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Ansonia
Lyons,
left,
finishes
a snack
while
her
mother,
Shelonda
Lyons,
takes
care of
her son,
Adrien
Lyons,
as her
nephew,
Malik
Lyons-Law,
plays in
the
kitchen. |
|
Chapter
One
Why do
so many
Black
women
die in
pregnancy?
One
reason:
Doctors
don't
take
them
seriously
By KAT
STAFFORD
Photos
by WONG
MAYE-E
and
video by
NOREEN
NASIR
apnews.com
This
story is
part one
of an AP
series
examining
the
health
disparities
experienced
by Black
Americans
across a
lifetime.
BIRMINGHAM,
Ala. –
Angelica
Lyons
knew it
was
dangerous
for
Black
women to
give
birth in
America.
As a
public
health
instructor,
she
taught
college
students
about
racial
health
disparities,
including
the fact
that
Black
women in
the U.S.
are
nearly
three
times
more
likely
to die
during
pregnancy
or
delivery
than any
other
race.
Her home
state of
Alabama
has the
third-highest
maternal
mortality
rate in
the
nation.
Then, in
2019, it
nearly
happened
to her.
What
should
have
been a
joyous
first
pregnancy
quickly
turned
into a
nightmare
when she
began to
suffer
debilitating
stomach
pain.
Her
pleas
for help
were
shrugged
off, she
said,
and she
was
repeatedly
sent
home
from the
hospital.
Doctors
and
nurses
told her
she was
suffering
from
normal
contractions,
she
said,
even as
her
abdominal
pain
worsened
and she
began to
vomit
bile.
Angelica
said she
wasn’t
taken
seriously
until a
searing
pain
rocketed
throughout
her body
and her
baby’s
heart
rate
plummeted.
Rushed
into the
operating
room for
an
emergency
cesarean
section,
months
before
her due
date,
she
nearly
died of
an
undiagnosed
case of
sepsis.
Even
more
disheartening:
Angelica
worked
at the
University
of
Alabama
at
Birmingham,
the
university
affiliated
with the
hospital
that
treated
her.
Her
experience
is a
reflection
of the
medical
racism,
bias and
inattentive
care
that
Black
Americans
endure.
Black
women
have the
highest
maternal
mortality
rate in
the
United
States —
69.9 per
100,000
live
births
for
2021,
almost
three
times
the rate
for
white
women,
according
to the
Centers
for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention.
Black
babies
are more
likely
to die,
and also
far more
likely
to be
born
prematurely,
setting
the
stage
for
health
issues
that
could
follow
them
through
their
lives.
“Race
plays a
huge
part,
especially
in the
South,
in terms
of how
you’re
treated,”
Angelica
said,
and the
effects
are
catastrophic.
“People
are
dying.”
Angelica
Lyons
looking
up with
tears
running
down her
cheeks.
Angelica
Lyons
tears up
while
recalling
her
birthing
experience
during
an
interview
in
Birmingham,
Ala., on
Feb. 5,
2022.
To be
Black
anywhere
in
America
is to
experience
higher
rates of
chronic
ailments
like
asthma,
diabetes,
high
blood
pressure,
Alzheimer's
and,
most
recently,
COVID-19.
Black
Americans
have
less
access
to
adequate
medical
care;
their
life
expectancy
is
shorter.
From
birth to
death,
regardless
of
wealth
or
social
standing,
they are
far more
likely
to get
sick and
die from
common
ailments.
Black
Americans’
health
issues
have
long
been
ascribed
to
genetics
or
behavior,
when in
actuality,
an array
of
circumstances
linked
to
racism —
among
them,
restrictions
on where
people
could
live and
historical
lack of
access
to care
— play
major
roles.
Discrimination
and bias
in
hospital
settings
have
been
disastrous.
The
nation’s
health
disparities
have had
a tragic
impact:
Over the
past two
decades,
the
higher
mortality
rate
among
Black
Americans
resulted
in 1.6
million
excess
deaths
compared
to white
Americans.
That
higher
mortality
rate
resulted
in a
cumulative
loss of
more
than 80
million
years of
life due
to
people
dying
young
and
billions
of
dollars
in
health
care and
lost
opportunity.
