Albuquerque Journal

Amid abortion debate, clinic asks: Who’s caring for moms?

- BY LEAH WILLINGHAM

JACKSON, Miss. — Miracle Allen used her last tank of gas to drive an hour and 15 minutes to the closest clinic that would care for her and her unborn baby.

Allen, 29, was four months pregnant when Hurricane Ida ripped through her Houma, Louisiana, community. She spent three nights in the remnants of a house with a torn roof and no electricit­y. Her car was all she had left. So Allen — along with her 6-year-old daughter, her mother and a niece — fled in it to the rural Mississipp­i town of Kosciusko, where family lives.

Her first priority was finding a doctor to check on her baby boy. But the lone local obstetrici­an splits her work between two rural counties and wasn’t taking new patients. Allen couldn’t find another doctor even within an hour’s drive — certainly not one who’d take a patient without insurance or an ID, which was destroyed in her home by Ida.

Finally, a Jackson-area hospital that turned her away suggested the Sisters in Birth clinic. On that last tank of gas, she arrived in a panic. Would they see her? Had the stress of the storm affected her pregnancy? Where would she go if turned away?

Almost all the mothers served at the clinic in Mississipp­i’s capital are Black women without insurance, like Allen. Many haven’t been to a doctor for years, until they became pregnant and qualified for Medicaid. Most are at risk for conditions such as hypertensi­on and heart disease. Nearly all have nowhere to go.

Clinic CEO and founder Getty Israel says Mississipp­i leaders are failing these women every day. As state Republican officials spend time and resources trying to ban abortion and awaiting a ruling that could overturn Roe v. Wade, advocates say nothing is being done to support women who choose birth.

“We’re doing everything wrong,” Israel said. “Mississipp­i is probirth, but not pro-life. If we really are a pro-life state, we have to do more than try to end abortion and make sure that women are healthy.”

Mississipp­i has the highest infant death rate in the nation, and Black babies die at roughly twice the rate of white children, federal statistics show. Mississipp­i also ranks among states with the highest maternal death numbers, with Black women again disproport­ionately affected. And rural hospitals are closing at an alarming rate, leaving gaps in health care, while about 20 percent of Mississipp­i women are uninsured, according to census figures.

All these issues plagued Mississipp­i before the pandemic, but Israel and others said COVID-19 made matters worse, with overwhelme­d hospitals and a flailing economy.

Israel opened her clinic amid the pandemic need in June 2021. She wanted to teach patients, especially Black women who she’s seen taken advantage of in the medical system, how to take control of their bodies and advocate for themselves.

Sisters in Birth is a midwifery clinic that provides education and care to pregnant patients — ultrasound­s, prenatal vitamins, checkups with the nurse midwife and doctor on staff. But Israel also tries to focus on more than medical care; she said she takes a holistic approach to women’s physical, social and emotional health.

The clinic’s community health workers help create eating and exercise plans, meet with patients at home, and join them in the hospital for labor. Employees help with enrollment in Medicaid and community college.

In particular, Israel wants Sisters in Birth to address any health disparitie­s before patients — many of whom are at risk for complicati­ons and lack of access to care — give birth and offer them social support.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? Dr. Felecia Brown, a midwife at Sisters in Birth, in Jackson, Miss.,left, measures the stomach of Kamiko Farris of Yazoo City, Miss.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP Dr. Felecia Brown, a midwife at Sisters in Birth, in Jackson, Miss.,left, measures the stomach of Kamiko Farris of Yazoo City, Miss.

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