According to the CDC, Black women in the US are three times more likely to die from a pregnancy-related cause than White women. Vice President Kamala Harris has issued a nationwide Call to Action addressing these maternal mortality rates. And studies have shown that Black women receive a lower quality of obstetrical care than White women, including undertreatment of pain and delayed or inaccurate diagnoses. Structural racism and unconscious bias are often factors contributing to those outcomes.
Learning about reports like these, healthcare activist Kimberly Seals Allers asked herself: “Why is this happening, and more importantly, how am I going to change it?”
In The Big Idea: Birth Without Bias, a film presented by MIT Solve and made by the award-winning Redglass Pictures with support from HP, we follow the journey of the Queens, New York native as she shares how she was spurred to become a maternal healthcare activist after having her own traumatic birth experience.
Birth Without Bias is one in a trio of short documentaries that follow three innovators who are brilliant, bold and united by the desire to use technology, science and engineering to create radical change.