Abstract

ObjectiveNational studies report that birth center care is associated with reduced racial and ethnic disparities and reduced experiences of mistreatment. In the US, there are very few BIPOC-owned birth centers. This study examines the impact of culturally-centered care delivered at Roots, a Black-owned birth center, on the experience of client autonomy and respect.MethodsTo investigate if there was an association between experiences of autonomy and respect for Roots versus the national Giving Voice to Mothers (GVtM) participants, we applied Wilcoxon rank-sum tests for the overall sample and stratified by race.ResultsAmong BIPOC clients in the national GVtM sample and the Roots sample, MADM and MORi scores were statistically higher for clients receiving culturally-centered care at Roots (MADM p < 0.001, MORi p = 0.011). No statistical significance was found in scores between BIPOC and white clients at Roots Birth Center, however there was a tighter range among BIPOC individuals receiving care at Roots showing less variance in their experience of care.Conclusions for PracticeOur study confirms previous findings suggesting that giving birth at a community birth center is protective against experiences of discrimination when compared to care in the dominant, hospital-based system. Culturally-centered care might enhance the experience of perinatal care even further, by decreasing variance in BIPOC experience of autonomy and respect. Policies on maternal health care reimbursement should add focus on making community birth sustainable, especially for BIPOC provider-owners offering culturally-centered care.

Highlights

  • More than 98% of birthing people in the United States deliver in hospitals (MacDorman & Declercq, 2019)

  • We explore how a community birth center, focused on the needs of the Black community, and offering culturallycentered care to all its clients, impacts the experience of respect and autonomy of both BIPOC and white clients

  • Data for the analysis presented in this paper was collected as part of the Birth Equity Project (2016–2018) that examined the impact of culturally-centered care on the experiences of individuals receiving care at Roots and the motivations of midwives, doulas, and birth workers associated with Roots (Almanza et al, 2019; Karbeah et al, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

More than 98% of birthing people in the United States deliver in hospitals (MacDorman & Declercq, 2019). In the Listening to Mothers—California study (Sakala et al, 2018), the authors found that Black birthing individuals wanted options for community birth centers and midwifery care but had the least access to it. In their recent systematic review of the evidence on effects of race and racial concordance on care, Shen et al (2018) found that Black patients consistently experienced poorer communication quality, information-giving, patient participation, and participatory decision-making than white patients

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