
Amy Goh (she/her) is a midwife at Cambridge Health Alliance and is on faculty at Thomas Jefferson University’s Midwifery Program. She completed her PhD at Boston College where her research examined digital health equity in pregnancy. She has been a midwife for over a decade, working in diverse settings from birth centers to large academic teaching hospitals. She is on the American Association of Birth Centers’ Board of Directors and is currently a Commissioner on the Commonwealth of Massachusetts’ Asian American and Pacific Islander Commission. She was a former Health Equity Fellow through Cambridge Health Alliance’s Center for Health Equity Education and Advocacy and a previous Duke-Johnson and Johnson Nurse Leadership Fellow. Prior to her midwifery career, Amy worked to improve and better understand the complexities of health and rights in global communities. After her stint as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Cape Verde, she completed her MPhil thesis in International Development investigating the socio-political aspects of maternal mortality in Brazil. Her research interests include midwifery and birth center utilization amongst Asian Americans, data disaggregation, midwifery workforce, respectful maternity care and digital health.

