Daily News (Los Angeles)

Midwives deliver for Black moms-to-be

Victoria Project steps up as virus measures complicate births

- By Olga Grigoryant­s ogrigoryan­ts@scng.com

Aysha-Samon Stokes’ Mother’s Day went just as planned.

She arrived at Kindred Space L.A. birth center about 10 p.m. on May 9, stepped into a bathtub and shortly before midnight pushed her newborn son, Nikko, into the arms of her boyfriend, Dennis Richmond.

Minutes later, she climbed into a bed, wrapped her arms around the baby and breastfed him as “Heartbreak Anniversar­y” by Giveon played in the background and Richmond massaged her feet.

She felt relieved and happy, surrounded by her niece, boyfriend, sister and two midwives who carefully guided

“A lot of Black women die in the hospital, and that does concern me.”

— Aysha-Samon Stokes, who gave birth on Mother’s Day

her through labor. There was something else giving her peace of mind: Her childbirth bill was covered by the Victoria Project, a nonprofit that helps women in Los Angeles County pay their childbirth-related expenses.

Stokes found out about the Victoria Project during her last trimester from midwives Allegra Hill and Kimberly Durdin, who run Kindred Space L.A.

It was not a single event that made her consider home birth, she said, but rather a series of memories from her previous two pregnancie­s: An obstetrici­an-gynecologi­st who couldn’t remember her name, a nurse who ignored her plea for an epidural when her pain became intolerabl­e and a cesarean section with her first pregnancy that she felt was unnecessar­y.

Something else was at stake once she began learning about the high mortality rate among women like herself.

“A lot of Black women die in the hospital, and that does concern me,” said Stokes, 26.

The coronaviru­s has wreaked havoc on many women’s birth plans, forcing them to adjust to quickly changing hospital policies and, in some cases, labor in isolation and even opt for home birth. The pandemic has been especially hard on mothers like Stokes, who even before the pandemic had been part of terrifying statistics that show Black women in the U.S. have more than a three times higher risk of dying during pregnancy and childbirth than White women.

Black mothers and infants have been disproport­ionately affected by pregnancya­nd birth-related complicati­ons. Nearly 700 women die each year in the U.S. as a result of pregnancy-related complicati­ons.

In Southern California:

• In Los Angeles County, mortality rates among Black mothers from perinatal complicati­ons are four times higher compared to White women. Black infants are three times more likely to die before reaching their first birthday.

• In Riverside County,

Black newborns are three times more likely to die than their White counterpar­ts.

• Officials in Orange County reported in 2020 the death of one Black infant out of 392 African American births. So far in 2021, no deaths have been reported among Black infants or mothers, according to the Orange County Health Care Agency’s preliminar­y report.

San Bernardino County, meanwhile, reported 11.3 deaths for every 1,000 Black infants born, the 2011-15 data show.

In 2018, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health pledged to work on reversing the trend and reducing the county’s gap in Black and White infant mortality rates by 30% by 2023.

Dr. Deborah Allen, deputy director of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, said “midwives are a very important voice but they are a very small group of people. They’re all wonderful, but they have to be part of something bigger. It has to go way beyond that. It has to include medical profession­als.”

There needs to be a movement, Allen said, that would involve systematic changes on the part of hospitals, medical profession­als, and federal and state government agencies to make sure Black women feel safe to deliver their babies, whether at home or at hospitals.

“When we really want to have equality in birth outcomes, we need more than equal health care — we need equal lives,” she said.

Many of the county’s programs, Allen added, focus on addressing the consequenc­es of intergener­ational racism on the health of Black women.

The Los Angeles County African American Infant and Maternal Mortality Initiative, launched by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health and First 5 L.A. along with community partners, is offering no-cost doula care to Black pregnant people in the Antelope Valley, San Fernando Valley, San Gabriel Valley and South L.A.

Doulas work with pregnant and birthing mothers before, during and after delivery to provide emotional and physical support and guidance. Studies show that doula care proved to be effective with reductions in

“Having a well-informed, articulate, supportive person by your side, who knows the health care system and can be a buffer and a bridge when you’re dealing with medical providers and so on ... can really make the

experience much more positive, much less stressful and, therefore, healthier for Black women.”

— Dr. Deborah Allen, deputy director of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health

the use of C-sections and medication­s during labor along with promotion of breastfeed­ing.

“Having a well-informed, articulate, supportive person by your side, who knows the health care system and can be a buffer and a bridge when you’re dealing with medical providers and so on,” Allen said, “can really make the experience much more positive, much less stressful and, therefore, healthier for Black women.”

The program, which just finished its first year of operations, has served 363 clients while supporting 199 births, and health officials say it can potentiall­y become one of many aimed at reversing trends in high mortality rates among Black mothers.

