A mother holding a newborn in a hospital setting for an article about the Detroit RxKids cash program

Detroit RxKids sends .4 million in free cash to new mothers in its first month

A Detroit program that prescribes cash — not medication — to pregnant women and new mothers distributed $1.4 million in its first month of citywide operation, reaching hundreds of families across one of the country’s most economically strained cities. The Detroit RxKids cash program marks one of the most ambitious guaranteed income experiments targeting maternal health in U.S. history.

At a glance

  • Detroit RxKids cash program: Pregnant participants receive $500 per month during pregnancy, followed by $500 monthly for the first year of their child’s life — no strings attached and no spending restrictions.
  • Citywide scale: The program expanded to serve all eligible Detroit residents after a successful pilot, enrolling hundreds of mothers in its first full month and distributing over $1.4 million in direct payments.
  • Evidence base: Research from earlier guaranteed income pilots, including the Stockton Economic Empowerment Demonstration, showed that unrestricted cash transfers reduce stress, improve employment outcomes, and support child development in low-income households.

Why cash for mothers?

The logic behind RxKids is straightforward: poverty is itself a health crisis. Financial stress during pregnancy is linked to premature birth, low birth weight, and worse long-term outcomes for children. Detroit has among the highest infant mortality rates of any major U.S. city, and Black infants in Detroit die at roughly three times the rate of white infants — a disparity decades of clinical interventions alone have failed to close.

RxKids was designed by Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, the pediatrician who helped expose the Flint water crisis, and launched with support from the city of Detroit and a coalition of foundations. The premise is that giving mothers direct financial resources removes the impossible choices — between rent and food, between doctor visits and utility bills — that erode health before a child is even born.

Cash programs of this kind also carry a trust dividend. Unlike services that require navigating bureaucracies or meeting conditions, unconditional payments reach families on their own terms. Early data from the program’s pilot phase showed participants spent the money on exactly what policymakers hoped: food, rent, transportation, and baby supplies.

What the research says

The case for cash transfers in early childhood has grown substantially over the past decade. A landmark 2022 study published in Science found that monthly cash payments to low-income mothers during infancy produced measurable differences in infant brain activity associated with cognitive development by age one. The findings, led by researchers at Columbia University and the University of California, offered some of the strongest evidence yet that poverty itself — not just its correlated stressors — shapes early brain development.

The UC Davis Center for Poverty and Inequality Research and others have documented that guaranteed income programs consistently reduce food insecurity and improve mental health among recipients without reducing work participation — dismantling a common objection to direct cash transfers.

Detroit as a model

Detroit’s decision to scale RxKids citywide positions it as a potential national template. The program targets one of the periods of greatest biological and economic vulnerability in a family’s life — the stretch from pregnancy through a child’s first birthday — when intervention has the largest proven return.

The city is partnering with RxKids and local health systems to streamline enrollment for Medicaid-eligible mothers, meaning outreach happens where women already seek care. That integration with existing healthcare touchpoints could make the model replicable in other cities without requiring a separate infrastructure.

Still, $500 a month falls short of what many families need to meaningfully escape poverty, and the program depends on philanthropic funding that may not be sustainable at scale without state or federal backing. The question of long-term financing remains unanswered.

What the first month’s numbers confirm is that the demand is real, the infrastructure works, and the money moves fast. For the mothers enrolled, that is not an abstraction — it is rent paid, groceries bought, and one fewer impossible choice made during one of the most consequential periods of their lives.

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For more on this story, see: Detroit News

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