Daily Southtown

Fertility treatment grant gift of hope

Partnershi­p provides aid for women of color

- Francine Knowles

Dana Bingham-Guanilowas so overcomewi­th emotion, she sobbed and couldn’t speak. The Rev. Stacey Edwards-Dunn, of Olympia Fields, had just notified BinghamGua­nilo on a Zoom call that she was among fourwomen selected to receive an award froma new $50,000 fertility treatment grant program.

“Thank you so much for the gift of hope,” Bingham-Guanilo said through tears as her husband, Yuri Guanilo, stood behind her.

The grant programwas launched byNewYork-based reproducti­ve health and fertility provider Kindbody in partnershi­p with Fertility for Colored Girls, a nonprofit founded by Edwards-Dunn that provides education, awareness, support and encouragem­ent to African Americanwo­men and couples and otherwomen of color experienci­ng infertilit­y.

Thanks to the grant program, threewomen, including Bingham-Guanilo, will receive in vitro fertilizat­ion treatment and one woman will be able to freeze her eggs, Kindbody and Fertility for Colored Girls said in announcing the winners this month.

The grant program emerged this year amid protests against police brutality that put the spotlight on racial injustice and inequities.

Blackwomen are more likely than whitewomen to experience infertilit­y and less likely to seek treatment, which for many is financiall­y unaffordab­le, said Edwards-Dunn, who after years of battling infertilit­y with her husband, Earl Dunn Sr., gave birth to a daughter, Shiloh, now6.

The challenges of infertilit­y are also often not discussed in the African American community, and Edwards-Dunn hasworked to change that and to help remove the unwarrante­d stigma often associated with infertilit­y.

The grant initiative­was launched in support of Black, Indigenous and other people of color. It received more than 320 applicatio­ns, she said.

The response “speaks to the need, one, that this is a huge issue, but it also speaks to the need (for) resources for Blackwomen and couples who are struggling with infertilit­y at two times the rate of our Caucasian brothers and sisters,” she stressed.

“So many Blackwomen are not able tomove forward with treatment, even surgeries, because they don’t have health care. They don’t have the financial wherewitha­l to pay $15,000 to $20,000 for an IVF cycle or $6,000 to $7,000, for an (intrauteri­ne inseminati­on) cycle or to pay

$8,000 to freeze their eggs.”

For people who say, “Why don’t you just adopt,” there’s often

not money for that.

“Adoption can easily cost upward of $30,000,” Edwards-Dunn said.

Edwards-Dunn, who runs Fertility for Colored Girls out of her home, also is a church administra­tor and executive minister of community engagement and transforma­tion at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago.

She previously­worked in Cabrini-Green as a health education coordinato­r. She taught pregnancy prevention classes to young people and also was director of community education at Planned Parenthood. She holds a bachelor’s in chemistry, master’s in public health, a master’s of divinity and a doctor of ministry degree.

Bingham-Guanilo and her husband have been trying to have a baby for the past few years. They’ve endured two miscarriag­es, the latest this past spring. They previously considered IVF treatment, but the overall cost was a financial hurdle, she explained.

“I’m very thankful,” she said. “I recognize that not a lot ofwomen have these resources available to them.”

Carmia-Marshall-David, 44, another grant recipient who will receive IVF treatment, wrote in her grant applicatio­n, “as a black woman, I recognize fertility assistance is not as accessible, harder to attain due to the systemic racism that thrives at the core (among other things) of the health care system in the United States. Everything from conceiving to giving birth is more challengin­g.”

Marshall-David said the two organizati­ons provide an opportunit­y to create new life and build families.

“I hope thatwe are chosen as the recipient of the grant, but if not, I feel just as excited that another black, brown, or woman of color (will) have a chance at motherhood,” she wrote.

Marshall-David said after learning shewould receive a grant, “I kind of felt my whole life flash before my eyes.

“Everything changed in an instant. Iwas like, ‘Ohmy God. Is this really happening?’ Iwas so overwhelme­d with joy.”

Through the grant program, Kindbody said it’s seeking to help those with historical­ly disproport­ionate access to women’s health care and create more parity in fertility and family building care.

“With everything thatwas happening this past year with Black LivesMatte­r, we really wanted to do something real and not just put a statement out there thatwe supported themovemen­t, but really do some things to make a difference,” said Rebecca Silver, a spokeswoma­n for Kindbody.

Kindbody plans on initiating a second large donation so it can continue to provide cycles to those in need, Silver said.

Kindbody is not only donating the fertility treatments but open to hearing what else they can do to ensure they are culturally sensitive and welcoming to Black women and other women of color, Edwards-Dunn said.

Kindbody has its own clinics in New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Princeton, and partners with other clinics in the Chicago area where it plans to open its own a site in the next two years, Silver said. The organizati­on is also working to partner with employers to provide fertility coverage to their employees, and based on the response, will donate fertility treatment cycles to Fertility for Colored Girls, she said.

Fertility for Colored Girls, founded in 2013, has 14 chapters across the country, including in Detroit, Atlanta, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and NewYork. The organizati­on’s chapters hold support meetings and prayer circles where women share their experience­s and receive informatio­n, encouragem­ent and support. It has a Hope it Forward program that encourages individual­s to donate their unopened and unexpired medication­s to fertility clinics to be used by women who can’t afford them.

Bingham-Guanilo, who serves as peer leader with the organizati­on, said it’s important forwomen to be educated on infertilit­y issues and treatment options at younger ages and that they not be afraid or ashamed to talk about their situations and to ask for help.

Since its founding, Fertility for Colored Girls also has partnered with Fertility Centers of Illinois, which enabled women to receive free IVF treatments. It partnered with MerckKGaA’s biopharmac­eutical business, EMD Serono, to give women access to more than $107,000worth of free medication­s, Edwards-Dunn said. Thanks to the partnershi­p efforts, Fertility for Colored Girls has helped award a total of more than $250,000 in grants to assist women and couples in becoming parents, Edwards-Dunn said.

“We have helped 200women and couples to become parents,” she shared.

“It’s a very fulfilling experience,” she said. “I knowthe pain personally that they experience. Wheneve rwe are able to help provide resources forwomen or couples who going through (this journey) I get so much joy because I see now these women have an opportunit­y to seek to build the families of their dreams.”

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