About the E4P Team

The Enhanced Perinatal Programs for People in Prison (E4P) team is composed of collaborators from eight geographically and politically diverse states, including doulas, researchers, and other partners. To learn more about our E4P team, see below. 

Expand all

UMN Research Team

Abaki Beck, MPH (she/her), Research Staff

Woman with long brown hair wearing a floral shirt and glasses smiles in front of a beach

Abaki Beck, MPH, (she/her) is a Health Services Research, Policy, and Administration PhD student. Prior to her doctoral studies, Abaki worked on research and program evaluation in various settings, including for a university-based social policy institute, a higher education in prison program, a member of Congress, and a community-based organization on the Blackfeet Reservation. She has also organized with numerous community-based groups, including co-founding a mutual aid fund for formerly incarcerated people in 2020. She earned a Master’s in Public Health from Washington University in St. Louis in 2020 and a Bachelor’s in American Studies from Macalester College in 2015. Contact: [email protected]

Ingie Osman, MPH (she/her), Research Staff, COVID-19 Supplement Project Director

Woman with curly brown hair wearing a red shirt smiles at the camera

Ingie Osman, MPH, (she/her) is a Research Project Specialist in the Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Health at the University of Minnesota. She joined the Division in 2021 after completing her Masters of Public Health in Community Health Promotion at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health. Ingie’s work is broadly focused on the impact that criminal legal system involvement has on community health and wellbeing, and is centered around partnering with communities directly impacted by these systems. Contact: [email protected]

Katie Pierson, MA (she/her), Communications Strategist

Woman with short brown hair wearing a blue sweater smiles in front of a sunny background

Katie Pierson, MA, (she/her) has a BA in American History from the University of Pennsylvania and an MA in American History from the University of Minnesota. After 15 years of non-profit consulting, she provides content, coaching, mentoring, and technical assistance to diverse healthy youth development research teams, building traction in support of health equity and systems change. She loves using her academic training, creative writing chops, and professional advocacy experience to translate and disseminate the science into public-facing products, policy, and practice. Contact: [email protected]

Liz Ramey, MS, CCRC (she/her), Regulatory Specialist

Woman with short brown hair wearing a suit smiles in front of a gray background

Liz Ramey, MS, CCRC (she/her) is a regulatory specialist with the Department of Pediatrics Clinical Research Services. She started a career in research as a coordinator working in pediatric diabetes. Her current focus has developed into specialization in regulatory work on studies across the Department of Pediatrics, including E4P. She enjoys learning about the intersection of research regulations, ethics and the communities for which these studies serve in order to bring about compliant and successful studies to improve others' health and wellbeing. Contact: [email protected]

Anne Siegler, DrPH, MPH (she/her), Research Consultant

Woman with shoulder length curly brown hair wearing a gray turtle neck sweater smiling at the camera

Anne Siegler, DrPH, MPH, (she/her) is a public health practitioner with expertise in criminal justice and substance use. She completed her masters in public health at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health with a focus on maternal and reproductive health, and completed her doctoral degree in epidemiology from the City University of New York. Dr. Siegler works with non-profits and government agencies to build quality programming through data-driven design, implementation, and evaluation.  She has led evaluations of programs in the fields of criminal justice and correctional health, substance use, and harm reduction. She served as Director of Monitoring and Evaluation for Correctional Health Services, NYC Health + Hospitals, from 2015-2017. Contact: [email protected]

Karenna Thomas, MPH (she/her), Research Staff

Woman with long blonde/brown hair wearing a black blazer smiles in front of a stone background

Karenna Thomas, MPH, (she/her) is a staff researcher in the Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Health. She holds a Master of Public Health (MPH) degree in Social in Behavioral Sciences from Yale School of Public Health with concentrations in US Health and Justice (USHJ) and Maternal and Child Health (MCH). Her research focuses on reproductive rights behind bars and impacts of mass incarceration on community health, with specific interests in reproductive justice and activism-based research. Contact: [email protected]

E4P Site Leads

Ashley Lovell (she/her), Alabama Site Lead

Black and white image; woman with shoulder length blonde hair wearing glasses and a striped shirt smiles at the camera

Ashley Lovell (she/her) ​is the Program Co-Manager for the Alabama Prison Birth Project in Auburn, AL. She is a Lamaze-Certified Childbirth Educator, a DONA-certified birth doula, and a peer breastfeeding counselor. She received her B.S. and M.S. from Clemson University and Auburn University in wildlife sciences but eventually left her career in natural resources to focus on professional birth work. As a doula for 8 years, she has assisted women in birth in 10 different hospitals in Alabama and Georgia.

