Social media posts allow you to easily distribute Hear Her® campaign messages and materials to your audience. Use your organization’s social media accounts to share important information about preventing pregnancy-related deaths. Below are some graphics from the campaign and tailored posts that you can use to share and promote Hear Her® on your social media channels.
Quick tips
Here are a few quick tips to help you make the most of your social media posts to promote the Hear Her campaign on Facebook, Instagram, and X (formally known as Twitter).
Connect with partners. Ask them to share the posts or promote the content.
Use the campaign hashtag on Twitter/X and Instagram to label your message: #HearHer, which allows people to group and sort posts with that hashtag.
Engage with our social media handles through likes, mentions, and shares (i.e., @CDCHearHer on Facebook and @CDC_DRH on X).
Download images that are sized appropriately for Facebook, Instagram and Twitter/X.
"I really want women just to be aware, to know if they're at risk. To have a plan in place. To not be intimidated in doctors' offices and to be heard."
"I kind of heard of the statistics of Black women being more at risk for complications. But being a professional athlete, I never imagined myself in this situation."
Hear Allyson Felix's story and message for others.
Each year in the US, thousands experience severe, unexpected pregnancy-related health problems. You know your body best. Voice your concerns if something doesn't feel right. Know the urgent maternal warning signs.
Pregnancy-related complications like preeclampsia (high blood pressure) can happen during and after pregnancy. Learn about urgent maternal warning signs. And speak up if something doesn't feel right.
Be the support pregnant and postpartum women need. If someone who is or was pregnant in the past year shares any symptoms or concerns, take them seriously. Hear them out and act quickly. It could help save a life. #HearHer https://bit.ly/CDCHearHerAdvocates
Be the support pregnant and postpartum women need. If someone who is or was pregnant in the past year shares any symptoms or concerns, take them seriously. Hear them out and act quickly. It could help save a life.
Too many women die each year in the US due to pregnancy-related complications. If you know someone who is or was pregnant in the past year, hear her concerns and help her find the care she needs.
Would you know if a loved one is having a serious pregnancy-related complication? If you know what to look for, you could do more than just help. You could help save a life. Learn the urgent maternal warning signs that need immediate care.
Seek medical care immediately if you experience an urgent maternal warning sign during pregnancy or in the year after. Some include headaches that won't go away, changes in vision, and trouble breathing.
It's normal to be tired during pregnancy or after you've given birth. But overwhelming tiredness, dizziness, or feeling very sad could be a warning sign of something more serious.
Fast-beating heart, heavy vaginal bleeding, changes in vision, and trouble breathing are just a few of the urgent maternal warning signs. Support your loved one by learning ALL the warning signs that need immediate medical care.
Black, American Indian, and Alaska Native women who are pregnant and postpartum are more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications than others. Most of these deaths are preventable. Be the one to #HearHer. https://bit.ly/CDCHearHerAdvocates
A pregnancy-related death can happen during pregnancy, at delivery, and even up to a year after delivery (postpartum). Every pregnancy-related death is tragic, especially because most are preventable.