Last week, as I was scrolling through my Instagram feed, a post caught my attention, “Vice President Kamala Harris Pledges Her Support to Black Women Regarding Maternal Health: ‘Black Women Are Not Being Heard.’” Those last five words caused a flood of emotions, memories, and fears to flow throughout my body —all I could do was cry.
My son is three years old, but I will never forget my pregnancy nor labor. It started out slowly when, after taking three pregnancy tests, I finally called my primary care physician. They referred me to an OBGYN practice that consisted of midwives and doctors who I would see on a rotating basis each appointment. My mother was concerned from the start, but I figured if my doctor referred me there, then there shouldn't be any problems.
I had always heard of people having a birth plan and a backup plan in case anything went wrong during pregnancy. I knew that my mother had an emergency C-section with each of her pregnancies, and I was the same age she had been with her first. I told the doctor my concerns and that I wanted to have a plan in case I needed to have a C-section, but they brushed me off as if I was overreacting.
On March 12, 2018, at 30 weeks pregnant, I went home from work with a bad stomachache. My stomach felt hard. I called my husband who thankfully was home from a recent deployment and told him that I was taking a nap and to pick me up in a couple of hours. My husband called and as I walked out of the front door, blood came rushing down. I called the doctor and they told me to rush to the Emergency Room. I didn’t know where to go or what to say, we were in a panic. After the doctors ran a test, I was informed that my placenta abrupted and I would have to have an emergency C-section, the exact thing I tried to plan for.
The only thing I remember from my son’s birth is hearing him cry and the doctors rushing him out. I turned to the doctor and warned them that my head was pounding, and my husband screamed for somebody to help, my wife is having a seizure.
So many people have asked me if I plan on having another child. Each time, I immediately go into a panic. Not because I don’t want any more children, but out of fear that once again I won’t be heard and that this time no one will be around to save my life. All we want is to be heard and cared for like everyone else.
As Vice President Kamala Harris’ statement reflects, I am not alone in my experience. Black mothers are two to three times more likely than their white counterparts to die from a pregnancy related cause. Black mothers, like AIAN, and NHOPI women, are at a higher risk for preterm births, low birthweight births, or births for which they received late or no prenatal care. Preeclampsia specifically, which I endured during my labor, exists in consistently higher rates among Black mothers when compared to white mothers. These disparities come from a dark history of mistreatment and abuse, and they remain a central part of the conversation on equity. We need to listen to Black women, hear their concerns, and address them appropriately. Ignoring their voices leads to pain and cyclical trauma, all of which can be mitigated with proper medical treatment and respect.