- **Recipient organization:** COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES
- **Principal Investigator:** DANI DUMITRIU
- **Activity code:** R01 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $881,466
- **Award type:** 3
- **Project period:** 2021-04-12 → 2026-01-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10393379

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10393379, Structural and Social Determinants of Maternal Mental Health, Morbidity, and Inequities in COMBO (3R01MH126531-01S1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-27 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10393379. Licensed CC0.

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