Texas has manufactured a reproductive well being disaster. In the case of Tierra Walker, a Texas mom who died after being denied lifesaving abortion care, a state-designed catastrophe has collided with the nation’s Black maternal well being disaster. Texas’ compounding abortion restrictions and bans decrease the usual of medical care to denial, refusal, and what can solely be assumed as ambivalence.
This ProPublica investigation into the deaths of pregnant folks denied abortions, and the viral video of Karrie Jones’s medical neglect throughout childbirth exposes a vicious cycle: the maternal well being disaster and the denial of abortion care are mutually reinforcing failures, systemically abandoning Black pregnant folks from all sides.
Texas Stopped Reviewing Maternal Deaths
Texas’ Maternal Mortality Committee introduced it wouldn’t be reviewing maternal deaths from 2022 and 2023 — the primary two years since Roe v. Wade’s overturn. Committee members had recommended they skip the primary two years after Texas’s abortion ban to supply extra well timed suggestions, however as time passes, the headlines, the tales, and deaths provide a transparent image of what abortion and Black start advocates have identified all alongside. Texas’s abortion bans have a chilling impact on medical care: by prioritizing the state’s commonplace of refusal, licensed medical professionals abandon their obligation of care, with deadly penalties.
These cases attest to why advocates for Black Maternal Well being have amplified a transparent demand: “Hearken to Me”. Over 90 docs had been consulted on Tierra Walker’s medical state, but none offered the mandatory and life-saving care that will have prevented her early demise, an abortion.
Reproductive Well being Deserts and a Double Customary
In Texas, a Black Maternal Well being disaster is raging throughout the state, and reproductive well being deserts are limiting the provision and accessibility of preventative care, creating an ideal storm of preventable loss of life.
Texas’s long-standing historical past of maternal well being inequity makes clear that we are able to solely converse concerning the care and dignity Black moms deserve whereas standing beside their gravesites. We grieve Black moms whereas we chariot white survivors of abortion bans from courtroom instances to documentaries to public talking occasions. I refuse to let Black moms’ preventable deaths be in useless.
Refusing False Options
We cannot be fooled by so-called options supplied to us by those that manufactured this disaster. Those that at present govern know the results of their actions and intend to make Black moms collateral of their quest for management. We’d like correct investigations to see the extent and severity of maternal deaths in Texas. We additionally want governance that’s each rooted in care and attentive to the suggestions of Black start and coverage advocates closest to these communities most impacted by these compounding reproductive injustices.
When Tierra, already a mom to her eldest son, JJ, age 14, requested docs to think about her life, given the co-occurring morbidities, the dedication was made that her being pregnant was not in an emergency state, solely her well being. Whereas dad and mom who search abortions have all the time made caring choices in consideration of their capability, Texas’s abortion bans now power them to confront their potential incapacitation — the danger of being unable to mother or father their youngsters on account of maternal loss of life attributable to abortion care denial. That could be a reproductive injustice we must always all refuse to just accept.
raven E. Freeborn (they/them) is a full-spectrum doula, licensed social employee, and the chief director of Avow Texas. Freeborn’s work is pushed by a steadfast dedication to community-led change, significantly for LGBTQ and BIPOC communities. They’re deeply dedicated to addressing well being disparities inside traditionally marginalized populations.





















