Great Big Story: Racha Tahani Lawler
Our board member, Heather Armstorng, founder of dooce.com visited with Racha and shared her experience.
In May I joined a few members of EMC to visit a facility in Los Angeles called The Community Birthing Center located along a tiny stretch of La Cienega Blvd that I used to drive by every morning on my way to the job that would eventually fire me because of this website, a job that provided such excellent healthcare that it would have covered the costs of any number of doctors and facilities should I have chosen to have a baby during that time.
Back then, however, I don’t think that I would have known that I’d had options. I didn’t even know I had options when I was pregnant with Leta. A privileged, educated white woman didn’t know she had options.
This is a failure in our system.
When I had Marlo drug-free in a hospital setting, I was the first woman to have done so by choice in that facility which had been open for over 18 months. THE FIRST. The doctor who delivered her had never been present for an unmedicated childbirth. Nurses and doctors passed through my room for the next 24 hours in such droves to see “the woman who didn’t get an epidural” that I chose to go home early.
HELLO. THIS IS AMERICA.
The Community Birth Center is free-standing birth center founded by women who are determined to provide an alternative — an option — to the birthing experience that happens inside most hospital settings. They serve the women and families of Los Angeles who want an unmedicated childbirth, whether in the comfort of their own home or inside the tranquil walls of the birth center. These services include a variety of hands-on prenatal, delivery and postpartum care (including what they call Free Friday, a clinic held once a month for anyone and everyone who wants reproductive care), all so personalized and compassionate that we got to meet several members of the ever-growing family who return often to nestle in the warmth of Clinical Director and Owner, Racha Tahani Lawler.
Racha is the granddaughter, great‐granddaughter, great niece, and second cousin of midwives. As a Certified Professional Midwife and Licensed Traditional Midwife she is committed to providing midwifery care to all who seek it regardless of race, socio-economic status or gender. She has dedicated her life to help erase the many gaps that exist in our healthcare system that make it so hard for so many women to receive the services they need:
– discrimination
– financial and bureaucratic barriers to care
– lack of information about maternal care and family planning options
– lack of active participation in care decisions
– inadequate staffing
– a lack of accountability and oversight
She led us on a tour of the quaint yet beautifully-appointed facility (gorgeous artwork, private rooms, a birthing tub, private shower, birthing stools, etc.) and immediately her disposition and sense of humor made us feel like we’d known her and all her deepest held secrets for years.
Racha employs Tanya Smith-Johnson, a student midwife who is also pregnant with her fifth baby, and Eva Zaueta-Lara, a nurse practitioner and student midwife from Sonoma County, doing clinical work in LA. Together they deliver six to seven babies a month.
Over half a million women give birth each year in California — that’s almost one of eight births nationally — and 33% of those births are c-sections.
One-third.
Currently there are about 400 licensed midwives in California. However, less than 20 of them are women of color. This disparity coupled with the fact that nationally, African-American women are nearly four times more likely to die of pregnancy-related complications than white women (a statistic that has not improved in more than 20 years) perfectly illustrates the power structure in this country that values the lives and the quality of it of white people over any other.
Joining us on our tour was the inimitable Jennie Joseph, Executive Director of The Birth Place, a birthing center and maternity medical home in Winter Garden, Florida that she founded as an outreach clinic for pregnant women who are at risk for not receiving prenatal care. She, like Racha, is striving to offer solutions to the gaps in our healthcare system experienced especially by those in low income and uninsured women. She offers these women choices: where to receive care, who should provide it, and how they’d ideally like to deliver their child. She then brings in family members to be a part of a team engaged in helping these women achieve a healthy, full-term pregnancy.
Jennie is a force (and also one of EMC’s grantees) who has given countless briefings (including one on Capitol Hill) to discuss statistical data, quantitative and qualitative studies, and practical solutions regarding racial and perinatal disparities in the US. Midwifery is her life, the pump that pushes every molecule of blood through her expert hands and mind, and to be in her presence you have to be prepared for the power with which that dedication radiates from the posture of her body, from the emphasis in every word that she utters. She does not turn any woman away.
These are the faces of women who have set out to improve maternal mortality rates in this country, and they are chipping away at that goal one woman at a time. They know that this is at best a life-long, uphill slog, and yet, they go about it anyway.
It’s these women and these types of programs that compel me to run these races for Every Mother Counts, despite broken ankles and pulled hamstrings, and weekly visits to a chiropractor. It’s certainly the least this privileged white woman can do to dismantle part of the system that has at every turn given me more choices than I even knew I had while at the same time barring care and life-saving options for those women who need it the most.
Original article can be found on Dooce.com.