Black women’s disproportionate role in Quebec health care source of community pride
MONTREAL — When 26-year-old nurse Stephanie Bumba looks at herself in the mirror wearing her uniform, she feels pride and sees a past she wants to honour.
Bumba, who is of Congolese descent, is among the 37 per cent of employed Black women in Quebec who work in the province’s health-care system. Among employed Quebec women who aren’t racialized or Indigenous, 24 per cent work in health care, according to 2021 data from Statistics Canada.
“When I wear my work uniform, I see the sacrifice my parents made. I see someone who’s resilient and humble,” Bumba, who works at a Montreal hospital, said in a recent interview. “And I don’t want to lose that.”
The disproportionate role Black women play in health care is a reflection of values and culture, Bumba and other members of Quebec’s Black community say. But that rich tradition of caring for others has placed a burden on Black Quebec households during the pandemic: they have had higher rates of COVID-19 infection compared with the general public, research indicates.