What is the name of your solution?
Birth By Us
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
An app that empowers Black women through birth – while giving health professionals insights to reduce preventable maternal deaths and complications.
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?
Alycia is a 37-year-old Black woman who had just given birth to her baby boy, Adam. After being sent home from a C-section, she started to feel exhausted to the point where she could not even feed Adam. Scared, she contacted her provider but was told that her symptoms were due to her age and nothing else. Three days later, Alycia collapsed on her kitchen floor and entered into a 4-week coma due to a pregnancy-related complication.
Unfortunately, as we listened to Alycia’s story in conducting our user research, we knew it wasn't unique. With rising maternal mortality rates triple those of any other developed nation, the United States today is clearly plagued by disparate birth outcomes (Taylor et al., 2022). At the same time, these rates are not equal, as they disproportionately affect women and birthing people of color, specifically Black people who are currently 3-4 times more likely to die in childbirth compared to their White counterparts often due to missed signs and routine dismissal from their providers (CDC, 2021). Additionally, as there are approximately 14 million Black women of reproductive age in the U.S., this is an issue affecting many (March of Dimes, 2022).
From statistics like this, combined with the fact that 84% of maternal deaths were deemed preventable as seen in data reported from Maternal Mortality Review Committees (multidisciplinary committees tasked with reviewing the circumstances surrounding each maternal death) it is clear that the U.S. healthcare system is failing its patients, especially Black women (CDC, 2022).
As pre-medical Black women, we knew something needed to change, and that if they didn’t, we may fall prey to the very issues we aim to solve. Committed to centering the voices of key stakeholders, we began by listening. From August 2021 to June 2022, we conducted focus groups and individual interviews with over 120 stakeholders, including but not limited to Black women and birthing people, their partners, doulas, midwives, obstetricians, quality improvement experts, and academic researchers.
In this research, a common pattern emerged: Black women and expectant parents like Alycia feel disempowered and fearful in their pregnancy and postpartum journeys, like they do not have the necessary resources to achieve an optimal perinatal outcome for themselves and their families. At the same time, we found that maternal care providers are aware of the statistics and want to effect change, but feel that they lack the critical insights and effective strategies they should implement to help eradicate this crisis.
What is your solution?
Birth By Us (BBU) provides comprehensive check-ins at sequential points in pregnancy and postpartum through our research-focused quality questionnaires, which assess users’ vaginal, mental, sleep, and overall health; and evaluate users’ experiences with their care providers. Upon completion of each questionnaire, our app analyzes and uncovers users' top concerns, yielding tailored visit preparation and recommended culturally responsive resources. We do this because while research shows that patient-provider racial concordance is associated with improved patient perceptions of care, we recognize that finding a Black provider isn’t always possible so resources like ours can bridge the gap (Saha et al., 1999). Users will also be able to create their own birthing plan, which is critical in improving patient agency over their birthing experience.
We also recognize that providing high-quality patient care isn’t easy, as we heard in our focus groups with maternal care providers, many citing lack of time and patient feedback as key obstacles on the road to improvement. Due to this, BBU supplies its users with shareable week-to-week health progress sheets capturing trends in users’ health data, which can be easily uploaded to electronic health portals and discussed at care appointments, saving crucial time. In addition, Birth By Us will take the guesswork out of improvement for maternal care providers by turning patients’ feedback collected in our questionnaires into comprehensive, routine quality reports placed side-by-side with valuable resources to help providers make impactful changes.
Finally, we know that change is needed on a systems level as well because although researchers have found that it is racism, not race, driving health disparities, many still want to know what tangible changes they need to make to improve care. The BBU system will uniquely break down patient feedback to uncover facets of care related to implicit and unconscious bias among other holistic metrics.
Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?
Our target population is Black women in the US currently in the reproductive age range of 16-45. The maternal health market currently fails Black women resulting in persistent disparities during their pregnancy, birth, and postpartum period.
For instance:
Black women are three to four times more likely to die in childbirth than white women — regardless of education, income, or any other socioeconomic factors.
84% of maternal deaths are preventable and Black women are more likely to experience them
The risk of postpartum depression is 1.6 times higher for Black women
Black women experience physical "weathering" due to chronic stress, thus making postpartum recovery longer and riskier at an earlier age
We believe technology can provide sustainable and expedited avenues toward solving two crucial pieces of the Black maternal health crisis: implicit bias recognition and patient education dissemination. This is exactly where Birth By Us comes in. We aim to create a new vision for Black maternal health and to be known as the pregnancy, birth, and postpartum app for Black women and their families by innovatively introducing technology with payoffs for both parents and providers, combining data analytics with robust resources to help everyone achieve their best possible outcome.