“It’s time for Black women to stop feeling guilty when they have an adverse outcome and recognize it as a social phenomenon rather than a personal failing,” Allen said.

When the pandemic hit, Victoria Project co-founder Janelle Green couldn’t stop thinking about women who were afraid to go to the hospital to give birth and lacked the means to hire a midwife or doula to deliver their babies at home. As a trained midwife, she also knew that out-of-pocket expenses could easily become a financial burden for many families because insurance reimburses only a fraction of the costs.

She wanted to help women to have other options, she said.

Green reached out to a friend, Deja Rabb, and together they launched the nonprofit to finance midwifery and doula care, breastfeed­ing support, childbirth education services for pregnant women. The Victoria Project was born in September 2020.

“We named it after a victorious pregnancy that I hoped to one day have,” she said.

Green and Rabb connected with doulas and midwives in Los Angeles, offering assistance to their clients.

Currently, the nonprofit enrolls about 200 people and is close to its capacity, Green said. But as more families are hearing about the program, Green added, the goal is to start sponsoring more people, including those from Santa Barbara, where Green and Rabb now live.

Clients mostly learn about the nonprofit through word of mouth. Its funding comes from private donations and fundraisin­g and is open to anyone who considers giving birth at home or a birth center, regardless of their income. The program, though, prioritize­s requests from marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

“We are trusting that they will put forward what they can and then they’ll ask for what it is that they need support with, so sometimes it’s a hundred percent and sometimes it’s the remaining balance,” Green said.

The Victoria Project covers birth center midwifery care, doula care, acupunctur­e, home birth and chiropract­ic care, lactation support, and doula care for pregnancy loss and miscarriag­e. In some circumstan­ces, the nonprofit may cover therapy, especially in the postpartum period.

Some families reach out seeking not just emotional and physical support but food assistance and medication, Green said. And those types of requests are something the nonprofit will try to fulfill in the future.

“I imagine as we grow it might be one of the things we hope to do is connect with other organizati­ons who are providing some support in other areas so that we have a good referral system in place,” she said.

During her third trimester, the pandemic was still raging, forcing hospitals to alter their visitation protocols, and Stokes worried about whether her sister and boyfriend would be allowed to be by her side at the hospital and whether she would be allowed to move freely during labor.

“I had a C-section with my daughter, vaginal with my son and I feel like in order to have a successful labor, I need to be able to roam around and move around and I’m not going to be able to do that at the hospital so then what are my chances of having the successful” vaginal birth after cesarean? she said. “Probably slim to none.”

In the spring, Stokes made up her mind to find a midwife who would help her deliver her baby at home.

“I told my partner if I can’t find what I want, to be prepared to deliver this baby at home with just me, him and our kids,” she said.

In April, as she was waiting for a response from the Victoria Project, Stokes, who has Medi-Cal, prepared to dig into her savings if her applicatio­n wasn’t approved.

It was very important for her to find a Black midwife, she said, someone who would understand her and be “aware of the battles I face without me having to mention it.”

Beginning with her first visit to Kindred Space L.A., Stokes noticed the difference between the care she received at obstetrici­angynecolo­gist appointmen­ts during her first two pregnancie­s and what the midwives provided.

Meetings with Durdin and Hill sometimes stretched to more than an hour as Stokes’ 18-monthold son and 7-year-old daughter played on a patio. Midwives offered homemade lentil soup and asked whether she felt weepy, took her vitamins and consumed enough water. After each appointmen­t, she received a bag filled with fresh produce grown at the center’s garden.

When she started having pain in her lower back, the midwives offered her freeof-charge acupunctur­e. A woman who volunteere­d with the center stopped by her apartment to bring a warm homemade meal. When the midwives offered to deliver the baby at the center, she agreed.

Those appointmen­ts with the midwives met all of her expectatio­ns, Stokes said.

“They listen and they care, and it is everything I wanted,” she said. “They got my name right and the hospital couldn’t even do it.”

On the evening of Mother’s Day, Stokes began feeling her contractio­ns grow intense. She asked her sisters to pick up her kids at her apartment and headed to the birth center in South L.A. When she arrived around 10 p.m., her pain grew so intense that she began crying.

“Each breath and each push brings you closer to the baby,” her sister, Lauri Powell, kept saying, taking turns with Richmond to massage Stokes’ back and shoulders.

When Nikko’s face finally emerged from the water as Stokes was sitting in a bathtub, she said could feel a wave of happiness and relief. “He was here, and all my worries have gone out of the window,” she said.

Her entire $6,000 birthrelat­ed bill was covered by the Victoria Project.

Holly Smith, a health policy chair at California Nurse-Midwives Associatio­n, said it’s crucial to have a package of legislatio­n that would contribute to systemic changes to support parents of color.

