Jade Garrett is a birth worker, maternal health advocate, and community educator deeply committed to protecting and honoring the birthing experiences of Black and Brown families. Her work is rooted in both professional training and lived understanding of how powerful, political, and sacred birth truly is. As a trained doula and maternal health educator, Jade supports families through pregnancy, labor, and postpartum with evidence-based education, emotional grounding, and unwavering advocacy. She believe birth is not just a medical event, it is a transformative life moment that deserves safety, dignity, and informed choice.
Beyond labor support, Jade shows up for her families in ways that extend far past the delivery room. Jade provides prenatal education, birth planning, hospital advocacy, postpartum healing guidance, and mental health–centered support to ensure mothers feel seen and heard at every stage. Her background in community-based maternal health work has allowed her to serve families navigating systemic barriers, medical bias, and high-risk environments with confidence and care. Whether she is helping a mother prepare her birth preferences, supporting her partner in stepping into fatherhood, or checking in during those tender postpartum weeks, she remain a consistent, trusted presence.
Jade's approach is compassionate, culturally grounded, and deeply intentional. She is here not just to support your birth, but to walk with you, empower you, and help you reclaim your voice in the process. When you work with her, you are gaining an advocate, an educator, and someone fully invested in your safety, strength, and story.
I truly enjoy working in this space because it allows me to give the kind of support, guidance, and resources that I once needed, and that I wish had been more accessible to my mother and grandmother. Birth work is personal for me; it is about healing generational gaps, restoring confidence, and ensuring families feel informed, protected, and deeply supported. Every time I show up for a client, I do so with the intention of changing outcomes and honoring the women who came before us.