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- Title
The impact of devaluing Women of Color: stress, reproduction, and justice.
- Authors
Mayne, Gabriella B.; Ghidei, Luwam
- Abstract
This commentary is in response to the Call for Papers put forth by the Critical Midwifery Studies Collective (June 2022). We argue that due to a long and ongoing history of gendered racism, Women of Color are devalued in U.S. society. Devaluing Women of Color leads maternal healthcare practitioners to miss and even dismiss distress in Women of Color. The result is systematic underdiagnosis, undertreatment, and the delivery of poorer care to Women of Color, which negatively affects reproductive outcomes generally and birth outcomes specifically. These compounding effects exacerbate distress in Women of Color leading to greater distress. Stress physiology is ancient and intricately interwoven with healthy pregnancy physiology, and this relationship is a highly conserved reproductive strategy. Thus, where there is disproportionate or excess stress (distress), unsurprisingly, there are disproportionate and excess rates of poorer reproductive outcomes. Stress physiology and reproductive physiology collide with social injustices (i.e., racism, discrimination, and anti‐Blackness), resulting in pernicious racialized maternal health disparities. Accordingly, the interplay between stress and reproduction is a key social justice issue and an important site for theoretical inquiry and birth equity efforts. Fortunately, both stress physiology and pregnancy physiology are highly plastic—responsive to the benefits of increased social support and respectful maternity care. Justice means valuing Women of Color and valuing their right to have a healthy, respected, and safe life.
- Subjects
UNITED States; WOMEN of color; SOCIAL justice; MATERNAL health services; INSTITUTIONAL racism; PSYCHOLOGICAL stress; HUMAN reproduction; ANTI-Black racism; HYPOTHALAMIC-pituitary-adrenal axis; DISCRIMINATION (Sociology); HEALTH equity
- Publication
Birth: Issues in Perinatal Care, 2024, Vol 51, Issue 2, p245
- ISSN
0730-7659
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/birt.12825