A
yearlong
Associated
Press
project
found
that the
health
challenges
Black
Americans
endure
often
begin
before
their
first
breath.
The AP
conducted
dozens
of
interviews
with
doctors,
medical
professionals,
advocates,
historians
and
researchers
who
detailed
how a
history
of
racism
that
began
during
the
foundational
years of
America
led to
the
disparities
seen
today.
Angelica
Lyons
appears
as a
blur
holding
her
phone in
one hand
and son
in
another.
In the
background
Angelica’s
sister
Ansonia
Lyons
sits on
the
kitchen
counter
eating
from a
bowl.
Angelica
Lyons’
pregnancy
troubles
began
during
her
first
trimester,
with
nausea
and
severe
acid
reflux.
She was
prescribed
medication
that
helped
alleviate
her
symptoms
but it
also
caused
severe
constipation.
In the
last
week of
October
2019,
while
she was
giving
her
students
a test,
her
stomach
started
to hurt
badly.
“I
remember
talking
to a
couple
of my
students
and they
said,
‘You
don’t
look
good,
Ms.
Lyons,'"
Angelica
recalled.
She
called
the
University
of
Alabama-Birmingham
Hospital’s
labor
and
delivery
unit to
tell
them she
was
having a
hard
time
using
the
bathroom
and her
stomach
was
hurting.
A woman
who
answered
the
phone
told her
it was a
common
pregnancy
issue,
Angelica
said,
and that
she
shouldn’t
worry
too
much.
“She
made me
feel
like my
concern
wasn’t
important,
and
because
this was
my first
pregnancy,
I
decided
not to
go
because
I wasn’t
sure and
thought
maybe I
was
overreacting,”
Angelica
said.
The pain
persisted.
She went
to the
hospital
a few
days
later
and was
admitted.
She had
an enema
— a
procedure
where
fluids
are used
to
cleanse
or
stimulate
the
emptying
of
bowels —
to
alleviate
her
constipation,
but
Angelica
continued
to plead
with
them
that she
was in
pain.
“They
were
like,
‘Oh,
it’s
nothing,
it’s
just the
Braxton
Hicks
contractions,'"
she
said.
“They
just
ignored
me.”
She was
sent
home but
her
stomach
continued
to ache,
so she
went
back to
the
hospital
a day
later.
Several
tests,
including
MRIs,
couldn’t
find the
source
of the
issue.
Angelica
was
eventually
moved to
the
labor
and
delivery
floor of
the
hospital
so they
could
monitor
her
son’s
heartbeat,
which
had
dropped
slightly.
There,
they
performed
another
enema
that
finally
helped
with the
pain.
She also
was
diagnosed
with
preeclampsia,
a
dangerous
condition
that can
cause
severe
pregnancy
complications
or
death.
Then she
began to
vomit
what
appeared
to be
bile.
“I got
worse
and
worse
with the
pain and
I kept
telling
them,
‘Hey,
I’m in
pain,’”
Angelica
said.
“They’d
say,
‘Oh, you
want
some
Tylenol?’
But it
wasn’t
helping.”
She
struggled
to eat
dinner
that
night.
When she
stood up
to go to
the
bathroom,
she felt
a sharp
pain
ricochet
throughout
her
body.
“I
started
hollering
because
I had no
idea
what was
going
on," she
said. "I
told my
sister I
was in
so much
pain and
to
please
call the
nurse.”
What
happened
next
remains
a blur.
Angelica
recalls
the
chaos of
hospital
staff
rushing
her to
labor
and
delivery,
putting
up a
blue
sheet to
prepare
her for
an
emergency
C-section
as her
family
and
ex-husband
tried to
understand
what
went
wrong.
She
later
learned
that she
nearly
died.
“I was
on life
support,”
recalled
Angelica,
34. “I
coded.”
She woke
up three
days
later,
unable
to talk
because
of a
ventilator
in her
mouth.
She
remembers
gesturing
wildly
to her
mother,
asking
where
her son,
Malik,
was.
