unique powerpoint

Jordanjameire

 

 answer in your own words as a 18 year old african american male online sophmore. do not use any ai words or phrases 

FINAL ASSIGNMENT: THE MAKING OF A MODERN CRISIS

For this assignment, you will select one  current trending topic from the news and investigate its historical  roots. Your task is to explain "how we got here" by creating a  five-slide PowerPoint presentation.

Key Requirements:

  • Slide Count: AT LEAST five slides.
  • Content: Each slide MUST contain at least 30 words of explanatory text.
  • Visuals: Each slide SHOULD include at least one relevant image to support your analysis, but it its not required.
  • Notes: You MUST attach at least ONE page of notes, showing how you would theoretically present each slide.
  • Topic: Choose a significant, CONTEMPORARY issue RELATED TO THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN COMMUNITY THAT WE HAVE NOT LEARNED ABOUT IN THIS COURSE SO FAR, and trace the historical events, processes, and decisions that led to its current state.

The goal is to demonstrate how  past developments in politics, economics, technology, and society have  shaped the modern world we see in today's headlines.

FOR EXAMPLE, here is a five-slide presentation outline focusing on the Modern Black Maternal Health Crisis, tracing its roots from historical inequities to contemporary systemic challenges.

Slide 1: Title & Introduction

  • Title: The Modern Black Maternal Health Crisis
  • Subtitle: Understanding the Historical Roots of Contemporary Healthcare Disparities
  • Visual Anchor: Graphic showing US maternal mortality rates by race.
  • Key Point: Black women face disproportionately high maternal mortality rates today.
  • The Stat: Black mothers are 2.6 times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than white mothers.
  • Takeaway: This crisis is driven by systemic issues, not biological differences.

Slide 2: Historical Foundations (19th Century)

  • Title: The Foundations of Medical Exploitation
  • Visual Anchor: Historical timeline marking early American gynecology milestones.
  • Key Point: Modern American gynecology was built on the exploitation of enslaved Black women.
  • Historical Fact: J. Marion Sims experimented on enslaved women without anesthesia.
  • False Narrative: A pervasive, false medical myth arose that Black people feel less pain.
  • Takeaway: Dehumanization in early medicine laid the groundwork for deeply rooted implicit bias.

Slide 3: Systemic Exclusions (20th Century)

  • Title: Institutional Segregation and Divestment
  • Visual Anchor: Map illustrating 20th-century residential redlining patterns.
  • Key Point: Segregation legally separated healthcare access and quality along racial lines.
  • Hospital Separation: Black patients were barred from white hospitals, causing severe care delays.
  • Economic Inequality: Redlining restricted Black families from moving to areas with well-funded medical facilities.
  • Takeaway: Geographic and economic barriers institutionalized unequal healthcare quality for decades.

Slide 4: Modern Realities & Systemic Bias (21st Century)

  • Title: The Present-Day Crisis: Weathering and Bias
  • Visual Anchor: Breakdown of preventable pregnancy-related deaths.
  • Key Point: Economic status does not shield Black mothers from this specific crisis.
  • Weathering Effect: Chronic stress from systemic racism physically accelerates cellular aging and health deterioration.
  • Dismissed Pain: Medical professionals routinely downplay or dismiss symptoms reported by Black patients.
  • Takeaway: Modern implicit biases actively lead to preventable, fatal delays in maternal care.

Slide 5: Path Forward & Solutions

  • Title: Transforming Black Maternal Health Outcomes
  • Visual Anchor: Icon matrix representing community-led healthcare solutions.
  • Key Point: Reversing this crisis requires policy changes and culturally competent care systems.
  • Diversifying Care: Expanding access to Black doulas, midwives, and diverse medical professionals.
  • Policy Reform: Implementing mandatory implicit bias training across hospital systems nationwide.
  • Community Advocacy: Supporting the Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act to fund comprehensive care.
  • Takeaway: Targeted, systemic accountability can eliminate these preventable disparities.
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