BlackEnterprise.com: Black women-owned heal center in Ohio caters to black mothers and children
A health center in Ohio, founded by two Black women, offers Black women a comfortable place to receive high-quality healthcare services.
A health center in Ohio, founded by two Black women, offers Black women a comfortable place to receive high-quality healthcare services.
In February 2022, alumna Da’na M. Langford, MS, CNP, (‘09 MS) realized her dream of opening a Black woman owned and operated clinic in Euclid, Ohio, with her business partner, Tenisha Gaines. The Village of Healing Center’s goal is to decrease racial disparities in healthcare and improve patient outcomes.
Nursing.OSU.edu: Da’na Langford and the Village of Healing Read More »
In the short time they’ve been open, Village of Healing co-founders Dána Langford and Tenisha Gaines have produced some promising results for moms and babies, doing their part to help reduce local maternal and infant mortality rates.
News5cleveland.com: Clinic geared toward Black women doubles down with second location Read More »
Village of Healing is thrilled to receive a Black Women Impact Grant from Goldman Sachs One Million Black Women.
The Village of Healing Receives Black Women Impact Grant from Goldman Sachs Read More »
Tenisha Gaines and Da’na Langford founded Village of Healing, a nonprofit pledged to improving birth outcomes for Black women, to provide a remedy for what they saw as ineffective and incomplete treatment during their careers as healthcare professionals.
TheLandCle.org: Village of Healing expands the safe spaces for pregnant Black mothers Read More »
During their years serving on committees examining infant mortality in Cuyahoga County, Healthcare workers Da’na Langford and Tenisha Gaines came to believe it takes boots on the ground in under-resourced neighborhoods, not large institutions, to make change
Da’Na and Tenisha walked us through each room, with all of their colors, flair, and artwork paying homage to Black individuals who have played a major part in helping to advance modern medicine, including Anarcha, Betsy, and Lucy—known as the Mothers of Modern Gynecology—three enslaved women who were grotesquely experimented on in the name of gynecology
CommunitySolutions.com: Village of Healing: A Beacon of Hope Read More »
This Valentine’s Day the Village of Healing Center will officially start taking in patients, delivering love through health care that’ll meet the social and cultural needs of Black women.
Despite pandemic-related delays, Langford and Gaines say their goal remained: eliminating racial health disparities.
Fox8.com: Village of Healing officially opens doors to care for Black women in NE Ohio Read More »
Sourced from: The News-HeraldOriginally written by: John Butler The Village of Healing Center in Euclid will be celebrating one year of helping the community throughout February. The center, at 22344 Lakeshore Blvd., is seeking to improve the maternal health and mental health of the community it serves. In their first year of operation, officials say the center