Miriam Zoila Pérez: How racism harms pregnant women -- and what can help
Miriam Zoila Pérez investigates how race and gender affect health -- and the people who create spaces for healing. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
to what I'm feeling right now.
are obviously the result
in front of a thousand of you
that might be streamed online
I'm experiencing right now
basic mind-body mechanism.
a flood of hormones
into my bloodstream.
response that sends blood and oxygen
that I might need
on a daily basis,
period of time,
happens infrequently: super-necessary
examining the relationship
a relationship to stress.
too much activation from stress
that keep me healthy.
that I was pregnant.
of my pregnancy,
when I tell you
during pregnancy is not good.
to initiate labor too early,
the stress communicates
a safe place for the child.
with things like high blood pressure
of health challenges
particularly in our modern lifestyle,
to give a TED Talk,
presentation at work,
with a family member or friend.
of stress we experience
in a relaxed state long enough
more discrimination
by police while driving your car,
the tools that have proven these linkages,
groups in our society
and more impacts on their health.
for over a decade.
instead sent me down a path
to help pregnant people.
and a Spanish speaker,
at a public hospital in North Carolina,
impacted the experiences
about the rates of illness
outlined by Dr. Williams.
experience than white women
their babies are born healthy.
particularly the Deep South,
and infant death for black women
those rates in Sub-Saharan African.
are four times more likely
for their infants to die
to have higher rates of these problems
turned journalist and blogger,
the experiences of women of color,
and birth in the US.
about these appalling statistics,
that it's about either poverty
tell the whole story.
still have much worse outcomes
white counterparts.
is definitely still a problem,
the recommended prenatal care
to poor health,
that many people of color know to be true:
particularly black and Latina immigrants,
they first arrive in the United States.
the worse their health becomes.
to Cuban immigrant parents,
worse health than my grandparents did.
"the immigrant paradox,"
in the US environment
is making people of color,
women and babies, sick, is vast.
with you talking about it,
to tell you about one solution.
that isn't particularly expensive,
any fancy drug treatments
in the Orlando, Florida area
pregnant women for over a decade.
to over 600 women per year.
Haitian and Latina,
and respectful prenatal care,
to healthy, full-term babies.
start at the front desk.
and every moment a women is at her clinic,
due to lack of funds.
no matter what the hurdles.
late to their appointments.
your aunt's living room than a clinic.
"a classroom in disguise."
arranged in a circle,
in one-on-one chats
to your appointment,
and moms themselves.
keeping food down due to nausea.
your prescription, OK?
aspect of Jennie's model.
alongside the woman and her family,
are actually the center of her care model,
is just to support their work.
on her cell phone,
about all sorts of things.
she was prescribed at the hospital
of an infant born under Jennie's care.
to see the provider,
in the waiting room,
in the bathroom.
from the traditional medical model,
responsibility and information
where you might be chastised
with provider recommendations --
to low-income women --
as supportive as possible.
facing these women every day.
about Jennie's model:
to give birth too early,
of pregnancy and childbirth?
eliminated those problems,
"skinny babies."
her clients to term
This is a baby girl
this past June.
of women in Jennie's area
hospital her clients did
into what has been seen for decades
that The JJ Way requires
is not the center of Jennie's model,
and in order to maintain her model,
of clients to cover costs.
a ton of time with each woman,
can provide the support, information
is that she actually believes
in pretty much any health care setting.
just waiting to happen.
with you are big.
of racism, classism,
and class stratification.
physiological mechanisms
actually make us sick.
from my work as a doula,
support can go a really long way.
are incredibly resilient,
from it overnight,
environments that provide a buffer
experience on a daily basis.
that buffer can be an incredible tool
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Miriam Zoila Pérez - Writer, activistMiriam Zoila Pérez investigates how race and gender affect health -- and the people who create spaces for healing.
Why you should listen
Miriam Zoila Pérez began her career as a doula, a layperson who provides support to people during pregnancy and childbirth. That work led her to explore the complex ways our identities shape our health, especially for people of color, LGBT folks and women. As a writer, Pérez has illuminated these topics, and much more, for outlets like Fusion, Talking Points Memo, The American Prospect, Feministing and Colorlines, where she is the gender columnist.
For ten years Pérez has run Radical Doula, a blog that explores the political aspects of doula work. She's the author of The Radical Doula Guide, a political primer that has influenced a generation of activist doulas.
A frequent speaker at colleges, universities and conferences around the US, Pérez brings her perspective as a queer Cuban-American to the issues she explores. A lover of music, Pérez is also the co-host for the popular Latinx music podcast Radio Menea with Verónica Bayetti Flores.
Miriam Zoila Pérez | Speaker | TED.com