The so-called California Momnibus Act, authored by state Sen. Nancy Skinner, seeks to establish doula care for all pregnant and postpartum people enrolled in Medi-Cal. The bill, SB 65, will require medical investigat­ions into maternal and child death, collecting data on socioecono­mic factors that contribute to negative birth outcomes, expanding postpartum health care and offering options for doulas and midwives.

The bill would allow expecting mothers to have at least four appointmen­ts with a doula during the prenatal period and delivery, and at least eight appointmen­ts during the postpartum period. Doula care, which can cost from several hundred dollars to $2,000, also would also be available during miscarriag­e, stillbirth and abortion.

In addition, the bill would establish an advisory board to standardiz­e competency requiremen­ts and certificat­ion for doulas.

The Legislatur­e also would expand coverage for a postpartum period for people on Medi-Cal from two months to one year, invest in midwifery care and create a maternal mortality board, which would advise on how to close racial disparitie­s in maternal health.

SB 65 has been passed by the state Senate and will head to the Assembly.

Earlier this year, Gov. Gavin Newsom said three pieces of the legislatio­n will be part of his budget proposal, including Medi-Cal coverage for doulas, MediCal postpartum coverage and a guaranteed minimum income pilot program for low-income families.

“Racial disparitie­s are preventabl­e and we can turn back the clock on that if we really want,” Smith said. “We have to have all hands on deck and we have to have multiple strategies.”

“I imagine as we grow it might be one of the things we hope to do is connect with other organizati­ons who are providing some support in other areas so that we have a good referral system in place.”

— Janelle Green, Victoria Project co-founder

 ?? PHOTOS BY SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Aysha-Samon Stokes and daughter Nyla watch midwife Allegra Hill and student midwife Maryam Karim check the heartbeat of 2-week-old Nikko during a postpartum visit to the South L.A. birthing center where he was born on Mother’s Day.
PHOTOS BY SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Aysha-Samon Stokes and daughter Nyla watch midwife Allegra Hill and student midwife Maryam Karim check the heartbeat of 2-week-old Nikko during a postpartum visit to the South L.A. birthing center where he was born on Mother’s Day.
 ??  ?? Midwife Kimberly Durdin checks on Stokes’ baby as son Wyatt sits on her at Kindred Space L.A., a birthing center Durdin operates with another midwife.
Midwife Kimberly Durdin checks on Stokes’ baby as son Wyatt sits on her at Kindred Space L.A., a birthing center Durdin operates with another midwife.
 ?? PHOTOS BY SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Aysha-Samon Stokes’ 13-year-old niece Leena, sister Lauri Powell and Stokes’ boyfriend, Dennis Richmond, watch over her after delivery at Kindred Space L.A. in May.
PHOTOS BY SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Aysha-Samon Stokes’ 13-year-old niece Leena, sister Lauri Powell and Stokes’ boyfriend, Dennis Richmond, watch over her after delivery at Kindred Space L.A. in May.
 ??  ?? Richmond touches their son Nikko as Stokes rests in the birthing bath after delivery. The Victoria Project paid the $6,000bill related to the birth.
Richmond touches their son Nikko as Stokes rests in the birthing bath after delivery. The Victoria Project paid the $6,000bill related to the birth.
 ??  ?? Richmond massages Stokes during labor at Kindred Space L.A. on Mother’s Day. Stokes’ sister, right, and 13-year-old niece, not pictured, also were there for the birth.
Richmond massages Stokes during labor at Kindred Space L.A. on Mother’s Day. Stokes’ sister, right, and 13-year-old niece, not pictured, also were there for the birth.
 ??  ?? Student midwife Maryam Karim checks the heartbeat of Stokes’ baby, Nikko, during a postpartum visit to the South L.A. birthing center on May 26.
Student midwife Maryam Karim checks the heartbeat of Stokes’ baby, Nikko, during a postpartum visit to the South L.A. birthing center on May 26.
 ??  ?? ABOVE: A pregnant Aysha-Samon Stokes, who played basketball in high school, plays ball with her children at home in downtown Los Angeles in April.
ABOVE: A pregnant Aysha-Samon Stokes, who played basketball in high school, plays ball with her children at home in downtown Los Angeles in April.
 ?? PHOTOS BY
SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? BELOW: Dennis Richmond bathes Wyatt and Nyla in April. Baby Nikko is still on the way.
PHOTOS BY SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER BELOW: Dennis Richmond bathes Wyatt and Nyla in April. Baby Nikko is still on the way.
 ??  ?? LEFT: Stokes helps daughter Nyla with her homework while carrying son Wyatt during lunch at home in downtown L.A. in April. Nyla is in a dual language Spanish immersion program.
LEFT: Stokes helps daughter Nyla with her homework while carrying son Wyatt during lunch at home in downtown L.A. in April. Nyla is in a dual language Spanish immersion program.

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