Northwest Film Forum is SCREENING ONLINE! NWFF’s physical space is temporarily closed in light of public health concerns around COVID-19, but community, dialogue, and education through media arts WILL persist. • • HOW TO WATCH • • Purchase your ticket through Brown Paper Tickets. Your email receipt from Brown Paper Tickets will contain a link and password for viewing, under “Ticket Details”. (Don’t see it? Check your spam filter.) If you encounter any issues logging in, please contact louie@nwfilmforum.org for a quick follow-up. (But please, check your confirmation email!) About For too long America has failed to acknowledge the outrageous and seemingly intractable rates of poor maternal health and deaths of mothers in childbirth. The United States has the highest maternal mortality rate of any industrialized country in the world. More than two women die every day in the US from pregnancy-related causes. And while the vast majority of countries have reduced their maternal mortality ratios, for the past 25 years the numbers of women lost during pregnancy, birth or postpartum have increased dramatically in the US.
African-American women in the US are at especially high risk; they are nearly 4 times more likely to die of pregnancy-related complications compared to European American. Women of color are less likely to go into pregnancy in good health because of a lack of access to primary health care services. They are also less likely to have access to adequate maternal health care services. Black women are by far the largest demographic to suffer these outcomes. It has been this way for decades, and yet they are seldom able to make their voices heard. The women in this documentary tell their own stories: they know what is wrong. They share their hopes and fears, and they share about their American dream, as it relates to maternal health in the US. Discussion ** A recorded panel discussion accompanies this film, featuring a conversation between RVCC Executive Director and Co-founder Tara Lawal, Lead Student Midwife Latonia Westerfield, Doula Bre Davis, and Homebirth/Midwifery Consumer and Advocate Amelia Carmona-Fesili, and The Birth Place Founder, CEO & Clinical Director Jennie Joseph. ** In partnership with UW Bothell and Rainier Valley Community Clinic, we’re hosting an online screening of this documentary resource for families and all women regardless of their race or beliefs about birthing. It will be accompanied by a panel discussion with RVCC midwives, doulas, and clinicians to demystify home birth and natural forms of pain management for families, particularly during the pandemic. Our hope is to empower women to trust that they are capable of giving birth on their terms, in the comfort of their homes. |