2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.rbms.2020.10.001
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Reproducing while Black: the crisis of Black maternal health, obstetric racism and assisted reproductive technology

Abstract: Black women bear the burden of a number of crises related to reproduction. Historically, their reproduction has been governed in relation to the slave economy, and connected to this, they have been experimented upon and subjected to exploitative medical interventions and policies. Even now, they are more likely to experience premature births and more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications. Their reproductive lives have been beleaguered by racism. This reality, as this article points out, shapes the… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(59 citation statements)
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“…Future research should include marginalised populations such as the LGBTIQ+ community and refugees and asylum-seekers. Seeing as marginalised groups are more vulnerable to stigma and discrimination in general, they are also likely to be more at risk of mistreatment in maternity care [6,57]. The previously referenced US study for instance found that Black, indigenous, and women of colour experienced significantly higher rates of mistreatment [6].…”
Section: Strengths and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Future research should include marginalised populations such as the LGBTIQ+ community and refugees and asylum-seekers. Seeing as marginalised groups are more vulnerable to stigma and discrimination in general, they are also likely to be more at risk of mistreatment in maternity care [6,57]. The previously referenced US study for instance found that Black, indigenous, and women of colour experienced significantly higher rates of mistreatment [6].…”
Section: Strengths and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Future research should include marginalised populations such as the LGBTIQ+ community and refugees and asylum-seekers. Seeing as marginalised groups are more vulnerable to stigma and discrimination in general, they are also likely to be more at risk of mistreatment in maternity care [6, 54]. The previously referenced US study for instance found that Black, indigenous and women of colour experienced significantly higher rates of mistreatment [6].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Anthropologist D ana-Ain Davis's (2019) Reproductive Injustice: Racism, Pregnancy, and Premature Birth, which explores Black middle-class women's experiences with premature birth, NICU stays, and reproductive losses, demonstrates how obstetrical racism is a key factor in prematurity and poor birth outcomes for Black families regardless of class background-a key finding in a sea of literature dismissing racism in favor of a focus on class-based inequities. Davis's (2020) related article in Reproductive Biomedicine & Society, aptly titled "Reproducing While Black," probes the intersections of obstetric violence and medical racism experienced by Black women who have used assisted reproductive technologies. She emphasizes that it is incumbent upon researchers to explicitly name obstetrical racism, and reflect on the nuanced ways it intersects with homophobia and other inequities and, most importantly, how it is experienced by the people who are most harmed by it.…”
Section: Citational Politics Is (Also) a Feminist Issuementioning
confidence: 99%