Tag: black women
Addressing the Crisis of Black Maternal Health: A Critical Role for Black Fathers
Experts link dire outcomes for Black women to systemic racism, limited health care access, and chronic conditions like diabetes and hypertension. While data quantifies the crisis, many personal stories indicate that Black women are dying in childbirth because their voices are often ignored.
Black fathers are an untapped resource often overlooked when considering support systems for Black mothers during labor and delivery.
But with increased recognition, proper guidance, education about health care systems, and knowledge of what to ask medical staff, Black fathers can offer crucial support. Their understanding of the specific needs Black mothers face during pregnancy positions them to advocate effectively, provide reassurance, and navigate medical situations.
Black Work, and the Myth of a Gender Divide: What the Employment Numbers Really Say About Family Stability
In February 2026, unemployment for Black men ages 20 and older was 7%, and for Black women ages 20 and older it was 7.1%, nearly identical. This alone should interrupt a lot of lazy commentary that claims one group is faring better than the other and causing the labor market gaps the other faces.
The real lesson is that both Black men and Black women remain more exposed than the average U.S. worker.
The Birth Crisis We Can Change: Fathers as Partners in Black Maternal Health
The responsible fatherhood field has spent decades teaching men how to show up after the birth. But Black maternal health demands we teach men how to show up before it, during it, and long after the hospital bracelets come off.
It starts with learning, being present, speaking up when necessary, and building a partnership strong enough to hold the weight of a family’s most precious and vulnerable hours.
Does Black Love Matter to Black Men?
For many of us, the holidays are a time to be close to significant others and romantic partners. Whether we are getting cozy by a fire or meeting under the mistletoe, there is just something about the days getting shorter and the weather getting colder that makes many of us long for intimacy and companionship.



