Birthing hostages: Haitian women's stories of maternal medicine, debt, and hospital detention.
Alissa JordanPublished in: Medical anthropology quarterly (2024)
What does it mean that hospitals in Haiti have become widespread sites of "kidnapping" for mothers and babies? In at least 46 countries, including Haiti, indebted patients are extralegally held prisoner in hospitals until family members, kin, outside groups, or charities pay their outstanding bills. The majority of those detained globally are women following complicated births. This article introduces and situates the global problem of "hospital detention" as it is practiced in Haiti, tying it to transnational architectures that target Black reproduction in global health. In this piece, Senisha and Mari share their experiences of detention, revealing the practice as continuous with other forms of coercion, neglect, and violence they face in seeking safe births, and highlighting the communal care, refusals, and acts of self-liberation that oppose these oppressions.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- global health
- mental health
- pregnancy outcomes
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- end stage renal disease
- gestational age
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- public health
- chronic kidney disease
- quality improvement
- primary care
- acute care
- prognostic factors
- palliative care
- adverse drug
- emergency department
- breast cancer risk
- peritoneal dialysis
- pregnant women
- metabolic syndrome
- adipose tissue
- patient reported outcomes
- body mass index
- weight loss