SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Reproductive justice is a framework created by Black women in 1994 to address the intersectional and multifactored issues that women of color and their families face in society.
(b) Reproductive justice is the human right to control our bodies, sexuality, gender, work, and reproduction. That right can only be achieved when all people, particularly women and girls, have the complete economic, social, and political power and resources to make healthy decisions about their bodies, families, and communities in all areas of their lives. Two of the core tenets of reproductive justice are the right to have children and the right to parent the children we have with dignity and respect in safe and sustainable communities.
(c) Reproductive justice affirms that every birthing person is entitled to dignity and demands that they are equipped with the necessary supports for a safe, joyous, and positive birthing process.
(d) With the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the maternal mortality rate is projected to increase by more than 33 percent for Black birthing people and 21 percent overall. Birthing people need the supports necessary to support positive birth outcomes and cost should not be a barrier to obtain these critical supports.
(e) Where 60 percent of pregnancy-related deaths are preventable and structural racism and implicit bias have been identified as root causes for disparities in adverse birth outcomes for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) women and birthing people, a multileveled approach to address this persistent crisis is necessary.
(f) Growing evidence indicates that expanding access to doula care during the perinatal period is a critical step toward advancing maternal health equity, as this approach has been shown to improve birth outcomes and reduce medical costs.
(g) While proving to be a beneficial and integral aspect of care for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people, particularly pregnant, birthing, and postpartum people of color, the cost of doula care poses a barrier to access for a significant percentage of the population.
(h) Research demonstrates that doulas can be particularly beneficial for pregnant and birthing women of color, women with low incomes, and women living in underserved communities. While not all birthing people identify as women, research suggests that the same findings would likely be applicable to all birthing people. It is clear, though, that research that contemplates or specifically accounts for the birthing experiences of transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming birthing people is necessary.
(i) Expanding access to doula care can help reduce health disparities by ensuring that pregnant people who bear the greatest risks for adverse birth outcomes have the added support they need to have a positive birthing experience.
(j) A growing body of evidence reveals that support from a doula during labor and delivery is associated with improved birth outcomes that include, among others, lower cesarean rates, lower preterm birth rates, fewer obstetric interventions, fewer complications, higher infant Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration (APGAR) scores, and a more positive, self-reported birth experience.
(k) Although California has made advancements in providing health care coverage and doula care for low-income birthing people, there are birthing people who experience deep disparities in birth outcomes that do not have access to these advancements, including Black birthing people that have incomes just above the level required to be eligible for Medi-Cal and incarcerated birthing people. For Black birthing people, the increased risk of pregnancy related death persists regardless of socioeconomic status or income level and education.
(l) Although California’s overall maternal mortality rate has declined by 65 percent since 2006, mortality and morbidity for Black and Indigenous pregnant people remain considerably higher than the state’s average.
(m) In California, Black women are overrepresented in pregnancy-related deaths from all causes and the data shows that racial and ethnic disparities in pregnancy-related mortality ratios (PRMR) has widened such that the PRMR for Black women is four to six times greater than their counterparts.
(n) In California, the rate of preterm births among Black and Indigenous birthing people is 40 percent higher than preterm births for their White counterparts, while Latinx birthing people have the second highest rate of low birthweight babies in the state.
(o) Approximately 210,595 women were in state or federal prison or jail in the United States at the end of 2015, a 645-percent increase since 1980. Additionally, almost three-quarters of incarcerated women fall within the prime childbearing age range of 18 to 44 years of age, inclusive. This means that it is likely that a number of people who are capable of giving birth will enter prison or jail while pregnant or during the postpartum period.
(p) Chapter 321 of the Statutes of 2020, the Reproductive Dignity for Incarcerated People Act, expanded incarcerated pregnant people’s access to a support person, including a doula, during labor, childbirth, and during postpartum recovery while hospitalized.
(q) The Minnesota Prison Doula Project discovered that incarcerated participants had healthier pregnancies and babies than those who did not participate in the program. Doula care for incarcerated people has been found to promote a more satisfying birthing experience overall.
(r) An integral component of care in the perinatal period, doula care can easily add up to over 100 hours of care for each client during the perinatal period. Compensation for doula care services should adequately reflect the level of care that doulas provide each client, support the provision of high-quality care to clients, provide a sustainable living wage for doulas, and encourage uptake and doula participation in service provision or the profession.
(s) A stated goal of the State Department of Public Health is to reduce health and mental health disparities among vulnerable and underserved communities to achieve health equity throughout California. This should extend to ensuring health equity for all birthing people and babies.
(t) In an effort to maintain accuracy, when referring to existing research, the categories and identifiers use gendered terms such as, “women” or “female.” It is recognized, though, that not all people capable of giving birth identify as women or female.