We believe Birth By Us will positively impact parents’ lives by equipping birthing people with the tools and knowledge needed to be their health advocates and achieve their best birthing experience, contributing at large to a reduction in maternal health disparities. Additionally, Birth By Us helps partners by allowing them to take a more active role in the communal process of birth, understanding their birthing partner’s body and transitions, all while learning how to best support their own physical and mental well-being through curated resources. Finally, Birth By Us will aid providers in serving their patients with the best quality care by highlighting key areas of improvement along with best practices to continue.
We envision a world in which high-quality perinatal care is the standard for all parents, which is exactly why we are developing Birth By Us. By beginning with Black women and later expanding horizontally to serve other underserved communities, we hope to tackle this problem from the ground up. Black women have been historically left behind in innovative pursuits, but no longer. We are claiming our power and building something by us, for us – Birth By Us.
How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?
As pre-medical Black women, acutely aware of this issue and that, in the absence of reform, we may fall prey to the very issues we hope to solve. In addition, we have spent a lot of time reaching out and listening to the stories of parents and providers (120+ stakeholder interviews), which have further shaped our understanding of the issue and familiarity with our community.
Founders:
Mercy Oladipo is a co-founder of Birth By Us and a 4th-year undergraduate pre-med student at MIT studying computer science and molecular biology. She is an advocate for safe birthing practices with a passion for Black maternal health and is experienced in Python, SQL, project management, and website design. Additionally, she has previous experience in health informatics and public health research, and front-end engineering at MIT CSAIL, Tufts University Maternal Outcomes for Translational Health Equity Research Laboratory, and Willow Innovations, which will help in the necessary data analytics for our product. Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/me...
Ijeoma Uche is a co-founder of Birth By Us and a 2nd-year pre-med graduate student at UC Berkeley pursuing a Masters in Public Health with a focus in Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health. Prior, she spent her time at Brown University researching disparities in maternal health and is thrilled for the growth digital healthcare can bring to reproductive health. She also has specific expertise in R, biostatistics, and three years of experience in health informatics. Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ij...
Medical Advisory Board:
Last year, we began to build our medical advisory board, including Dr. Chiamaka Onwuzurike, MD, MPH, an OB/GYN at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston; Dr. Kia Lannaman, MD, an OB/GYN and founder of Accessible Professionals, a network of health, education and legal professionals providing trustworthy information to support families online; and Dr. Zille Huma, an OB/GYN with 15+ years of experience delivering care across fragile contexts in Pakistan and the U.S. As we grow, we plan to expand this board to include more key stakeholders and field experts such as Dr. Karen Sheffield- Abdullah PhD, RN, a CNM and professor at the University of Carolina School of Nursing, with whom we are already in communication.
Interns:
Christina Kim (MIT Class of 2024) - UI/UX Design, Gabriel Sumayan Garcia (UC Berkeley Class of 2022) - Research and Resource Collection, Paola Gutierrez (UC Berkeley MBA Candidate Class of 2024)- Marketing and Business Development, and Easha Narayanan (UC Berkeley Class of 2026)- Business Development.
Mentors:
We are mentored by Alex Manick and Ammar Ammar through MIT Sandbox; Lucas DiLeo and Sheryl Greenberg through MIT Venture Mentoring Service; Dr. Vanessa Nicholson through Tufts’ Maternal Outcomes for Translational Health Equity Research (MOTHER) Lab; Dr. Jaspal Sandhu and Dr. Lindsay Parham through UC Berkeley Wallace Center for Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health; and Dr. Jeff Rideout through UC Berkeley’s MPH and MBA program. They will help us with advice in areas of product and business and as we continue to fundraise and develop our model.
Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
Improve accessibility and quality of health services for underserved groups in fragile contexts around the world (such as refugees and other displaced people, women and children, older adults, LGBTQ+ individuals, etc.)
In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Berkeley, CA
In what country is your solution team headquartered?
What is your solution’s stage of development?
Pilot: An organization testing a product, service, or business model with a small number of users
How many people does your solution currently serve?
2
Why are you applying to Solve?
We are confident in the potential impact of our solution at every scale, but we face barriers to making this a reality. For one, there is the financial barrier associated with transitioning our web application to a mobile application as we need to work with a software engineer to complete the back end and data architecture for our platform. This is a step we hope to undertake after a few pilots since in our robust customer discovery, we learned that our target population uses mobile apps more frequently.
