AbilityHUB Highlights Need for Real-Time Visibility in Maternal Care, Showcases Family-Centered Approach with FieldWorker

Following the Black Maternal Health Week session last month, AbilityHUB outlines a new approach to improving maternal care outcomes through coordinated, connected care delivery.

Maternal health outcomes are often shaped not just by the care delivered, but by how consistently that care is followed through. As maternal care increasingly extends beyond clinical settings into homes and communities, maintaining visibility across care teams, families, and timelines remains a critical challenge.

In a recent session held as part of Black Maternal Health Week, FieldWorker & AbilityHUB brought together this challenge and its solution into focus, highlighting how care delivery today requires stronger coordination, shared visibility, and continuous engagement beyond the point of care.

A key issue in maternal health programs is disconnection. When care spans multiple providers, touchpoints, and environments, agencies often lose track of follow-ups, interventions, and overall progress. This lack of visibility makes it difficult to ensure that care plans are consistently executed, particularly when a significant portion of outcomes is influenced by non-clinical factors such as social and environmental conditions.

FieldWorker addresses this gap by enabling structured care delivery with built-in tracking, accountability, and program-level visibility. Every interaction, intervention, and follow-up is captured and monitored, allowing care teams to stay aligned and informed across the entire care journey.

Complementing this, AbilityHUB introduces a family-centered layer to care delivery, bringing expectant mothers, caregivers, and providers into a shared system. Through connected schedules, communication, and real-time updates, families are no longer passive participants but active contributors to the care plan.

Together, FieldWorker and AbilityHUB create a connected care environment where maternal health programs can move from disconnected execution to coordinated, continuous care.

The webinar, titled “Bridging Care Gaps for Expectant Mothers Through Family-Centered Technology,” shows how this combined approach works in real-world settings. Through a live walkthrough, attendees were shown how improved coordination and shared visibility can directly impact engagement, adherence, and overall care outcomes.

“One of the biggest challenges in maternal health is not defining what care should be delivered, but ensuring that it is consistently followed through,” said Rohit Mathur, Co-Founder of FieldWorker. “When care moves across settings, teams, and support systems, visibility becomes critical. Our focus is on enabling that visibility, so every stakeholder, including families, stays connected to the care journey.”

As maternal health programs continue to evolve, there is growing recognition that effective care delivery depends on more than clinical interventions alone. Coordination across providers, inclusion of family support systems, and the ability to track care in real time are becoming essential components of improving outcomes at scale.

FieldWorker & AbilityHUB’s approach reflects this shift by positioning care delivery not as a series of isolated actions, but as a connected, accountable process supported by technology.

About AbilityHUB

AbilityHUB is a family and caregiver engagement platform that helps individuals, families, and care teams coordinate care, manage tasks, share updates, track important information, and stay connected through a centralized app.

AbilityHUB is fully integrated with FieldWorker as the family- and client-facing side of the same connected care platform. While FieldWorker helps provider agencies manage care coordination, documentation, service delivery, billing, scheduling, reporting, and compliance, AbilityHUB brings families, caregivers, and clients directly into the care process. Together, they create a unified platform that improves communication, visibility, and coordination across the full care team.

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