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National Black Women's Health Project : ウィキペディア英語版
Black Women’s Health Imperative
Black Women’s Health Imperative, previously the National Black Women's Health Project', was formed in 1984 in Atlanta, Georgia out of a need to address the health and reproductive rights of African American women. NBWHP was principally founded by Byllye Avery. Avery was involved in reproductive healthcare work in Gainesville, Florida in the 1970s and was particularly influenced by the impact that policy had on women of color and poor women. Additionally Avery was also concerned with healthcare choices and wanted “to provide an environment where women could feel comfortable and take control of their own health” (Silliman et al., 66).
Lillie Allen, a healthcare educator, (who is not formally listed on the organizations website but is sited in other sources) was primarily concerned with birthing choices of African Americans as well as internalized racism within the community. Both women worked with the National Women's Health Network and started the project within the organization.
Eventually they extracted “The Project” from the NWHN because of concern regarding the lack of focus on the issues facing black women and poor women which played out through the events that occurred during and the National Conference on Black Women’s Health Issues at Spelman College in 1983 (Silliman et al., 69). Because of the two main focuses on self-help and the medical establishment as an institution, the NBWHP ebb and flows between a grassroots operation that focuses on the community of women and one that focused on policy. The National Black Women’s Health Project, opened an office in Washington, DC to address policy issues and moved their headquarters to Washington, DC. NBWHP has changed their name to the Black Women’s Health Imperative.
==Aims==
The project's five Health Imperatives for Black Women are:
*

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Black Women’s Health Imperative」の詳細全文を読む



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