Additionally, with the data heavy notion of our platform, we are excited by the opportunity to measure impact in innovative ways. However, we acknowledge that the body of research on quantifying equity is sparse and so, we would love to receive the support of SOLVE in building and monitoring an impact measurement practice.
Finally, another barrier we face is getting into hospital systems. Through networking and customer discovery programs like MIT’s NSF SPARK I-Corp Program, we have made strides and conducted interviews with hospital personnel, but there is still lengths to go We hope to leverage SOLVE’s access to mentorship, coaching, and expert advice to enhance our relationships with these key systems and gain the expertise necessary to run our pilot and scale our solution.
In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Mercy Oladipo
What makes your solution innovative?
Through our focus groups with Black parents, we found that many used apps during their pregnancy journeys, but were left unsatisfied by the resources offered through current solutions.
Pregnancy and Motherhood Apps: Ovia Pregnancy and BabyCenter Pregnancy Tracker are among the top pregnancy apps in the U.S. as reported by Forbes Health (Berger, 2022). Both include resources that track menstrual cycles, monitor babies’ growth, and help answer pregnancy questions. However, their efforts are not directed to address or find contributing factors to the maternal health crisis that disproportionately affects people of color. Ovia also excludes access to the provider and clinical-based resources.
Integrated Care Delivery Platforms: Platforms like Mahmee are built with the goal to serve Black communities by connecting mothers to all of the providers they may need along their journey (obstetrician, pediatrician, lactation consultant, etc.). But to gain access to a dedicated care team and high-quality support, users must pay $149 per month, a price that is out of reach for many expectant parents.
Provider Directory Platforms: Irth and HealthinHerHue also stand out as players in this space, aiming to serve the Black community by providing a directory of culturally-responsive healthcare providers. However, these platforms have struggled to make their directories as robust as necessary and so provider options are slim in size and scope.
Community-Based Organizations: Outside of these products, current efforts to eradicate disparities in maternal health are largely focused on working towards large-scale policy changes or the creation of community-based/grassroots organizations supplying maternal care. For example, the Maternal Outcomes for Translational Health Equity (MOTHER) Lab at Tufts’ University hosts a free Black Maternal Health Conference each year, allowing all stakeholders to come together for a day of intentional reflection and education. In addition, the National Birth Equity Collaborative continues to be a strong advocate for birth equity, supporting maternal health equity research through their Birth Equity Scholars program and working towards advancing legislative policy changes in collaboration with the Black Maternal Health Caucus.
We acknowledge that these efforts have pushed the issue in the right direction, but at the same time maternal mortality rates continue to rise and while the Black women we spoke to cited being more aware of these disparities now, many still feel that they do not have tangible support to help them along their specific journeys, which is exactly what a systematized consumer-facing app can provide. Further, unlike the current alternatives, our app will be able to reach underserved communities and give them the imperative patient education, support, and healthcare access necessary to achieve better birthing outcomes.
What are your impact goals for the next year and the next five years, and how will you achieve them?
For the next year, our key milestones are: (1) create a high-functioning web-based app, (2) conduct our first pilot with a minimum of 500 Medicaid Black patients in March 2022, (3) build an advisory board with experienced maternal health professionals and experienced industry mentors, (4) pitch to medical groups and hospital systems with the goal of obtaining letters of intent to confirm our business model, (5) develop and release the mobile app version of Birth By Us on Apple and Google app stores, with the goal of achieving 56,,000 downloads; We hope to utilize the resources and support obtained through the SOLVE Challenge to achieve this goal.
To ensure the project produces a meaningful impact, we will do rounds of testing and are keeping the app free to improve access. As a patient education tool, our product aids providers and produces reports that can be easily uploaded to existing systems rather than making them learn a new piece of technology. One consideration of this is that providers have limited time in appointments with each patient. Our app aids this rather than adding burden because its tailored visit preparation helps guide the conversation ensuring that top concerns are addressed. In this way, we are confident that our product will positively impact the lives of Black birthing people along their perinatal journeys. In fact, we already launched our waiting list and have 150 potential users in line, writing things like “Excited to have access! This will be extremely helpful!” and “Finally! Something for us! Excited to see what there is to offer”.
After completing customer discovery on our own and with support from MIT NSF I-Corps Spark, we already created the beta version of Birth By Us for a 4-week beta testing period and will be rolling out the product in a free 6-month alpha launch in late February. As we onboard users, we will be assessing our product on our ability to meet specific quality metrics outlined below:
Improve overall patient satisfaction with their perinatal experience as measured through our custom quality questionnaires.
