Birthing While Black During Emergencies

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Date

2021-08

Authors

Eyob, Hirut

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Abstract

My graduate studies have built on my extensive experience as a maternal healthcare practitioner, with a particular focus on the intersections of health and racial inequity, sexual violence, and LGBTQ2S+ issues. My research focuses on reproductive justice during emergencies, including the COVID-19 global pandemic. Specifically, I am examining the experiences of Black Canadians who are pregnant and/or giving birth during the pandemic. It is well-documented in the United States that Black women have disproportionately negative maternal health and childbirth outcomes. These inequitable outcomes have led to a response from a reproductive justice movement that works to redress negative outcomes for Black women as a result of racism. In Canada, there has been a push to collect race-based data to identify health inequities, and advocates have pushed for Public Health agencies to name anti-Black racism as a public health issue. Nevertheless, despite the recognition that Black women have more negative reproductive outcomes due to systemic anti-Black racism, Canada lags behind other Western countries in documenting the impact of anti-Black racism on maternal and infant health. My research responds to this immense gap by doing exploratory, qualitative research with Black mothers/individuals, and birth workers in order to paint a picture of their experiences. My work will contribute to an understanding of the impact of anti-Black racism on maternal health in Canada, especially during a major public health crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic that is disproportionately impacting the Black community. The final outcome of my plan of study is a portfolio that is housed on a website that I built (www.birthingwhileblack.ca). #BirthingWhileBlack in Canada is a hub for the rough cut of my documentary film ‘Birthing while Black during COVID-19,’ which consists of interviews with Black mothers who were pregnant or gave birth during the pandemic, and Black birth workers; a manuscript submitted for publication ‘Unpacking emergency response: anti-Black racism and other barriers faced by pregnant and lactating asylum claimants in Quebec, Canada’; the development of the conceptual framework of ‘First Food Sovereignty’ as a policy tool that centers the most vulnerable; and the blueprint series, an art installation. What these stories inform us, that is new, is that Black families in Canada are giving birth in a state of survival mode because they are acutely aware of the threat of anti-Black violence existing in the healthcare system. Their trauma responses consist of going into “freeze” mode, making themselves small and invisible, silencing themselves, and not bringing attention to themselves. Even in the face of a pandemic, what they fear most for themselves and their children, is systemic anti-Black racism.

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Keywords

Reproductive justice, Infant feeding, Migration, Health inequity

Citation

Major Portfolio Master of Environmental Studies, Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change, York University

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