R 165
2023 -- S 0680
Enacted 03/16/2023

S E N A T E   R E S O L U T I O N
RECOGNIZING MARCH 14, 2023, AS "BLACK MIDWIVES DAY" TO SHED LIGHT ON THE HISTORY, POLITICS, CULTURE, AND IDENTITY OF BLACK MIDWIFERY IN THE CONTEXT OF A NATIONAL CONVERSATION ABOUT MATERNAL HEALTH, AND THE IMPORTANCE OF MIDWIFERY CARE AS AN ESSENTIAL STRATEGY IN REDUCING MATERNAL MORTALITY AND MORBIDITY AMONG BLACK BIRTHING PEOPLE

Introduced By: Senators Mack, Cano, Lawson, Ujifusa, Picard, Murray, Sosnowski, Euer, Lauria, and F. Lombardi

Date Introduced: March 16, 2023

     WHEREAS, Recognizing the day of March 14, 2023, as “Black Midwives Day”
underscores the importance of midwifery in helping to achieve better maternal health outcomes
by addressing fundamental gaps in access to high quality care and multiple aspects of well-being;
and
     WHEREAS, The inaugural Black Midwives Day (BMD) campaign, founded and led by
the National Black Midwives Alliance in 2023, is a day of awareness, activism, education and
community building; and
     WHEREAS, This day is intended to increase attention for the state of Black maternal
health in the United States, the root causes of poor maternal health outcomes, and for community-
driven policy, program, and care solutions; and
     WHEREAS, In addition, BMD venerates the work and contributions of past and present
midwives who have served to usher in new life despite a history fraught with persecution,
enslavement, violence, racism and the systematic erasure of community Black midwives
throughout the 20th century; and
     WHEREAS, The decimation of midwifery across the Southern United States reduced the
numbers of Black midwives from thousands to dozens in a 50 year period from the 1920s to the
1970s, leaving many communities without care providers; and
     WHEREAS, The resurgence of Black midwifery is a testament to the resilience,
resistance, and determination of spirit in the preservation of healing modalities that are practiced
all over the world. The focus on holistic care, which involves caring for the whole person, family
and community, is what makes a difference in midwifery; and
     WHEREAS, Midwifery honors a birthing person’s right to bodily autonomy; can be
facilitated at home, in a birth center, or hospital; and works in tandem with doulas, community
health workers, obstetricians, pediatricians, and other health care providers; and
     WHEREAS, Black families benefit from access to Black midwives to receive culturally
sensitive and congruent care established through trust and respect; backed with the wisdom of
time honored technique and best practices; and
     WHEREAS, Black birthing people in the United States suffer from life threatening
pregnancy complications, known as “maternal morbidities”, twice as often as white birthing
people; and
     WHEREAS, Maternal mortality rates in the United States are among the highest in the
developed world, and increasing rapidly; and
     WHEREAS, These deaths have devastating effects on Black children and families, and
the vast majority is entirely preventable through assertive efforts to ensure Black birthing people
have access to information, services, and supports to make their own health care decisions
particularly around pregnancy and childbearing; and
     WHEREAS, The high rates of maternal mortality among Black birthing people span
across income levels, education levels, and socioeconomic status; and
     WHEREAS, Structural racism, gender oppression, and the social determinants of health
inequities experienced by Black birthing people in the United States significantly contribute to
the disproportionately high rates of maternal mortality and morbidity among Black birthing
people; and
     WHEREAS, A fair distribution of resources, especially with regard to reproductive
health care services, is critical to closing the racial disparity gap; and
     WHEREAS, Justice-informed, culturally congruent models such as midwifery care are
beneficial to Black birthing people; and
     WHEREAS, An investment must be made in robust, quality and comprehensive health
care for Black birthing people, and policies that support and promote affordable, holistic maternal
health care that is free from gender and racial discrimination: and
     WHEREAS, The National Black Midwives Alliance is campaigning for a Black
Midwives Day: To strengthen the base of Black midwives and their supporters;
     To preserve the cultural history of Black midwifery as an important part of the story of
America;
     To provide advocacy tools that eliminate barriers to education and resources for Black
midwives;
     To build power by developing a national unified voice that advocates for Black
midwifery;
     To address perinatal health disparities that impact Black communities; and
     To elevate the consumer demand for access to midwifery and community birth; and
     WHEREAS, It is fitting and proper on Black Midwives Day to recognize the tremendous
impact of human rights, reproductive justice, and birth justice frameworks; and
     WHEREAS, Black Midwives Day is an opportunity to fight to end maternal mortality
locally and globally; now, therefore be it
     RESOLVED, That this Senate of the State of Rhode Island hereby believes that in order
to better mitigate the effects of systemic and structural racism, this body must work to ensure that
all Black people have access to midwives, doulas and other community-based, culturally-matched
perinatal health providers; and be it further
     RESOLVED, That this Senate hereby proclaims March 14, 2023, to be “Black Midwives
Day” in the State of Rhode Island; and be it further
     RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is authorized and directed to
transmit a duly certified copy of this resolution to Ms. Jamarah Amani, Director, National Black
Midwives Alliance.
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LC002479
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