Tuesday, April 19, 2022

15795: We Love You To Health. To Hiring, Not So Much.

 

Campaign republished an MM+M report spotlighting a campaign from Wunderman Thompson Health intended to promote equitable maternal care for Black women. The White advertising agency learned that Black women face greater inequities than White women from healthcare establishments and professionals, experience stereotypes of being labeled “the strong Black woman,” and benefit from community care—i.e., Wunderman Thompson recognized “the idea that ‘it takes a village,’ because it takes a village to have a baby.” Gee, what did it take to arrive at such common knowledge?

 

The campaign theme line is, “We Love You to Health.” Okay, but Wunderman Thompson doesn’t love you to hiring. To be clear, the WPP shop doesn’t love Black women enough to hire them—or their offspring—with fairness and equity.

 

‘We Love You to Health’ pushes for equitable maternal care for Black women

 

By Lecia Bushak

 

Continuing with its Health4Equity push, Wunderman Thompson Health has launched “We Love You to Health,” a campaign that aims to drive down high mortality rates among Black mothers.

 

The effort was devised with the backing of a WPP Racial Equity Program grant. Other initiatives carried out during Health4Equity’s first year addressed COVID-related health disparities, vaccination rates in the BIPOC community and early prostate cancer screening for Black men.

 

For “We Love You to Health,” the Wunderman team focused exclusively on diagnosing maternal health inequities, according to chief medical officer Dania Alarcon. It interviewed a range of Black mothers and mothers-to-be as well as doulas, nurses and midwives.

 

Some surprising findings emerged. “We found that doulas seem to be the ones that are focused on serving the needs of the mother and most in tune with the mother,” Alarcon said. Such learnings prompted the campaign team to center “We Love You to Health” around amplifying the voices, stories and experiences of Black mothers, and then attempting to connect them with doulas.

 

Black women are three to four times more likely to die in childbirth compared to white women, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That significant disparity is what drove the team to expand the campaign beyond a mere awareness effort, said Wunderman Thompson Health chief creative officer Tuesday Poliak.

 

“We weren’t just going to do awareness,” she stressed. “We wanted to make sure we were coming up with a solution. We wanted to really help.”

 

The campaign also seeks to deconstruct what Poliak characterized as “the superwoman phenomenon” among Black women and the notion that they are often stereotyped as “the strong Black woman.”

 

“They are depicted as strong, self-sacrificing and free of emotion, and that they have this high tolerance to pain,” Poliak explained. “And this isn’t just a societal perception; even healthcare workers believe it. We want to rewrite that superwoman story so that Black women can finally get the respectful maternal care they deserve.”

 

“We Love You to Health” also includes a community care component.

 

“We wanted to make sure Black mothers can start to accept their care and almost return to the old way of community care — the idea that ‘it takes a village,’ because it takes a village to have a baby,” Poliak said.

 

Wunderman will judge the success of “We Love You to Health” against a range of metrics, including the number of individuals who click through to the doula site.

 

“This is phase one and our goals have always been very ambitious,” Alarcon said. “I’m so proud of our campaign and we can’t wait to see what it grows up to be.”

 

This story first appeared on MM+M.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

What are Black women worth to that agency?

$33

That's the cost of the stock photography they used.

https://www.istockphoto.com/photo/we-are-glowing-with-the-gift-of-new-life-gm1151995096-312379851

"The effort was devised with the backing of a WPP Racial Equity Program grant." Looks like the agency pocketed most of that grant and rolled out some of the tiniest crumbs they could, continuing the long tradition of Black ads getting pennies and leftovers and cheap stock pictures while their more mainstream white ads and creators get fistfuls of dollars, original art, and resources.