A new collaboration between Georgetown and Howard universities offers a path toward health justice through the medical humanities
Stories about birth are as old as humanity itself. They are universal, crossing every culture as they mark the breathtaking beginnings of new life. People tell these tales, from celebratory to tragic, as lessons, historic markers, memorable moments to help us understand the human condition. The accumulation of storytelling holds wisdom. Can this lore guide and improve health care?
After a traumatic experience with her first birth, Imani Cabassa-George knew she wanted to do things differently for her second one.
“The first time, I was in labor for 36 hours and it ended with an emergency C-section,” she recalls. The next time, she enlisted the help of a doula, who brought alternative pain relief methods and comforts like soothing aromatic oils to counter the normal hospital smells. The doula also helped Cabassa-George advocate for herself during labor, reminding her that she could ask medical providers to step out of the room when needed so that she and her husband could speak privately.
“I’m extremely thankful for doulas and doula programs that help Black women and any women navigate uncertainty in birth,” says Cabassa-George, who identifies as Afro-Latina.
Last year she served as the first graduate research assistant for the newly founded Georgetown–Howard Center for Medical Humanities and Health Justice (MHHJ). The unique center formed by the two Washington, DC, universities launched in 2023 with a 3.5-year, $3 million grant from the Mellon Foundation, which supports communities through the arts and humanities. The center seeks to reduce health disparities in Washington by leveraging the critical inquiry methods at the heart of the humanities.
A Ph.D. candidate in Howard University’s Communication, Culture, and Media Studies program, Cabassa-George was a perfect fit for her new role with the center. “I was extremely interested because medical humanities involves storytelling. As a communications scholar, the combination of storytelling and health is important to me.”
Her research looks at how Black women use social media and storytelling to prioritize Black maternal health. High maternal mortality rates for Black women have plagued the nation—and the Washington, DC, area in particular—for decades, and Cabassa-George sees the potential for digital communities to help make a difference. Whereas in the past, people might have sat around the hearth or the well to share their birth stories, today many people are finding community online and swapping wisdom there, wisdom that can be lifesaving.
“I’m really interested in the agency that Black women use to navigate the maternal health crisis,” she says. “A lot of times, we hear stories about how providers just aren’t listening to Black women. There’s a lot of systemic injustice behind this problem. But also we’ve seen a lot of Black women take agency over their situation by turning to social media for answers.”
Storytelling in the virtual sphere can have a major impact on health care, she notes.
“This is where digital humanities and storytelling come in. You see Black women going to social media and saying, ‘Hey, this is what happened with me and my provider. And here’s how I navigated the situation.’ These instances are really powerful for Black women, offering alternative birthing practices, and giving them what they need to face the uncertainties of maternal health.”

Partnering beyond the clinic doors
The field of medical humanities emerged on medical school campuses in the 1960s as a way to humanize what had become in many cases an overly clinical relationship between patient and physician. Since then the goals of the medical humanities have broadened, bringing together a variety of disciplines to offer a different, more complete picture of what is going on in health and health care. Medical humanities aims to understand health and medicine in a wide social, cultural, and historical context, through the lenses of ethics, philosophy, history, literature, cultural studies, religion, psychology, medical anthropology, and the visual and performing arts.
“Medical humanities is a field that teaches us that health and health care do not begin and end in the clinic or at the hospital doors,” says Lakshmi Krishnan, co-executive director of the center and founding director of the Georgetown Medical Humanities Initiative. “Health touches every aspect of our lives, and the medical humanities help make meaning out of that.”
A Georgetown University professor who specializes in cultural history of medicine and a board-certified physician in internal medicine, Krishnan co-leads the new center with Dana Williams, Howard University professor of African American literature and dean of the Graduate School. The two executive directors of the center were introduced several years ago by a mutual friend, and as humanities scholars they felt an immediate connection through personal and professional interests. A 30-minute meeting became a two-hour conversation as they shared stories of everything from literature to health care challenges faced by friends and family to the history of medicine uncovered in their archival work.
Soon after this memorable meeting, Williams invited Krishnan to participate in an annual Howard event called Disciplines in Dialogue.