Nailah Nicolas stood in the late-afternoon Southern sun at a park dedicated to three enslaved Black women who suffered torturous experiments to advance the field of gynecology. That day, hanging heavy in the air surrounding the soaring steel monuments to Anarcha, Lucy and Betsey was the Supreme Court’s forthcoming decision in an abortion case that could overturn Roe v. Wade. Because of mistreatment and neglect of Black women by the medical profession, and society more broadly, the court’s imminent decision adds a layer of complexity to the continued struggle for equity in gynecologic and obstetric services — and to the divergent views on abortion. Read more