Melissa Zielinski (she/her), Arkansas Site Lead

Woman with long dark brown hair wearing a yellow shirt smiles at the camera

Melissa Zielinski, PhD, (she/her) is an Assistant Professor and Clinical Psychologist in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. She directs the Health and the Legal System (HEALS) Lab, a diverse group of scholars and clinical trainees focused on the intersections among trauma, mental illness, addiction, and the legal system (e.g., prisons, drug treatment courts, jails, crime victims). Much of her work has focused on justice-involved women, many of whom are survivors of sexual and domestic violence and have unique needs like pregnancy care. Her research is helping to identify how to best intervene, how to get treatments that work in to these systems, and how to promote long-term recovery.

Ashley Minihan (she/her), Connecticut Site Lead

Woman with long curly brown hair wearing a tan sweater smiling at the camera

Ashley Minihan (she/her) is the Owner of Empowered Beginnings. Ashley holds Certifications as a  DONA Doula, Childbirth Educator, Lactation Counselor, Passenger Safety Technician, Spinning Babies Parent Educator and Circle of Security Facilitator as well as Parents as Teachers, Touch Points and has earned a Family Development Credential. Her goal is to support prenatal and postnatal families as they navigate parenthood. Ashley prides herself in respecting everyone’s choices in a non-judgmental way by offering emotional support during the journey of parenthood.

Brenda Baker (she/her), Georgia Site Lead

Woman with shoulder length blonde hair wearing a black blazer smiles in front of a classroom

Brenda Baker, PhD, RNC, FAAN (she/her) is an assistant professor of nursing at Emory University’s Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing. She is a fellow in the American Academy of Nursing, a Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Fellow, 2021-2022, and a recipient of a March of Dimes Nurse of the Year Award. Baker is the founder of the Georgia Prison Motherhood Project, a collaboration between Emory University’s Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing and the Georgia Department of Corrections. 

Baker is actively involved in policy and advocacy efforts related to care of incarcerated women and their children and serves on state and national committees representing the unique needs of incarcerated women. Her research has focused on health disparities experienced by incarcerated pregnant women, substance use disorders among women, and the role of social support in the transition to motherhood. Baker has examined and published on the topics of mothers of preterm infants, evidence-based care for pregnant women and newborns, and maternal and neonatal outcomes of incarcerated women.

Alexus Roane (she/her), Michigan Site Lead

Woman with long black hair wearing a black shirt smiling in front of a brick background

Alexus Roane (she/her) is a PhD candidate in Sociology and a 3rd year MPH student in Health Behavior and Health Education at the University of Michigan. She obtained her B.A. in Women’s and Gender Studies and Public Policy from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her current research interests center using a reproductive justice theoretical framework to address reproductive health disparities for Black birthing people at the nexus of their experiences with violence and/or criminalization. As a Ford Predoctoral fellowship scholar, her current qualitative research project examines Black birthing people’s experiences with pregnancy and maternity care decision-making in rural North Carolina maternity care deserts. Alexus is also a pregnancy loss doula studying to become full-spectrum alongside serving as a collective member of Black Women Birthing Justice

Primary tabs

Evelyn Yaeggy (she/her), Minnesota Site Lead

Woman with dark brown hair up in a clip wearing a green shirt and glasses smiles in front of greenery

Born in Guatemala, Evelyn Yaeggy (she/her) is the founder of Vida Midwifery Collective in Minnesota. She is a home birth midwife, a certified prison doula through Minnesota Prison Doula Project, and a certified one-on-one peer counselor through Intentional Peer Support. She is also a certified Parenting Inside Out facilitator for incarcerated folx. Evelyn is passionate about working with the community, whether it is in her Vida Midwifery Practice providing perinatal care outside of the hospital setting or being a doula for clients at the prison. She enjoys facilitating parenting and mothering classes for families at several locations in Minnesota.

Alicia Roach (she/her), Oregon Site Lead

Woman with short black hair wearing a white tank top smiles in front of a background with a wooden and glass door

Alicia Roach's (she/her) journey as a Doula began over 20 years ago, before she knew of the term Doula. She started supporting friends and family members through pregnancy, labor and delivery and postpartum, loving every minute of it.

Her journey into motherhood was faced with many challenges and traumatic experiences, essentially setting her on the path to become a Doula. Knowing how naturally skilled she was with supporting births, Alicia knew this was the career she needed to pursue. She believes that every voice deserves to be heard, regardless of their situation, with advocacy being one of her biggest passions aside from being a Doula.

Sara Zia (she/her), Virginia Site Lead

Woman with dark brown hair wearing a black shirt smiles in front of greenery

Sara Zia, MA, (she/her) has an academic background in Philosophy from UCLA and UVA. She is a Certified Professional Midwife and doula and has over a decade of experience teaching yoga in her community. In 2018 Sara began teaching yoga at her local prison and drafted an evidence-based proposal for perinatal support programs. In 2019 Sara collaborated with prison staff to design and implement programs serving Virginia’s pregnant prison population with childbearing year support. She is Founder and Executive Director of the Virginia Prison Birth Project, a non-profit organization dedicated to building on this work.

