Showing posts with label Black Maternal Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Maternal Health. Show all posts

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Racism in U.S. Healthcare Is a Life-or-Death Crisis For Black Pregnant Mothers!


Black History Month Presentation for the Jamaican Nurses Association of Florida (JNAF)

By Norris R. McDonald, DIJ, AARC, Respiratory Therapist
Health Vybz | https://healthvybz.blogspot.com/

Norris R. McDonald, DIJ, AARC
Across the United States, over 1,100 counties have closed hospital maternity units, creating what public health experts call maternity care deserts — areas where pregnant women must travel long distances for prenatal visits, labor, and emergency obstetric care. The consequences are not theoretical. They are measurable: delayed treatment, higher complication rates, and preventable maternal deaths. 

 

Maternity Care Deserts: When Distance Becomes Destiny

In these “maternity care deserts” poor Black women and families are forced into long travel times, delayed prenatal visits, and weaker continuity of care. In emergencies, distance becomes destiny.

In Florida alone, 13 counties lack maternity clinics, forcing families to cross county lines — sometimes for hours — to deliver babies safely.

Why This Matters

When maternity wards close:

• Emergency C-sections are delayed
• High-risk pregnancies go unmanaged
• Rural mothers travel 30–90 minutes or more
• Ambulances become delivery rooms
• Postpartum care collapses

Research shows longer travel times are directly associated with increased maternal and infant mortality. For Black women — already facing a maternal mortality rate significantly higher than white women — these closures compound structural inequities.

The National Pattern

Since 2018, approximately 300 maternity units have closed. More than 100 rural hospitals have stopped delivering babies since 2020. Financial losses, low Medicaid reimbursement rates, staffing shortages, and declining rural birth volumes are cited as causes.

But policy choices shape those financial realities.

When obstetric services disappear, what disappears with them is safety.

Black maternal and child health in the United States has therefore reached a breaking point. Despite medical advances, too many Black women still face avoidable danger in pregnancy and childbirth—driven not by biology, but by systemic racism, unequal access, and preventable failures in care.

What This Presentation Seeks to Achieve

This Black History Month presentation for JNAF is designed to outline current systemic maternal and child health issues affecting underserved Black communities, explain root causes through evidence-based medical knowledge, and strengthen the role of nurses as assertive change-agents in policy and bedside advocacy.

Racism Inside Healthcare Costs Lives

Racism in healthcare is not only personal prejudice; it can be embedded in systems and routines—dismissed symptoms, delayed care, undertreated pain, and neglectful attitudes that increase medical errors. When discrimination becomes predictable, patients may avoid care altogether. In the maternal health context, that avoidance and dismissal can turn treatable complications into emergencies.

Provider–patient relationships matter. Respect, listening, and timely response are not “soft skills.” They are clinical protections. A system that repeatedly fails Black mothers is a system that must be confronted.

Black Maternal Mortality Is a National Emergency

Many Black women die in childbirth from poor health care in American hospitals. Data consistently show that pregnancy-related deaths are dramatically higher among non-Hispanic Black women than among white women. This is a national emergency rooted in racial disparity—unequal treatment, unequal access, and unequal protection.

Core principle: Who you are or where you live should not decide whether you survive childbirth.

Mental Health Crisis: The Hidden Emergency Behind the Numbers

Poverty and racism shape health outcomes beyond the delivery room. Experiencing racism increases the risks of prenatal and postpartum depression and can raise parenting stress. Meanwhile, mental health resources remain scarce in many minority and rural communities—long wait times, shortages of professionals, and limited culturally competent services.

Mental health struggles do not emerge in a vacuum. They grow from material conditions—poverty, instability, discrimination, and chronic uncertainty. When those pressures are constant, the body keeps score.

How Parental Depression Affects Maternal & Child Health

Parental depression is linked to long-term harms: disrupted bonding, reduced responsiveness, inconsistent routines, and increased risk for children’s wellbeing. For nurses and clinicians, the lesson is clear: evidence-based care must also be socially intelligent—aware of the political, economic, cultural, and racial pressures shaping patient outcomes.

Healthcare Without Justice Is Structural Violence

As Dr. Paul Farmer argued, healthcare without justice becomes structural violence: unjust social, economic, and political arrangements that produce preventable illness and premature death among marginalized communities. This lens clarifies what too many families already know—these outcomes are not random. They are patterned.

“Weathering”—the long-term psychological and physiological deterioration from chronic racism—helps explain why repeated exposure to stress and discrimination produces real, measurable harm. Racism behaves like an exposure. It accumulates. It injures. It kills.

Nurses as Change-Agents: From Ethics to Action

Historically, nurses have led transformative change. Mary Seacole, a Jamaican-born nurse and healer, challenged racial and gender barriers, integrated traditional medicine into treatment of cholera and yellow fever, and modeled holistic care long before it became mainstream.

Nurses and healthcare professionals, clearly have a moral and legal duty to speak out against unsafe and unethical practices. Doing no harm ameans refusing to become a silent partner to racial injustice. History offers models of courageous care, including Mary Seacole, who challenged racial and gender barriers and practiced holistic healing grounded in mind, body, and spirit.