He was
OK. But
Angelica
felt so
much had
been
taken
from
her. She
never
got to
experience
those
first
moments
of joy
of
having
her
newborn
placed
on her
chest.
She
didn’t
even
know
what her
son
looked
like.
Maternal
sepsis
is a
leading
cause of
maternal
mortality
in
America.
Black
women
are
twice as
likely
to
develop
severe
maternal
sepsis,
as
compared
to their
white
counterparts.
Common
symptoms
can
include
fever or
pain in
the area
of
infection.
Sepsis
can
develop
quickly,
so a
timely
response
is
crucial.
Sepsis
in its
early
stages
can
mirror
common
pregnancy
symptoms,
so it
can be
hard to
diagnose.
Due to a
lack of
training,
some
medical
providers
don’t
know
what to
look
for. But
slow or
missed
diagnoses
are also
the
result
of bias,
structural
racism
in
medicine
and
inattentive
care
that
leads to
patients,
particularly
Black
women,
not
being
heard.
“The way
structural
racism
can play
out in
this
particular
disease
is not
being
taken
seriously,”
said Dr.
Laura
Riley,
chief of
obstetrics
and
gynecology
at Weill
Cornell
Medicine
and New
York-Presbyterian
Hospital.
“We know
that
delay in
diagnosis
is what
leads to
these
really
bad
outcomes.”
In the
days and
weeks
that
followed,
Angelica
demanded
explanations
from the
medical
staff of
what
happened.
But she
felt the
answers
she
received
on how
it
occurred
were
sparse
and
confusing.
A
spokesperson
for the
University
of
Alabama
at
Birmingham
said in
a
statement
to The
Associated
Press
that
they
couldn’t
talk
about
Angelica’s
case
because
of
patient
privacy
laws.
They
pointed
to a
recent
internal
survey
done by
its
Obstetrics
and
Gynecology
department
that
showed
that
most of
its
patients
are
satisfied
with
their
care and
“are
largely
feeling
respected,”
and said
the
university
and
hospital
“maintain
intentional,
proactive
efforts
in
addressing
health
disparities
and
maternal
mortality.”
Angelica’s
son,
Malik,
was born
eight
weeks
early,
weighing
under 5
pounds.
He spent
a month
in
intensive
care. He
received
home
visits
through
the
first
year of
life to
monitor
his
growth.
While
he’s now
a
curious
and
vivacious
3-year-old
who
loves to
explore
the
world
around
him,
Angelica
recalls
those
days in
the ICU,
and she
feels
guilty
because
she
could
not be
with
him.
“It’s
scary to
know I
could
have
died,
that we
could
have
died,”
Lyons
said,
wiping
away
tears.
At the
far side
of the
room
Shelonda
Lyons
bends
down to
help her
8-month
old
grandson
Adrien
walk. In
the
foreground
Ansonia
Lyons
sits at
a table
while
2-year-old
Malik
plays on
the
floor.
Shelonda
Lyons
sits on
the
couch
holding
her two
young
grandsons
on her
lap.
A dog
jumps up
on the
glass
outer
door,
while
the
children
put
their
hands on
the
glass
from the
other
side.
Top:
Ansonia
Lyons,
left,
finishes
a snack
while
her
mother,
Shelonda
Lyons,
takes
care of
her son,
Adrien
Lyons,
as her
nephew,
Malik
Lyons-Law,
plays in
the
kitchen.
Left:
Shelonda
Lyons
looks
after
her
grandchildren,
Malik
Lyons-Law,
center,
and
Adrien
Lyons.
Right:
Malik
Lyons-Law
and
Adrien
Lyons
play
with
their
dog.
For
decades,
frustrated
birth
advocates
and
medical
professionals
have
tried to
sound an
alarm
about
the ways
medicine
has
failed
Black
women.
Historians
trace
that
maltreatment
to
racist
medical
practices
that
Black
people
endured
amid and
after
slavery.
To fully
understand
maternal
mortality
and
infant
mortality
crises
for
Black
women
and
babies,
the
nation
must
first
reckon
with the
dark
history
of how
gynecology
began,
said
Deirdre
Cooper
Owens, a
historian
and
author.