Increase user intention and followthrough of exclusively breastfeeding
Increase users’ care/appointment compliance
Increase the number of users seeking timely medical care following a flagged warning sign and decrease the incidence of complications overtime on a per-user basis
All metrics will be compared to the average state rate to determine the significance of our impact.
Which of the UN Sustainable Development Goals does your solution address?
How are you measuring your progress toward your impact goals?
To start, we will be tracking the number of users on our platform, the duration and areas of their engagement, and product referral rates to quantify our traction and better understand how to scale Birth By Us to support the most users.
We plan to collect and analyze our pilot data, measuring against following outcomes:
Improve user readiness and knowledge on key aspects of the perinatal journey
In stakeholder interviews, a common theme we heard from parents was that they felt lost and confused along their pregnancy, birth, and postpartum journeys as they lacked proper resources tailored to their experience. To measure the effectiveness of our culturally-specific resources in addressing this issue, we will periodically send users short and engaging quizzes to test their knowledge recall and self-reported level of knowledge improvement. Collected rates will be compared to users’ baseline (rates pre-pilot) with the goal of seeing a 50% or more increase.
On the product side, we will be measuring ourselves against the goal of producing 30 new medically-reviewed resources within the next 12 months. In the future, we plan to establish an ambassador program with institutions that have HRSA-funded Maternal Child and Adolescent Health (MCAH) programs. These include leading academic institutions that have expertise in maternal and child health, such as the UC Berkeley MPH MCAH program. By working with these institutions, we aim to create a more comprehensive and diverse resource directory.
Improve user self-efficacy and increase frequency of self-health assessments
A core issue, specifically for Black women, is that we rarely take the time to do a holistic check-in with ourselves and oftentimes don’t know where to begin. Our goal is that by having users complete daily check-ins designed to prompt parents to think of their feelings from head to toe, they will feel more equipped to conduct these sorts of self-health assessments on their own. From these check-ins, users receive instant feedback on any warning signs and abnormal entries, helping them understand when to contact a provider, alongside thorough resources based on their top concerns and needs (See Appendix Image 4). We will measure user-reported confidence rates on questions regarding feelings of preparedness to check-in on their bodies and understanding of potential maternal warning signs. Rates will be compared with users’ baseline as well as reputable datasets such as the Listening to Mothers dataset, a project of the National Partnership for Women & Families.
Improve user compliance with appointment attendance
Many parents, especially those with low income or those experiencing shifts in insurance coverage, struggle with receiving timely and appropriate care through the prenatal and postpartum period (Admon et al., 2021). To assess Birth By Us' impact on parents' care compliance, we will track our users' attendance at prenatal and postpartum visits. Specifically, we will evaluate whether our users complete the recommended 13 prenatal visits and 1 postpartum visit. We will also compare the rates of members in the pilot cohorts with national and local averages to measure the effectiveness of our program.
What is your theory of change?
Mission: Our mission is to empower Black pregnant and postpartum people with the personalized information needed to equip them to have a safe and holistic birthing and postpartum experience while giving maternal care providers and hospital systems the feedback needed to improve care for this population.
Impact: We aim to reduce the effects of systemic and institutionalized racism in maternal health by identifying and addressing unconscious bias, one of the top four CDC recommendations to reduce maternal health disparities. We will achieve this by improving patients’ and providers' education and resources.
Outcome: Our tool will be able to improve patients' involvement in the healthcare plan, decrease their anxiety around the unknown, and feel empowered to speak up as their self-advocates. It will also help providers and birth workers understand why these disparities exist and direct them to feasible and impactful solutions. Our long-term outcome is to decrease pregnancy complications, low birth-rates, and maternal deaths in the US.
Outputs: The immediate indicators that will help us track our progress will be the number of hospital partners, number of enrolled active BIPOC users, average user response rate to our questionnaires, and quality metric measures.
Activities: In order to achieve our outputs we will continue to build community connections with BIPOC birth workers, network amongst the leading physicians and researchers in maternal health, raise capital, and build a motivated and diverse team of experts/key stakeholders. Additionally, along the way we will be collecting statistical data (i.e demographics) to analyze and evaluate our efforts to assess areas of improvement and pivot towards achieving our goals.
Describe the core technology that powers your solution.
Our solution relies on technology as we are creating an integrated mobile application. In this app, we will have custom benchmark questionnaires that the user takes in order to evaluate the quality of their pregnancy journey (how are they feeling – mentally, emotionally, physically –, have they experienced any adverse outcomes, etc.) as well as the quality of care that their provider is giving them. These answers will inform the insights we give providers along the way while allowing us to track and analyze patterns in user experience, and recommend them correct modules and resources to help them improve their experience in real time.
