Black Maternal Health ECHO

About Black Maternal Health ECHO

Check back for 2026 updates

In partnership with the Indiana Minority Health Coalition (IMHC), the IU Indianapolis ECHO Center invites you to join the Black Maternal Health (BMH) ECHO. 

Become part of a network of birthing professionals exploring clinical practice changes that can help to reduce maternal morbidity and mortality among Black women in Indiana. In each ECHO session, you will meet to discuss didactic content related to disparities often faced by Black women and review a patient story with a multidisciplinary group, including:

  • Physicians
  • Advanced practice providers
  • Nurses
  • Doulas
  • Midwives
  • Community health workers, and
  • Other healthcare providers

The BMH ECHO meets on the 1st & 3rd Wednesday of the month from 11:30-1:00 pm ET via Zoom.

Register for Black Maternal Health ECHO

Upcoming Didactic Topics

Curriculum topics are subject to change

DateDidactic Topic
TBATBA

 

Recorded didactic presentations are available to our registered participants in our Canvas Resource Library.

DateDidactic Topic
09/06/2023Indiana Maternal Mortality Review
09/20/2023Trauma Base Care for Black Women with Poor Obstetric Outcomes
10/04/2023Domestic Violence
10/18/2023Count the Kicks // Healthy Birth Day, Inc.
11/01/2023What A Difference Doulas and Midwives Make!
11/15/2023Developing a Culturally Responsive C.A.R.E. Model for Black Families in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU)
12/06/2023Preeclampsia: Diagnosis and Management
12/20/2023Cancelled for Winter Break
01/03/2024Cancelled for New Year's
01/17/2024Perinatal Mental Health and Addictions
02/07/2024Providing Urgent Maternal Protections (PUMP) Act
02/21/2024Nutrition, Food Desert Considerations, and Available Services for Families During and After Pregnancy
03/06/2024Birthwork Justice, Equity, and Evolution: Exploring the Lived Experiences of Black Birthworkers and Navigating the Professions
03/20/2024Implementing Trauma Informed Care: A Care-Based Approach
04/03/2024Doulas: Birth Advocates
04/17/2024Barriers to Healthcare for Black Patients in 2024
05/01/2024Using a Reproductive Justice to Develop and Pilot a Racial Equity Training for Perinatal Providers
05/15/2024Supporting Black Fathers: Including Fathers in the Family Health Discussion
06/05/2024Supporting Black Mothers
06/19/2024Cancelled for Juneteenth
07/03/2024Cancelled for Independence Day
07/17/2024Improving Health and Inclusivity in the Workplace: Pregnancy Accommodations Under the Pregnancy Workers Fairness Act (PWFA)
08/07/2024Humanizing the Maternal Mortality Crisis: Stories, Strategies, and Solutions
08/21/2024Maternal Near Miss Events: Opportunities for Action
09/04/2024
  1. Advancing Black Maternal Health: Evidence and Impact of Community-Based Perinatal Navigators
  2. Innovative Maternal Healthcare Models for Birth Equity
  3. Improving Access and Allyship For Black Birthing Women

Recorded didactic presentations are available to our registered participants in our Canvas Resource Library.

DateDidactic Topic
04/06/2022Overview of ECHO & the Goal of the MMH ECHO
05/04/2022Count the Kicks
06/01/2022Race, Equity, and Maternal Health
07/06/2022"I see you" and "I am here": Addressing Stress & Anxiety in Black Perinatal Women
08/03/2022Preeclampsia: Diagnosis and Treatment
09/07/2022COVID & Pregnancy: Making the Case for Transformational Change
10/05/2022So much more than "Are you safe at home?" A discussion on domestic violence
11/02/2022An Overview of the Statewide Indiana Pregnancy Promise Program
12/07/2022Doulas: Birth Advocates
01/04/2023PATH4YOU: Pregnancy at a Time that is Happy and Healthy for YOU
02/22/2023Pregnancy and Heart Health
03/01/2023Moral Injury
04/19/2023A General Overview of Treatment of HIV Infection and Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs) in Pregnancy

Partnership

This ECHO is supported in partnership with the Indiana Minority Health Coalition. To learn more about the IMHC, please visit: imhc.org

Indiana Minority Health Coalition logo

Contact

For any questions, please feel free to reach out to our Assistant Director, Kaley Liang: klliang@iu.edu

Lauren Dungy-Poythress, MD, FACOG

Lauren Dungy-Poythress

Associate Professor | IU School of Medicine

Lauren Dungy-Poythress, MD, an accomplished board-certified physician specializing in Maternal-Fetal Medicine and educator, brings to her patients and their physicians more than 25 years of perinatology experience. She has designed, developed, and led successful Maternal-Fetal Medicine offices and/or programs in three states.