“The
history
of this
particular
medical
branch …
it
begins
on a
slave
farm in
Alabama,”
Owens
said.
“The
advancement
of
obstetrics
and
gynecology
had such
an
intimate
relationship
with
slavery,
and was
literally
built on
the
wounds
of Black
women.”
Reproductive
surgeries
that
were
experimental
at the
time,
like
cesarean
sections,
were
commonly
performed
on
enslaved
Black
women.
Physicians
like the
once-heralded
J.
Marion
Sims, an
Alabama
doctor
many
call the
“father
of
gynecology,”
performed
torturous
surgical
experiments
on
enslaved
Black
women in
the
1840s
without
anesthesia.
And well
after
the
abolition
of
slavery,
hospitals
performed
unnecessary
hysterectomies
on Black
women,
and
eugenics
programs
sterilized
them.
Health
care
segregation
also
played a
major
role in
the
racial
health
gap
still
experienced
today.
Until
Congress
passed
the
Civil
Rights
Act of
1964,
Black
families
were
mostly
barred
from
well-funded
white
hospitals
and
often
received
limited,
poor or
inhumane
medical
treatment.
Black-led
clinics
and
doctors
worked
hard to
fill in
the
gaps,
but even
after
the new
protections,
hospitals
once
reserved
for
Black
families
remained
under-resourced,
and
Black
women
didn’t
get the
same
support
regularly
available
for
white
women.
That
history
of abuse
and
neglect
led to
deep-rooted
distrust
of
health
care
institutions
among
communities
of
color.
“We have
to
recognize
that
it’s not
about
just
some
racist
people
or a few
bad
actors,”
said
Rana A.
Hogarth,
an
associate
professor
of
History
at the
University
of
Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign.
“People
need to
stop
thinking
about
things
like
slavery
and
racism
as just
these
features
that
happened
that are
part of
the
contours
of
history
and
maybe
think of
them
more as
foundational
and
institutions
that
have
been
with us
every
step of
the
way.”
Some
health
care
providers
still
hold
false
beliefs
about
biological
differences
between
Black
and
white
people,
such as
Black
people
having
“less
sensitive
nerve
endings,
thicker
skin,
and
stronger
bones.”
Those
beliefs
have
caused
medical
providers
today to
rate
Black
patients’
pain
lower,
and
recommend
less
relief.
The
differences
exist
regardless
of
education
or
income
level.
Black
women
who have
a
college
education
or
higher
have a
pregnancy-related
mortality
rate
that is
more
than
five
times
higher
than
that of
white
women.
Notably,
the
pregnancy-related
mortality
rate for
Black
women
with a
college
education
is 1.6.
times
higher
than
that of
white
women
with
less
than a
high
school
degree.
Ansonia
Lyons
bottle
feeds
her son
while
sitting
on the
couch.
Ansonia
Lyons
bottle
feeds
her son,
Adrien
Lyons,
in the
television
room of
her
parents'
home.
In
Angelica
Lyons’
home
state of
Alabama,
about 40
mothers
die
within
one year
after
delivery.
The toll
on Black
mothers
is
disproportionate.
The
state's
infant
mortality
rate for
2021 was
7.6
deaths
per
1,000
live
births.
The
disparities
between
Black
and
white
babies
is
stark:
The
infant
mortality
rate in
2021 for
white
mothers
was 5.8,
while
the
infant
mortality
rate for
Black
mothers
was
12.1, an
increase
from
10.9
from the
prior
year.
Black
babies
account
for just
29% of
births
in
Alabama,
yet
nearly
47% of
infant
deaths.
A 2020
report
by the
Alabama
Maternal
Mortality
Review
Committee
found
that
more
than 55%
of 80
pregnancy-related
deaths
that
they
reviewed
in 2016
and 2017
could
have
been
prevented.
Alabama
launched
its
Maternal
Mortality
Review
Committee
in 2018
to
investigate
maternal
deaths.
But Dr.
Scott
Harris,
Alabama’s
Department
of
Public
Health
State
Health
Officer,
said
work
remains
to
collect
a fuller
picture
of why
the
disparities
exist.
