Photography by Ekow Oliver
Mainstream reproductive health conversations centre white, non-disabled, cishet women.
With "pussy power" politics that revolve around pink vulvas and include the linking of uteruses and ovaries to womanhood, many are left out of sexual health discussions including Black and brown people, trans and non-binary folk and disabled people.
Despite being omitted from these conversations, Black women are 5 times more likely to die in childbirth than white women, while a 2016 report carried about by Public Health England highlighted that Black African women make up 80% of the women utilising HIV services in the UK.
When it comes to sexual health and Black women and non-binary folk, dangerous misconceptions and bias permeate the treatment they can receive by medical practitioners.
For example, Heart of the Race: Black Women’s Lives in Britain by Beverley Bryan, Stella Dadzie and Suzanne Scafe outlines the way Black women have historically had their sexuality and fertility policed by doctors due to being seen as a "high promiscuity risk", often to their utter detriment.
“Black women’s ability to reproduce has come to be viewed as a moral flaw, to be frowned upon and controlled... the consequences of this are evident in the numerous cases of Black women who receive unwanted sterilisations or terminations, or the damaging long-term contraceptive DP (Depo Provera).”