Dr. Dungy-Poythress has held faculty appointments as an associate and assistant professor at several university medical programs and serves, or has served, on multiple community boards and programs, some of which include the Women’s Fund Advisory Board, The State Board of Directors for the March of Dimes, The Indiana Perinatal Network, The Julian Center Board of Directors, and Officer and Board of Directors for the Dungy Family Foundation, Inc.

Emmalee K. Garate, CCHW

Emmalee K. Garate

Community Health Doula, Member of DONA, INCHWA

Emmy Garate found out about doula services and that she wanted to be a doula when she saw a job posting for a community doula position with Indiana Minority Health Coalition in 2020. She had no idea of the beautiful support that doulas provide or of the dismal maternal and infant mortality rate in the US, Indiana, and her county of residence, Cass. At that same time, she learned of the significant positive impact that doula services can have in reducing Cesarean births and improving birth outcomes through continuous one-on-one care at a birth. With a broader understanding of racial bias in healthcare and learning the fact that Black moms are twice as likely to die in childbirth than other moms regardless of education level or socioeconomic status, she knew she wanted to be part of community doula work in her community!  

She strives to make sure underserved populations in her community have access to doula services through the Community Doula Services Program offered by Indiana Minority Health Coalition in Cass County. 

Davinia Givens

Davinia Givens

Prenatal Community Health Specialist and Certified Birth Doula | Franciscan Health Prenatal Assistance Program

Hello everyone! My name is Davinia, and I am truly happy to be a part of the Black Maternal Health ECHO Hub Team. My experience and professional education come from an intensive and diverse background of being a victim advocate for specialized crimes, domestic violence, human trafficking, homicides, and crimes against children. I have now blended my former background with perinatal and pregnancy-related care for my community. I am one of the prenatal community health specialists for Northwest Indiana, and soon to be a certified birth doula for my team and the surrounding communities. Since I do have a background in victim advocacy, I do take on prenatal cases that would be assault-based or high alert due to a crime. 

Jasmine Johnson, MD, FACOG

Jasmine Johnson

Assistant Professor of Clinical Obstetrics & Gynecology | IU School of Medicine

Jasmine Johnson, MD is a wife, mother of two, and Maternal-Fetal Medicine faculty at Indiana University Health. Dr. Johnson received her undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan, medical degree at Indiana University School of Medicine, and completed OBGYN residency and MFM fellowship at the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill.Dr. Johnson’s research interests include health equity and quality improvement efforts to help reduce severe maternal morbidity and maternal mortality. Dr. Johnson strives to be a fierce advocate for the historically marginalized populations of her community. 

Velvet G. Miller, PhD, FAAN

Velvet G. Miller

Director | Not 1 More Project, Inc.

Velvet G. Miller began her career as a professional nurse, practicing in a variety of clinical and administrative positions. Dr. Miller has also served in senior positions in the public, private, academic, and nonprofit sectors. The consistent thread throughout her career continues to be ensuring affordable, geographic, and equitable access to health care, with a focus on people of color.

Vanessa Summers

Vanessa Summers

State Representative & Public Policy Associate | Indiana Minority Health Coalition

Vanessa’s primary goals in the Indiana General Assembly include working on Maternal mortality for women and improving the infant mortality rate in Indiana and addressing all issues directly affecting children. She has authored or co-authored bills that work to improve the foster care system in Indiana, help law enforcement locate missing and endangered children, and establish safe sleep standards for children while at daycare. She also works to even the playing field for the daycare system in Indiana by addressing the great difference between licensed day care facilities and day care ministries. 

In 2012, Vanessa became the first African American woman to become assistant Democratic Caucus Chair. She then became the first African American Woman to be Democratic Caucus chair. She is presently the longest-serving African American woman in the General Assembly in Indiana.  

Vanessa is currently a Public Policy Associate for the Indiana Minority Health Coalition in Indianapolis.

Nicole Williams

Nicole Williams

Doula | IMHC Community Doula Services Program

Nicole Williams is a Doula for the Indiana Minority Health Coalition’s Community Doula Services Program. As mother of five with a passion to serve others, she has worked with IMHC for 16 years and enjoys being hands on and 10 toes down in the community.

Name change announcement

The Minority Maternal Health ECHO has formally transitioned its name to the Black Maternal Health ECHO. This name change is made to better recognize the specific and most significant disparities witnessed in Black maternal care and outcomes. The IU Indianapolis ECHO Center and the Indiana Minority Health Coalition are committed to improving the lives and health of Black patients in Indiana by creating a safe space for healthcare teams to develop cultural humility and competence and to gain a deeper understanding of evidence-based practices to transform systems of health.