“We
certainly
know
that
from
national
numbers
as well
that
Black
women
have
worse
maternal
outcomes
at every
income
level,
which is
pretty
startling,”
said Dr.
Harris.
“Age
matters
and just
overall
ZIP code
matters.
Unfortunately,
where
people
live,
where
these
children
are
born, is
strongly
associated
with
infant
mortality.
I think
we’ll
see
something
similar
for
maternal
outcomes.”
And
concerns
about
access
and
barriers
to care
remain.
In
Alabama,
37% of
counties
are
maternity
care
deserts
— more
than
240,000
women
live in
counties
with no
or
little
care.
About
39% of
counties
don’t
have a
single
obstetric
provider.
Alabama
is not
alone in
this.
More
than 2.2
million
American
women of
childbearing
age live
in
maternity
care
deserts,
and
another
4.8
million
such
women
reside
in
counties
with
limited
access
to
maternity
care.
Angelica
Lyons
said she
wanted
to seek
maternal
care at
another
hospital
but the
University
of
Alabama
was the
only one
near her
home
equipped
to
handle
her
high-risk
pregnancy,
which
included
high
blood
pressure
near the
beginning.
Dr.
Harris
acknowledged
the lack
of
access
to care
is a
barrier
for
Black
women
who live
in the
state’s
rural
areas.
Much of
the
state’s
public
health
efforts
are
targeted
along
the
rural
Black
Belt,
which
gets its
name
from the
rich
soil but
it was
also a
region
where
many
plantations
were
clustered.
Centuries
later,
the
Black
Belt
continues
to be a
high-poverty
region
with a
large
Black
population.
More
than
half of
the
nation’s
Black
population
lives in
the
South.
“We’ve
talked a
lot
about
structural
racism
and the
impact
of that
on
African
American
women
and how
it has
no place
in
society,”
Harris
said. “I
think we
have to
publicly
call it
what it
is.”
Close-up
of
Angelica
Lyons
looking
into the
camera.
Close-up
of
Ansonia
Lyons
looking
into the
camera.
Angelica
Lyons’
traumatic
birth
experience
was not
the only
one in
her
family.
After
two
miscarriages,
her
younger
sister,
Ansonia,
became
pregnant
in 2020,
and it
was
difficult.
Angelica
Lyons
and
Ansonia
Lyons
pose for
portraits.
Doctors
told her
she was
suffering
from
regular
morning
sickness,
though
she was
vomiting
blood.
She was
eventually
diagnosed
with an
excessive
vomiting
disorder,
hyperemesis
gravidarum,
and was
extremely
dehydrated.
Ansonia
spent
months
in and
out of
the same
hospital
where
her
sister
had been
treated.
“They
said,
‘Welcome
to the
pregnancy,
sweetheart.
This is
what
pregnancy
is,’”
Ansonia,
30,
recalled.
“I told
her,
‘No,
this is
not
normal
for me
to be
throwing
up 10 to
20 times
a day.’
My own
primary
care
wasn’t
listening
to me.”
Ansonia
said
throughout
her
pregnancy
she
encountered
hospital
staff
that
made
stereotypical
jokes,
calling
her
child’s
father
her
“baby
daddy,”
a trope
often
lobbed
at Black
parents.
“She
said,
‘So,
your
baby
daddy,
where
does he
work?’”
Ansonia
recalled.
“I said,
‘I don’t
know
what a
baby
daddy is
but the
father
of my
child is
at
work.’
She
asked
where he
worked
and I
told her
he had
two
businesses
and she
acted
like she
was
surprised.”
Ansonia
said
staff
assumed
she
didn’t
have any
health
insurance,
when she
had
insurance
through
her
employer.
Ansonia
has Type
2
diabetes
and had
issues
with her
blood
pressure
and
heart
throughout
the
pregnancy.
She
started
to see a
cardiologist
and by
the time
she was
21 weeks
pregnant,
she was
diagnosed
with
congestive
heart
failure.
She was
placed
on a
medley
of
medications,
and her
doctors
decided
to
deliver
the baby
early
via
C-section.