Other Collaborators

Allison Ihle (formerly Crawford), PhD, RN (she/her/they/them), Research Collaborator, Probation Supplement Project Director

Woman with long brown hair wearing a black sweater smiles in front of a dark gray background

Allison Ihle (formerly Crawford), PhD, RN (she/her/they/them) is an Assistant Professor at the University of Texas Health at San Antonio’s School of Nursing where she conducts health research involving childbearing communities influenced by incarceration. As a registered obstetrical nurse with post-doctoral training in digital health, Dr. Crawford is an expert on creating interventions to address the barriers women experience who have criminal justice oversight. Her research directly informed two Texas state laws passed in 2019 (HB 1651) and 2021 (HB 1308) to improve healthcare for women in Texas county jails. Recently, in 2025, Dr. Crawford has been awarded Top 25 Nurses in the State of Texas by the Texas Nurses Association and selected to be a 2025 inductee as a Fellow in the American Academy of Nursing for her contribution to nursing science and public health. Dr. Crawford’s research is currently funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number R01HD103634-03S2 and IIMS/CTSA. The long-term goal of her research is to develop and test scalable and tailored interventions that enable self-efficacy and access to care discreetly and affordably using technology for those with risks associated with the criminal legal system. Affiliation: The University of Texas Health Science Center School of Nursing; Contact: [email protected]

Noël Marsh (she/her), Research Collaborator

Woman with shoulder length brown hair wearing a blue shirt smiles in front of a yellow background

Noël Marsh (she/her) is a feminist ethnographer who works at the intersections of medical anthropology and public health. She is currently pursuing a PhD in medical anthropology and a MPH in Behavioral and Community Health Sciences (with a focus in Maternal and Child Health) at the University of Pittsburgh. Her dissertation research, which was supported by the National Science Foundation and Wenner Gren Foundation, explores the politics of providing doula support to incarcerated pregnant people in the United States, especially as these efforts are linked to broader social movements for reproductive justice. As an undergraduate student at the University of South Carolina, she contributed to an implementation science project that assessed how midwifery-based, group prenatal care (CenteringPregnancy) was introduced and taken up by obstetric practices across South Carolina. Her general interests include care, social support, reproductive health, reproductive justice, incarceration, race/class/sex/gender, and feminist methodologies. Affiliation: University of Pittsburgh Department of Anthropology; Contact: [email protected]

Carolyn Sufrin, MD, PhD (she/her), E4P Research Collaborator

Woman with short curly dark brown hair wearing a tan tank top smiles for the camera

Carolyn Sufrin, MD, PhD, (she/her) is a medical anthropologist and an obstetrician-gynecologist specializing in family planning at Johns Hopkins University. She is associate professor in the Department of Gyn/Ob and the associate director of the Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine at the School of Medicine and in Health, Behavior and Society at the School of Public Health. She has worked extensively on reproductive health issues affecting incarcerated women, from providing clinical care in jail, to research, policy, and advocacy. Her work is situated at the intersection of reproductive justice, health care, and mass incarceration, which she examines in her book, Jailcare: Finding the Safety Net for Women Behind Bars. Affiliation: The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Department of Gyn/OB; Learn more about Dr. Sufrin at her website arrwip.org

Student Research Assistants

Lauryn Oberlander, UMN

Woman with long brown/red hair in a red shirt and jeans stands smiling in a parking lot

My name is Lauryn Oberlander and I am currently a junior at the University of Minnesota studying Sociology of Law, Criminology and Justice with a minor in Public Health. I am interested in helping those who have been affected by the criminal justice system and learning their stories! I am excited to learn more about the experiences of marginalized communities and those affected by social issues and hope to eventually become a social worker in prisons. I am very excited to be a part of the team and can't wait to work alongside others who share similar interests!

team dinner with fourteen smiling people around a table following a meal.

E4P Research Team at the June 2022 Data Collection Kickoff Lunch

Pictured left to right: Erica Gerrity (Ostara Initiative), Steph Wilson (Growing Together/UAMS), Noël Marsh (U Pittsburgh), Rae Baker (MnPDP), Amanda Corbett (UMN), Sara Zia (VaPBP), Jen Elder (VaPBP), Anne Siegler (UMN), Irene Yang (Georgia Prison Motherhood Project/Emory), Emily Sluiter (MPDI/UMI), Ashley Lovell (AlPBP), Rebecca Shlafer (UMN), Chauntel Norris (AlPBP).

Disclaimer:

This list of resources is for informational purposes only. The inclusion of any external link does not imply a recommendation or endorsement by the University of Minnesota of the views expressed within them. We do not control or guarantee the accuracy, relevance, timeliness, or completeness of any information on these external websites.