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Black Queer Being/Knowing/Feeling: Storytelling of Barriers to Reproductive Healthcare.

Robyn B AdamsMorgan E Ellithorpe
Published in: Qualitative health research (2024)
Anti-Blackness and heteronormativity are the driving forces that determine access to reproductive healthcare and services in the United States, and the rate of Black birthing-related deaths continue to skyrocket. Still, there is a dearth of literature that includes the reproductive experiences of Black birthing people and their interactions with the healthcare system. This current study builds power with 10 Black Queer birthing people (or Partners) by centering on their gestation-based storytelling within discourse about reproduction. By blending these Partners' self-examination of their lived experiences with gestation with health research, Black feminism, and researcher interpretation of their stories, this study reveals the unparalleled truths of Black Queer reproduction. Six thematic areas within the healthcare system as experienced by Partners are explored. Additionally, through this disruptive approach, this study identifies the lived and material needs that necessitate reproductive justice for all.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • systematic review
  • primary care
  • preterm infants
  • genome wide
  • gestational age