Nursing school faculty and alumni advise on award-winning film
By Amanda Brower
While maternal mortality rates across the globe are dropping, there is one exception: the U.S., where the rate is 10 times higher than in Europe, according to the World Health Organization and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Itβs even worse for women of color in the U.S., whose preterm birth rate is 54% higher than white womenβs, and whose babies are more than twice as likely to die.
Amid this escalating crisis, a documentary debuted last spring to sound the alarm and bring attention to the power of nursing professionals on the frontlines.
American Deliveryβwhich narrates the joys and fears of a diverse group of pregnant women during pregnancy, childbirth and the postpartum periodβtook home top honors at the Cleveland International Film Festival in April, winning best film and the coveted Roxanne T. Mueller Audience Choice Award.
Directed by Carolyn Jones and produced by Lisa Frank, American Delivery was the brainchild of a handful of faculty members at the Marian K. Shaughnessy Nurse Leadership Academy at Case ΒιΆΉΣ³» Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing. Dean Carol Musil, PhD, RN (NUR β79; GRS β91, nursing) and Joyce Fitzpatrick, PhD, RN (MGT β92), the Elizabeth Brooks Ford Professor of Nursing, as well as several alumniβLinda Q. Everett, PhD, RN (NUR β85), Greer Glazer, PhD, RN (NUR β79; GRS β84, nursing), and Judith Shamian, PhD, RN (GRS β98, nursing)βacted as advisors to the film.
The documentary intimately portrays womenβs experiences giving birth in the U.S. and spotlights the role of nurses providing holistic maternal healthcare and the individuals who shape legislation and policy to change the trajectory of high infant and maternal mortality.
βAmerican Delivery highlights the foundational role of nurses and midwives in changing maternal health outcomes,β said Fitzpatrick. βWomen in America deserve better care. Itβs that simple.β
Fitzpatrick believes the U.S. can draw inspiration from countries where nurse midwives play significant roles in providing care for women and are supported through systems that relies on interprofessional practice.
βThis film is ΒιΆΉΣ³» possibilities for change, hope for the future of womenβs health in America and globally,β said Fitzpatrick. βAnd importantly, for the power of nurses to make these changes.β
This article appears in the print edition of Forefront magazine, summer 2024. Find more stories from Forefront at case.edu/nursing/news-events/forefront-magazine.