Government Report Finds Care Deficits for Pregnant People in Federal Custody
Pregnant and postpartum people in federal custody receive care directed by policies that fail to meet national standards, a new report finds,

Pregnant and postpartum people in federal custody receive care directed by policies that fail to meet national standards, a new report finds,

A discussion of strategies to encourage organ donation and to address inequities relating to transplantation.

The COVID-19 pandemic has given renewed importance and urgency to the need for racial and gender diversity in clinical trials.

Through social movement advocacy and engagement, BIPOC can create their own narrative of medical need and activism.

Although the future of reproductive freedom is uncertain and bleak, we now have the opportunity to thoughtfully move forward.

Among the most salient lessons to be learned from the coronavirus pandemic is that justice is just plain good for America’s health.

Racism has repeatedly stymied progress toward the good governance of necessities. Anti-racism, therefore, must be at the core of any solution.

Health and economic inequities exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic disproportionately harm women involved in the criminal legal system.

In just three sentences, Justice Holmes delivers a message that has lasted through today: some lives matter more than others.

BIPOC are either subject to hypervisibility, or medical erasure, where their medical needs are left unaddressed and ignored.
