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Article
“Black Nurses in the Home is Working”: Advocacy, Naming, and Processing Racism to Improve Black Maternal and Infant Health
Maternal and Child Health Journal
  • Roberta Hunte, Portland State University
  • Susanne Klawetter, Portland State University
  • Sherly Paul, Healthy Birth Initiatives, Multnomah County
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-18-2021
Subjects
  • Reproductive justice,
  • Racism,
  • Social justice,
  • Infant health services -- United States,
  • Patient Advocacy -- Focus groups -- United States
Abstract

Objectives 1) To explore how racism-related stress impacts Black women’s health, pregnancy, and parenting. 2) To explore how a culturally-specific program affects the relationship between racism-related stress and Black women’s health, pregnancy, and parenting. Methods This qualitative study uses a Black Feminist approach to center the lived experiences and perspectives of Black women. Focus groups were conducted with clients and staff of a culturally-specific program that provides perinatal care for Black families. A thematic analysis was conducted using a Reproductive Justice framework as a guide. Results Participants consisted of 23 program clients and staff who all identified as Black women. Four themes emerged from the analysis: 1) The pervasive reach of structural racism, 2) Shared identities facilitate trust and healing, 3) Racism directly impacts mental health, and 4) Advocacy on macro and micro levels is a vital service. Conclusions for Practice Results show the chronicity and toxicity of structural racism on Black women’s physical and mental health. The presence of overt and subtle forms of racism occur in multiple systems and require interventions on macro- and micro-levels. Culturally-specific perinatal care programs that prioritize racial concordance between providers and clients/ patients are well-received and effective models of care. Black perinatal care should include culturally-specific approaches, advocacy on behalf of and alongside Black people, mental health support with attention to racism-related stress, and interrogation of implicit bias. Multipronged interventions guided by Reproductive Justice principles provide a holistic framework to address interpersonal and systemic racial oppression.

Rights

© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2021

DOI
10.1007/s10995-021-03283-4
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/36755
Citation Information
Hunte, R., Klawetter, S., & Paul, S. (2021). “Black Nurses in the Home is Working”: Advocacy, Naming, and Processing Racism to Improve Black Maternal and Infant Health. Maternal and child health journal, 1-8.