Date and Time
THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 2024 | 2 PM ET/11 AM PT | VIRTUAL
Speakers
Zea Malawa
MD, MPH, Director, Abundant Birth Project
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Zea Malawa is a mother, pediatrician and public health professional committed to improving health outcomes for children of color. Upon completing her undergraduate degree at Columbia University, she earned a medical doctorate from UCLA and a master’s degree in public health from UC Berkeley. Currently, Dr. Malawa is the director of Expecting Justice, a public health program that uses systems change and justice-oriented approaches to dismantle racism and close the racial gap in birth outcomes. In that capacity, she directs the Abundant Birth Project, the first pregnancy Guaranteed Income program in the US. She is the Perinatal Equity Medical Director at the San Francisco Department of Public Health and Adjunct Faculty at UC Berkeley School of Public Health. She also sees patients at General Hospital in San Francisco and serves as the Vice Chair of San Francisco’s Department of Early Childhood Commission.
Michaela Taylor
RN, BSN, PHN, Senior Manager, Abundant Birth Project
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Michaela Taylor is a registered nurse and MPH graduate from the UC Berkeley School of Public Health. Her clinical experience includes health promotion, disease management, and public health nursing. She’s worked specifically with adolescents who were in the foster care system and/or were involved in the juvenile criminal legal system. Through her clinical experience, she became aware of the ways discriminatory health and social policies often take advantage of, rather than support people who have been marginalized. This drove her passion to address the social and systemic injustices that create health inequities among communities of color in the U.S. This passion is what brings her to her work with Expecting Justice where she is the Senior Manager for the Abundant Birth Project.
Event Description
The Abundant Birth Project is a simple, yet novel, approach to achieving better maternal health and birthing outcomes: Provide pregnant Black and Pacific Islander women in San Francisco a monthly income supplement for the duration of their pregnancy and during the postpartum period as an economic and reproductive health intervention. Meet the Director and Senior Manager of the Abundant Birth Project to learn about its genesis, public/private partnership, the role of philanthropy, its successes, and challenges.