Ansonia
was
scared,
given
everything
she
witnessed
her
sister
go
through
nearly
two
years
prior.
“There
were
several
times I
told my
boyfriend
that I
thought
that I
was
going to
die,”
she
said.
Ansonia
Lyons
walks
holding
her son
Adrien
in one
arm and
a
plastic
bag in
the
other.
Ansonia
Lyons
holding
Adrien,
from a
closer
perspective.
Ansonia
sits on
the
couch
looking
up, with
a small
dog
sitting
on the
top of
the
couch
behind
her. Her
son
Adrien
is
visible
in the
foreground,
looking
up.
The
C-section
went
well.
Ansonia’s
son,
Adrien,
was due
in July
2021 but
he was
born at
the end
of May.
He spent
his
first
five
days in
the
intensive
care
unit,
then was
hospitalized
for some
early
breathing
problems.
Ansonia
Lyons
spends
time
with her
son,
Adrien
Lyons.
Cesarean
delivery
rates
are
higher
for
Black
women
than
white
women,
36.8%
and 31%,
respectively,
in 2021.
Problems
continued
for
Ansonia
after
the
delivery.
She
ended up
needing
a blood
transfusion
and was
unable
to see
her son
for his
first
few days
of life.
A few
months
postpartum,
she was
still
vomiting
and
having
fainting
spells
that led
to her
being
admitted
to the
hospital
off and
on. Her
arms
suffered
from
bruising
from
needles
used to
treat
her
throughout
the
pregnancy.
She had
always
been
slow to
heal
from any
bruising,
a common
problem
for
diabetics.
Yet a
doctor
who had
been
involved
throughout
her
entire
pregnancy
questioned
why she
had
bruises
on her
arms and
asked if
she
“smoked
weed” or
took any
other
recreational
drugs.
The
hospital
declined
to
comment,
citing
patient
privacy
laws.
“I said,
‘This is
from me
being
stuck so
many
times
and
having
to be in
the
hospital.’
I told
him I
don’t do
any
drugs,”
she
said.
He still
sent her
blood
work off
to be
tested.
The
tests
came
back
negative.
“That
just
made me
not
trust
them, it
made me
not want
to go
back,”
she
said.
Ansonia
Lyons
holds
her
8-month-old
son
Adrien’s
hands
and
helps
him take
steps in
the
hallway.
Ansonia
Lyons
walks
down the
corridor
of her
parents'
home
with her
son,
Adrien
Lyons.
There
are
indications
that the
sufferings
of Black
mothers
and
their
babies
are
being
recognized,
however
late.
In 2019,
U.S.
Rep.
Lauren
Underwood,
an
Illinois
Democrat,
and Rep.
Alma
Adams, a
North
Carolina
Democrat,
launched
the
Black
Maternal
Health
Caucus.
It is
now one
of the
largest
bipartisan
congressional
caucuses.
The
caucus
introduced
the
Black
Maternal
Health
Momnibus
Act in
2019 and
again in
2021,
proposing
sweeping
changes
that
would
increase
funding
and
strengthen
oversight.
Key
parts of
the
legislation
have
been
adopted
but the
bill
itself
has yet
to be
approved.
Biden’s
budget
for
fiscal
year
2024
includes
$471
million
in
funding
to
reduce
maternal
mortality
and
morbidity
rates,
expand
maternal
health
initiatives
in rural
communities,
and
implicit
bias
training
and
other
initiatives.
It also
requires
states
to
provide
continuous
Medicaid
coverage
for 12
months
postpartum,
to
eliminate
gaps in
health
insurance.
It also
includes
$1.9
billion
in
funding
for
women
and
child
health
programs.
U.S.
Secretary
of
Health
and
Human
Services
Xavier
Becerra
told The
Associated
Press
more
must be
done at
all
levels
of
government
to root
out
racism
and bias
within
health
care.
“We know
that if
we
provide
access
to care
for
mother
and baby
for a
full
year,
that we
probably
help
produce
not just
good
health
results,
but a
promising
future
for mom
and baby
moving
forward,”
he said.