Conclusion: The Reforms We Must Demand

We must: end racism in healthcare, fund Black maternal health, protect access in maternity care deserts, strengthen mental health supports, and hold institutions accountable for preventable harm. Saving Black mothers’ lives is not optional. It is the baseline of a moral healthcare system.

Today’s nurses can follow that legacy by:

  • Advocating for Black maternal health funding
  • Reporting unsafe practices
  • Supporting policy reform
  • Educating communities

The American Nurses Association affirms nurses’ responsibility to dismantle racism within the profession and healthcare systems.


What Must Be Done

  • End racism in healthcare
  • Fund Black maternal health programs
  • Hold hospitals accountable
  • Expand mental health services
  • Protect maternity units
  • Save Black mothers’ lives

These are not radical demands. They are moral obligations.


Justice in healthcare is not abstract. Justice is oxygen. Justice is survival. Justice is life!



READINGS 

American Nurses Association. (2022). ANA position statement on dismantling racism in nursing. American Nurses Association.


Farmer, P. (2004). Pathologies of power: Health, human rights, and the new war on the poor. University of California Press.


McDonald, N. R. (2026). Systemic racism worsens women’s and children’s health: How hospital closures and structural inequality are fueling a national maternal and child health emergency. Health Vybz.
https://healthvybz.blogspot.com/2026/02/systemic-racism-worsens-womens-and.html


Race Forward. (2024). Understanding systemic racism & the wealth gap [Video series].
https://www.raceforward.org/resources/video-series/what-systemic-racism


University of Minnesota School of Public Health. (2025, October 22). Reproductive justice denied: The structural violence of recent federal health care cuts.
https://www.sph.umn.edu/event/reproductive-justice-denied-the-structural-violence-of-recent-federal-health-care-cuts


Yale Medicine. (n.d.). How parental depression affects children.
https://www.yalemedicine.org/conditions/how-parental-depression-affects-child


Finichealth. (n.d.). Nurses’ growing impact on healthcare policy: Advocacy for patient-centered reforms.
https://www.finichealth.com/articles/nurses-growing-impact-on-healthcare-policy-advocacy-for-patient-centered-reforms


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About the Author

Norris R. McDonald is an author, respiratory therapist, and economic journalist whose work focuses on political economy, public health, healthcare systems, and global public policy. He is a regular contributor of public commentary and analysis for the Jamaica Gleaner, where he examines the intersection of economics, governance, social justice, and development in Jamaica, the Caribbean, and the Global South.


With professional training in respiratory care and decades of frontline healthcare experience, McDonald brings a clinical and evidence-based perspective to issues such as maternal mortality, health inequities, pharmaceutical policy, and healthcare access. His journalism blends data-driven analysis with historical and cultural context, particularly around Black communities, post-colonial development, and structural inequality.

McDonald is also the publisher of Sulfabittas Newsmagazine on Substack, where he produces investigative features, long-form essays, and geopolitical commentary on global power dynamics, economic sovereignty, and emerging multipolar realities.


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 Student Discussion Questions

  1. How does structural racism differ from individual prejudice, and why is this distinction important in healthcare?
  2. Why are Black women three times more likely to die in childbirth than white women? Discuss system-level causes.
  3. What are maternity care deserts, and how do they contribute to preventable maternal and infant deaths?
  4. How does chronic exposure to racism create biological harm (weathering)?
  5. In what ways does poverty intersect with racism to worsen mental health outcomes?
  6. Why does Paul Farmer describe healthcare without justice as structural violence?
  7. What ethical responsibilities do nurses have when they witness discriminatory practices?
  8. How can nurses function as policy advocates beyond bedside care?
  9. Should maternal healthcare be treated as essential public infrastructure? Why or why not?
  10. What reforms would you prioritize to reduce Black maternal mortality?


 Quiz / Exam Questions

Multiple Choice

  1. Structural racism refers to:
    A. Individual prejudice only
    B. Genetic differences between races
    C. Systems and institutions producing unequal outcomes
    D. Cultural misunderstandings

Correct Answer: C

  1. A maternity care desert is best defined as:
    A. A hospital with limited staff
    B. A county without adequate maternity services
    C. A clinic serving only high-risk pregnancies
    D. A temporary emergency unit

Correct Answer: B

  1. Weathering describes:
    A. Aging from genetics
    B. Stress from daily life only
    C. Biological deterioration from chronic racism
    D. Acute trauma events

Correct Answer: C

  1. Which group has the highest pregnancy-related mortality in the U.S.?
    A. White women
    B. Hispanic women
    C. Asian women
    D. Black women

Correct Answer: D


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BRIEF LEARNING NOTE

  1. Name two consequences of maternity unit closures.
  2. Explain how implicit bias affects clinical decision-making.
  3. Describe one way nurses can act as change agents.


Essay Questions

  1. Analyze how structural racism shapes maternal and child health outcomes in the United States.
  2. Discuss Paul Farmer’s concept of structural violence and apply it to maternity care deserts.
  3. Propose a policy framework to reduce Black maternal mortality.

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