Avery, Byllyein full Byllye Yvonne Avery(born 1937, DeLand, Florida, U.S.) American health care activist whose efforts centred on bettering the welfare of low-income African American women through self-help groups and advocacy networks. Avery studied psychology at Talledega (Alabama) College (B.A., 1959) and received an M.A. in special education from the University of Florida (1969). She devoted herself to the education of emotionally disturbed children, first as a teacher and then as a consultant to the state of Florida. Her husband's sudden death at age 33 was the catalyst for Avery's commitment to improving the health of the African American community; she focused particularly on women who, like herself, had a high level of stress in their lives. Self-help groups for African American women facing poverty, crime, violence, and racism were the cornerstones of her activism. In 1974 Avery cofounded the Gainesville (Florida) Women's Health
Center and later became its president and executive director. Four
years later she cofounded Birthplace, an alternative birthing
centre, also in Gainesville. The self-help groups she initiated
served as models throughout the nation and worldwide, and they paved
the way for her founding in 1983 of the National Black Women's
Health Project (NBWHP; since 2003 the Black Women's Health
Imperative). That year the NBWHP held its first national conference
at Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia. As executive director
(1982–90) of the NBWHP, Avery helped the grassroots advocacy
organization grow to an international network of more than 2,000
participants in 22 states and 6 foreign countries, producing not
only the first Center for Black Women's Wellness but also the first
documentary film by African American women exploring their
perspectives on sexuality and reproduction. For her proposals and
work with the NBWHP, which enabled thousands of African American
women to take charge of their health care, Avery was awarded a
MacArthur fellowship in 1989. In the 1990s she wrote and lectured
widely on how race, sex, and class affect women's empowerment in the
women's health movement. |