Oct 20, 2020
36: Meredith Shockley-Smith and Elizabeth Kelly, “Reducing Infant Mortality by Following the Lead of Black Women”
Over the past several years, Hamilton County has moved from having one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the United States to being in the lower 25 percentile. While there is still so much work to be done, this staggering improvement deserves our attention. In this episode we check in with Dr. Meredith Shockley-Smith and Dr. Elizabeth Kelly with Cradle Cincinnati who attribute their stunning progress on this progress to deliberately following the lead of Black women in the community. In too many sectors, racial equity is given lip service. We can learn so much from these two powerful women who didn’t just redistribute resources, they also redistributed power.
Dr. Meredith Shockley-Smith, Director of Community Strategies and Dr. Elizabeth Kelly, co- founder and Director of Systems Strategies, Cradle Cincinnati
Show Highlights:
Why humility is a “must-have” quality for any social change leader
The initiative to hear, see and celebrate Black women
How a recurring potluck dinner became the basis for powerful community organizing
The importance of building bridges and forging authentic relationships across difference
Leading large scale change is really about letting go, but letting go is easier said than done
What happened when Cradle Cincinnati recognized that it wasn’t just a health care problem, it was a justice problem
Links: Cradle Cincinnati:
http://www.cradlecincinnati.
Articles: SSIR Collective Impact model
https://ssir.org/articles/
Start Strong Avondale
https://www.cradlecincinnati.
Get $100 off Impact with Integrity
https://www.billionsinstitute.com/impactwithintegrity