| Literature DB >> 36033920 |
Elizabeth A Mosley1, Sequoia Ayala2, Zainab Jah2,3, Tiffany Hailstorks1,4, Dázon Dixon Diallo2, Natalie Hernandez5, Kwajelyn Jackson6, Indya Hairston2, Kelli S Hall1,7.
Abstract
Introduction: While reproductive injustice indicators are improving globally, they are worsening in the United States particularly for Black and other marginalized communities. Eugenics and obstetric violence against low-income and communities of color create well-founded distrust of sexual and reproductive health (SRH). Transformational, reparative ways of conducting SRH research are needed. Proposed principles of community-led research for reproductive justice: Drawing on our collective experience as reproductive justice leaders, SRH researchers, and clinicians, we propose the following principles of community-led research for reproductive justice: 1) Center the marginalized community members most affected by SRH inequities as leaders of research; 2) Facilitate equitable, collaborative partnership through all phases of SRH research; 3) Honor multiple ways of knowing (experiential, cultural, empirical) for knowledge justice and cross-directional learning across the team; 4) Build on strengths (not deficits) within the community; 5) Implement the tenets of reproductive justice including structural-level analysis and the human rights framework; 6) Prioritize disseminating useful findings to community members first then to other audiences; 7) Take action to address social and reproductive injustices. SisterLove's community-led georgia medication abortion project: We offer the community-led Georgia Medication Abortion (GAMA) Project by reproductive justice organization SisterLove from 2018-2022 as a case study to demonstrate these principles along with the strengths and challenges of reproductive justice research. Discussion: Community-led reproductive justice research offers innovative and transformational methods for truly advancing SRH in an era of increasing policy restrictions and decreasing access to care. Yet existing funding, research administrative, and publishing systems will require structural change.Entities:
Keywords: abortion; community-based participatory research; community-led research; medical distrust; reproductive coercion; reproductive justice
Year: 2022 PMID: 36033920 PMCID: PMC9412101 DOI: 10.3389/fgwh.2022.969182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Glob Womens Health ISSN: 2673-5059
Principles of community-led research for reproductive justice in the SisterLove Georgia medication abortion project.
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| 1) Center the marginalized community members most affected by SRH inequities as leaders of research | • The GAMA research study is led by community-based reproductive justice organization SisterLove, specifically bilingual Black and Latinx women leaders at SisterLove. |
| 2) Facilitate equitable, collaborative partnership through all phases of SRH research | • Conceptualization and Funding: The SisterLove team (spearheaded by bilinugal English and Spanish-speaking Black Latinx Sequoia Ayala) first conceived of the research study then applied for and secured funding by Society of Family Planning. Researchers at Emory University Center for Reproductive Health Research in the Southeast were approached as research partners with expertise in reproductive health data collection, analysis, and academic dissemination. |
| 3) Honor multiple ways of knowing (experiential, cultural, empirical) for knowledge justice and cross-directional learning across the team | • White and academic team members were called in to understand and address biases and assumptions, while non-academic team members were supported to develop new qualitative research skills. |
| 4) Build on strengths (not deficits) within the community | • Interviews and focus groups emphasized both the facilitators and barriers of medication abortion in Black and Latinx communities, which illuminated creative solution for improving access. |
| 5) Implement the tenets of reproductive justice including structural-level analysis and the human rights framework | • Interview and focus group guides asked about the federal, state, and clinic-level policy environment surrounding medication abortion for Black and Latinx women, including abortion restrictions in Georgia such as the pending 6-week gestational age limit, 24 hour waiting period, and in-person dispensing requirements. |
| 6) Prioritize disseminating useful findings to community members first then to other audiences | • The project began with a Community Kick-Off event, then continuously communicated about study activities and findings through a quarterly newsletter sent to all community members in the SisterLove communication networks. |
| 7) Take action to address social and reproductive injustices | • Findings informed a psychoeducational video to improve knowledge about medication abortion to counteract low awareness of medication abortion and poor access to comprehensive sex education. |
Figure 1My health in my hands medication abortion psychoeducational video and the community-clinical advocacy training.