Close-up
of hands
with
painted
fingernails
holding
a photo
of
Angelica
and
Ansonia
Lyons
standing
together,
taken
when
they
were
younger.
Ansonia
Lyons
looks at
a
photograph
of her
younger
self,
right in
photo,
posing
with her
sister
Angelica
Lyons,
left in
photo.
Shelonda
Lyons
always
taught
both her
daughters
the
bitter
truth of
racism,
hoping
it would
prepare
them to
navigate
life
growing
up in
Birmingham,
the Deep
South
city
known
for its
place in
civil
rights
history.
“When we
were
young,
she was
showing
us those
images
of all
the
Black
people
being
hung,
being
burned
on the
trees,”
Angelica
said,
pointing
to a
book
that
remains
on the
family’s
coffee
table.
“She
wanted
us to
understand
it, to
know
where we
lived
and that
racism
was
something
that we
might
have to
deal
with.”
But
Shelonda
never
could
have
prepared
for the
treatment
her
daughters
endured
during
their
pregnancies.
She
remembers
feeling
helpless
and
angry.
“It’s
like a
slap in
the face
to me
because
at what
point do
you
realize
that
you’re
dealing
with
human
beings?
That it
doesn’t
matter
what
color
they
are,”
she
said,
adding
that now
she
worries
any time
they or
her
grandsons
need to
go to
the
doctor.
“I don’t
have a
lot of
trust.”
Angelica
underwent
two
surgeries
in the
weeks
that
followed
her
C-section
to
repair
internal
damage
and
address
her
infection.
She had
to wear
a
colostomy
bag for
several
months
until
she
healed.
More
than
three
years
later,
her
stomach
remains
disfigured.
“I love
my
child, I
love him
all the
same but
this
isn’t
the body
I was
born
with,"
she
said.
“This is
the body
that
they
caused
from
them not
paying
attention
to me,
not
listening
to me.”
Angelica
Lyons
secures
her son
into his
car seat
while
Ansonia
Lyons
prepares
to get
into the
front
seat.
James
Lyons
holds
and
kisses
his
8-month-old
grandson
while
sitting
at a
round
kitchen
table.
First:
Angelica
Lyons
secures
her son,
Malik
Lyons-Law,
into his
child
car seat
while
her
sister,
Ansonia
Lyons,
prepares
to ride
with her
after
their
breakfast
outing
to
celebrate
their
father's
birthday.
Second:
James
Lyons
kisses
his
grandson,
Adrien
Lyons,
in the
kitchen
of his
home.
Digital
Presentation
Credits
Producers:
Samantha
Shotzbarger,
Josh
Housing,
Wong
Maye-E
Data
Analysis:
Angeliki
Kastanis
Research:
Rhonda
Shafner
Text
Editing:
Anna Jo
Bratton,
Andale
Gross
Graphics:
Kevin S.
Vineys,
Angeliki
Kastanis
Design
and
Development:
Linda
Gorman,
Eunice
Esomonu,
Kati
Perry
Audience
Coordination
and
Production:
Edward
Medeles,
Elise
Ryan,
Almaz
Abedje,
Sophia
Rosenbaum
Creative
Development:
Raghuram
Vadarevu
Project
Management:
Andale
Gross
Project
Vision
and
Development:
Kat
Stafford
Stafford,
based in
Detroit,
is a
national
investigative
race
writer
for the
AP’s
Race and
Ethnicity
team.
She is a
2022
Knight-Wallace
Reporting
Fellow
at the
University
of
Michigan.
More in
this
project
Black
children
are more
likely
to have
asthma.
A lot
comes
down to
where
they
live
Black
kids
face
racism
before
they
even
start
school.
It's
driving
a major
mental
health
crisis
High
blood
pressure
plagues
many
Black
Americans.
Combined
with
COVID,
it's
catastrophic
A
lifetime
of
racism
makes
Alzheimer’s
more
common
in Black
Americans
The
health
inequities
documented
in this
project
have
their
roots in
a long
history
of
medical
racism.
The AP
has
collected
a small
sample
of that
history
related
to every
phase of
life.
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