Did
you know that Black women are three or four
times more likely to die
from childbirth complications than white
women? Congresswoman Robin
Kelly (D-IL), who heads the Congressional
Black Caucus Health Brain
trust, says the data are direr depending on
where a mother lives. In
Illinois, Black women are six times as likely
to die. In New York,
Black women are ten times as likely to die.
And it’s not just Black
women. With a significant Indigenous
population in Washington state,
those women are eight times as likely to die
as white women!
The
issue of Black maternal health care is tackled
in the film,
Aftershock,
which can be seen on Hulu. Produced by Tonya
Lewis Lee and Paula
Eiselt, the film features families directly
and painfully impacted by
how Black women are treated as they deliver
children. The
Congressional Black Caucus Annual Legislative
Forum featured several
brain trust meetings on health, including one
titled, Creating
Maternal Health Care Systems that Believe and
Protect Black Women. It
featured clips from Aftershock and included
panelists affected by the
Black maternal health crisis.
Shawnee
Benton
Gibson’s daughter, Shamony Makeba Gibson, died
from
complications from childbirth, only thirteen
days after she gave
birth to her son. She complained of pain,
shortness of breath, and
more, but health care providers told her these
were “natural”
childbirth symptoms. She was only rushed to
the hospital to die when
she could not move. Later, it was shown that
health care providers
ignored vital signs of her increasingly poor
health. She died from
medical indifference and incompetence.
Also
featured in the film were Omari Maynard,
Shamony’s partner who is
now raising two children alone, and Bruce
McIntyre III, whose
partner, Amber Rose Isaac died after an
emergency C Section. He says
her death is the result of “medical
negligence” and has joined
several others in shining light on this
pandemic of Black maternal
health.
Aftershock
lifts
the importance of doulas (pregnancy coaches
and advocates) and
midwives, an essential part of maternal
health. It also looks at the
criminalization of midwives and those who
eschew traditional
birthing. Some midwives have been criminally
prosecuted for bringing
healthy babies into the world.
The
film also highlights the racist origins of the
OB/GYN medical
specialty. Developed by a sadist white
physician, James Marion Sims,
the specialty has its roots in experiments on
enslaved Black women.
Indeed, the lie that black people can
withstand enormous pain is
rooted in enslavement and the brutal way Black
women were
experimented on. Because Sims believed Black
women could stand all
kinds of pain, he conducted painful
experiments without anesthesia.
Really? Yet some medical professionals
continue to laud his work, and
until 2018 a statue celebrating him was part
of New York’s Central
Park. His defenders say he was just a product
of his times, but it is
clear that he not only experimented on
enslaved women that he owned
but also purchased women to experiment on
them. I reject the notion
that Sims was a product of his times. He was a
sadistic brute who
denied Black women’s very humanity.
Congresswoman
Lauren
Underwood (D-Ill), the youngest member of the
Congressional
Black Caucus, has introduced the Black
Maternal Health Momnibus Act,
an essential step toward vastly improving the
treatment Black women
experience as they give birth. A twelve-part
comprehensive piece of
legislation, the act includes expansion of
mental health services for
mothers, telehealth for new moms, increased
data collection, and
funding for community-based organizations
working on maternal health
issues. Supported by more than 250
organizations, including the
American Nurses Association, the Association
of Black Women
Physicians, the Center for American Progress,
the Children’s
Defense Fund, Families USA, the NAACP, and
others, the legislation
has more than 30 Congressional co-sponsors.
The legislation has yet
to pass the House of Representatives, and it
is unlikely to pass the
parsimonious Senate. People can get involved
by reminding their
legislative representatives of the importance
of this Momnibus Act.
Shawnee
Benton Gibson, Shamony’s mom, said that if
Black Lives Matter, then
Black Wombs must also matter. She has turned
the pain of her
daughter’s death into powerful advocacy for
Black maternal health.
She is among the many, including Congresswomen
Robin Kelly, Lauren
Underwood, and many others, who must be
applauded for addressing this
issue. Black Wombs matter. Watch Aftershock!
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