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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Formative Research

Date Submitted: Jun 5, 2024
Date Accepted: Dec 6, 2024

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Designing the First Pregnancy Guaranteed Income Program in the United States: Qualitative Needs Assessment and Human-Centered Design to Develop the Abundant Birth Project

Karasek D, Williams JC, Taylor MA, De La Cruz MM, Arteaga S, Bell S, Castillo E, Chand MA, Coats A, Hubbard EM, Love-Goodlett L, Powell B, Spellen S, Malawa Z, Gomez AM

Designing the First Pregnancy Guaranteed Income Program in the United States: Qualitative Needs Assessment and Human-Centered Design to Develop the Abundant Birth Project

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e60829

DOI: 10.2196/60829

PMID: 39869889

PMCID: 11811656

Designing the First Pregnancy Guaranteed Income Program in the U.S.: Qualitative Needs Assessment and Human-Centered Design to Develop the Abundant Birth Project

  • Deborah Karasek; 
  • Jazzmin C Williams; 
  • Michaela A Taylor; 
  • Monica M De La Cruz; 
  • Stephanie Arteaga; 
  • Sabra Bell; 
  • Esperanza Castillo; 
  • Maile A Chand; 
  • Anjeanette Coats; 
  • Erin Milan Hubbard; 
  • Latriece Love-Goodlett; 
  • Breezy Powell; 
  • Solaire Spellen; 
  • Zea Malawa; 
  • Anu Manchikanti Gomez

ABSTRACT

Background:

Racial inequities in pregnancy outcomes persist despite investments in clinical, educational, and behavioral interventions, indicating that a new approach is needed to address the root causes of health disparities. Guaranteed income during pregnancy has the potential to narrow racial health inequities for birthing people and infants by alleviating financial stress.

Objective:

We describe community-driven formative research to design the first pregnancy guaranteed income program in the U.S.—the Abundant Birth Project (ABP). Informed by birth equity and social determinants of health perspectives, ABP targets upstream structural factors to improve racial disparities in maternal and infant health.

Methods:

The research team included community researchers (CRs), community members with lived experience as Black or Pacific Islander pregnant and parenting people in the San Francisco Bay Area. The team conducted needs assessment interviews and facilitated focus groups with participants using human cantered design methods. Needs assessment participants later served as co-designers of the ABP program and research, sharing their experiences with financial hardships and government benefits programs and providing recommendations on key program elements, including fund disbursement, eligibility, and amount.

Results:

Housing affordability and the high cost of living in San Francisco emerged as significant sources of stress in pregnancy. Participants reported prohibitively low income eligibility thresholds and burdensome enrollment processes as challenges/barriers with existing social services. These insights guided the design of prototypes of ABP’s program components, which were used in a design sprint to determine the final components. Based on this design process, the ABP program offered $1000/month for 12 months to pregnant Black and Pacific Islander people, selected through a lottery called an Abundance Drawing.

Conclusions:

The formative design process maximized community input and shared decision-making to co-design a guaranteed income program for Black and Pacific Islander women and people. Our upstream approach and community research model can inform the development of public health and social service programs.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Karasek D, Williams JC, Taylor MA, De La Cruz MM, Arteaga S, Bell S, Castillo E, Chand MA, Coats A, Hubbard EM, Love-Goodlett L, Powell B, Spellen S, Malawa Z, Gomez AM

Designing the First Pregnancy Guaranteed Income Program in the United States: Qualitative Needs Assessment and Human-Centered Design to Develop the Abundant Birth Project

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e60829

DOI: 10.2196/60829

PMID: 39869889

PMCID: 11811656

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© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.