We leverage technology in our solution by placing these questionnaires with digital resources on every aspect of the pregnancy continuum all to be accessed from any device. In the future, we hope to utilize ML/AI to create a more robust resource recommendation engine and automate the data analysis portion.
Which of the following categories best describes your solution?
A new application of an existing technology
Please select the technologies currently used in your solution:
If your solution has a website or an app, provide the links here:
www.birthbyus.com
In which countries do you currently operate?
In which countries will you be operating within the next year?
What type of organization is your solution team?
For-profit, including B-Corp or similar models
How many people work on your solution team?
4
How long have you been working on your solution?
2
What is your approach to incorporating diversity, equity, and inclusivity into your work?
As a Black women owned company, Birth By Us is aware of the maternal health crisis and will direct our efforts to reach birthing people who historically have limited access and knowledge about a healthy birth. As such, we plan to build an advisory board composed of representative stakeholders who primarily focus on health equity and have personal connections to the population we are serving, as we pilot in hospitals and birthing centers that serve majority Black populations.
Additionally, community involvement is a key component of BBU’s foundation. From the beginning of our processes we have sought to intentionally engage with our stakeholders through active listening in over 140 interviews and focus groups. Beyond this, we believe in the value of building authentic relationships with parents and providers to create needed trust, especially since we are working with communities with higher rates of medical mistrust. We plan to continue these efforts and values as we expand our team to gain a wide range of perspectives and expertise to provide culturally competent and holistic resources to our users.
What is your business model?
From our customer interviews both with maternal care providers and birthing people, we have discovered that our biggest value propositions lie in three main areas. Firstly, we are quantifying and measuring provider progress on factors associated with health equity, which has never been done before and provides an opportunity for hospital systems and birthing centers to show actionable commitment to change. Secondly, we provide tailored visit preparation based on users’ answers to our questionnaire, highlighting main concerns to bring up to their provider. This also aids providers by saving them time on patient education and ensures that both parties' concerns are addressed given the limited-time nature of hospital appointments. Thirdly, we offer birthing people the opportunity to provide feedback to their provider. Many hospitals do not have formal systems for patient feedback and every birthing person we talked to said that they wish they had a platform that would have allowed them to give anonymous feedback during their pregnancy journeys.
After conducting interviews with our potential customers, we derived three revenue streams: in-app subscriptions for parents, white labeling for healthcare providers, and contracts with health plans/insurance groups.
Our in-app subscription will be a freemium model priced at $4.99 per month or $29.99 per year. We believe parents will be able to benefit from our application by achieving early detection of pregnancy complications, reducing healthcare costs, at-home health tracking between appointments and up to one year postpartum, and learning from our curated resources specific to the Black birthing experience.
White labeling will be offered to hospitals, physician groups, and birthing centers at a price of $150 per patient. With our service, they will be able to have at-home patient monitoring, reduce unnecessary medical visits, decrease operational costs, improve patient communication, medical adherence, and continuity of care, as well as optimize time spent with patients to increase practice efficiency.
Lastly, for health plans/ insurance groups, we believe our application will be able to increase prenatal and postpartum visits among Black birthing people and achieve early detection for pregnancy and postpartum complications which will also result in a reduced rate of c-section rates for low-risk and high-risk pregnancies. We will position this option for our third year of operations because we will need a substantial amount of data to secure an insurance contract. Due to the fact that 3.3 million Black women are covered by Medicaid, it is our primary healthcare plan of choice. Medicaid has already shown interest in investing in digital health platforms (like Birth By Us) that are created to serve the needs of underrepresented communities.
Do you primarily provide products or services directly to individuals, to other organizations, or to the government?
Individual consumers or stakeholders (B2C)What is your plan for becoming financially sustainable?
Through a subscription model, we plan to sell our application by first using a B2C model for a fee for service then directly to a B2B2C model where we will be white labeling our app to hospitals and birthing clinics so that all patients can have full access to our resources free of charge. In the near future, we will be expanding our B2B2C model and directing our efforts to obtain contracts with health plans or insurance groups. In the meantime, we are applying for grants and seeking angel investments to sustain our current operational costs and begin our HIPAA compliance requirements. Further, we plan to expand our application to serve other underserved populations that suffer similar maternal health disadvantages (eg. Hispanic [866,000 birth/yr] and American Indian or Alaska Native communities[27,000 birth/yr]) to increase our market share and global impact.
Solution Team
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Mercy Oladipo Co-Founder, Birth By Us
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Our Organization
Birth By Us, Inc.