By Dilpreet Raju
Illinois State and community leaders Monday, Feb. 26 celebrated the planned opening of a new freestanding birth center on Chicago’s South Side while emphasizing proposed maternal health spending increases in governor JB Pritzker’s budget.
The nonprofit Chicago South Side Birth Center will mark the City’s second active midwife-led birth center, but, the first for the South Side. Advocates say the Black-led center offers safe birthing alternatives in a medically-underserved area of the city.
Jeanine Valrie Logan, a midwife and leader at the Chicago Beyond philanthropic organization that helped launch the birth center, said the push to create more options for family planning would have been impossible without a 2021 law that increased to 17, from 12, the number of birth centers allowed in Illinois.
Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton said facilities such as the South Side Birth Center are important in the Black community. She discussed how she — and now her grown daughters — have serious hesitations with trusting medical caregivers, especially while pregnant. She shared a story of being called “sweetheart” by a doctor who was giving her a prenatal ultrasound.
“This is personal to me. All these years later, we still haven’t figured out how Black women can have safe pregnancies, birthing experiences, and a healthy-first year postpartum,” Stratton said.
Last year, the Illinois Department of Public Health found more than 90 percent of all deaths for those pregnant or within one year of pregnancy were potentially preventable from 2018 through 2020. That same study, the “2023 Maternal Morbidity and Mortality Report,” also found Black women were two times as likely two die to from pregnancy-related conditions when compared to white women over the same timespan.
Logan emphasized how freestanding birth centers, where midwives are available to care for pregnant mothers in place of doctors, will transform maternal care for long underserved communities.
It aims “to create a space that will change how people receive reproductive health care,” she said.
Senator Lakesia Collins, D-Chicago, shared her experience of finding a midwife and doula, both of whom positively shaped her delivery and newborn experience.
“It was one of the best choices I could have ever made in my life … and the care for the mother and then the child all at the same time, and then postpartum care, it really saved me,” Collins said.
Pritzker said Illinois must start acting on maternal health issues.
“Unfortunately, our Nation is failing mothers and mothers-to-be on nearly every metric,” he said. “We have so much to do but imagine what this will look like when it’s completed.”
“The Center is intended to offer a full spectrum of reproductive care from contraception to STI screenings and abortion to prenatal birthing and postpartum care, serving as a model for how Illinois can decrease Black maternal mortality,” he added.
Starting this year, for the first time in Illinois history, doulas, midwives, and lactation consultants are being recognized as Medicaid health-care providers, expanding who can receive their services, he said.
Pritzker continued to promote his proposed budget, highlighting the Illinois Birth Equity Initiative, a multi-pronged proposal aimed at promoting infant health while reducing the number of maternal and infant deaths.
The Chicago South Side Birth Center will open in the former site of the Morning Star Bible Baptist Church, just a few miles south of the South Shore neighborhood. No date was announced for the birth center to open.
— Capitol News Illinois