Tejumola Adegoke, MD MPH

Funded project: THE RESTORE PROJECT


Boston University School of Medicine, OB/GYN
Director, Equity & Inclusion
Director, Wellness in Sexual Health (WISH) Clinic
Boston Medical Center, Department of OB/GYN

The RESTORE Project

In the United States, women and neonates of racial and ethnic minoritized groups are known to experience higher rates of maternal and infant mortality, fetal demise, preterm birth, low birthweight, cesarean delivery, fetal growth restriction, diabetes, and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.

Black women are twice as likely to deliver a low birth weight or preterm infant and are three to four times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications compared with white women. They are also at increased risk of severe maternal morbidity. Indigenous and Hispanic/Latinx mothers also suffer disproportionate adverse health outcomes. Research has established that these disparities in maternal health outcomes are inadequately explained by socioeconomic factors, medical comorbidities, access to care or location of care. Attempts to improve overall obstetric care provision via traditional quality improvement techniques have similarly failed to eliminate racial inequities in birth outcomes. With a few notable exceptions, these research and quality improvement projects have failed to include the voices and priorities of communities of color.

We propose to establish the RESTORE (Reproductive Sexual Gynecologic Health Community Partnership) project. Our intent is to assemble a permanent patient advisory board for the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology at Boston Medical Center (BMC). Using the Research Prioritization for Affected Communities (RPAC) framework, we will elicit patient and community research priorities around maternal health inequities. In continued partnership through the RESTORE Project, this compendium of priorities will form the agenda for continued community-based participatory research with the Boston community. This project will inform advocacy efforts to improve maternal health care provision at the local and state level and will be disseminated to other institutions to guide future research and quality improvement to address maternal health inequities.

What People Are Saying

 

Focus on Black women and other women of color

“Dr. Adegoke’s efforts to ensure equity in reproductive care extend beyond Boston Medical Center. She is the founding chair of the Massachusetts chapter of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Equity and Justice Committee and was recently appointed to the state commission to address disparities in maternal health.” 

Community Presence

“Dr. Adegoke has consistently demonstrated through action and scholarship her commitment across many spaces; she recognizes her responsibility as a physician who advocates for not only the patient in front of her, but for the wider community.”

Institutional Support

“I was ecstatic to recruit her to our faculty in 2018 and have been so proud to watch her grow into a leader in building Equity, Diversity and Justice in the field of women’s health. I look forward to seeing how she will change the face of our specialty.” 

— Aviva Lee-Parritz, MD

Chief, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Boston Medical Center / Chair and Associate Professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Assistant Dean of Faculty Practice, Boston University School of Medicine / Director of the Office for Equity, Vitality and Inclusion, Boston University Medical Group

 

 

Focus on Black women and other women of color

“She has several ongoing projects designed to assess and improve patient experience of reproductive healthcare for women of color, particularly Black women.”

Community Presence

“She is the founding chair of the Massachusetts- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (MA-ACOG) Equity and Justice committee, established to address the effects of systemic racism on the reproductive health care and recruitment, retention and advancement of under-represented trainees and faculty to Obstetrics and Gynecology medical schools and practices in the Commonwealth.”

Intervention and Prevention Model – RESTORE:  Reproductive Sexual Gynecologic Health Community Partnership

“Her proposed project for the MACE Foundation fellowship is a community-based participatory assessment of research priorities in maternal health disparities, reflecting Dr. Adegoke’s belief that the voices of those from the most affected communities must be centered in discourse to eliminate these inequalities.”

— Katharine White, MD, MPH

Vice Chair of Academics / Director, Fellowship in Family Planning / Associate Professor (Boston Medical Center, Boston University School of Medicine)