I agree that you’re a strong candidate for most if not all of the women’s colleges. Your ACT isn’t quite high enough to add strength to your application for these schools, but they’re all test-optional and de-prioritizing test scores this cycle anyway, and even in a normal year your scores would have been a neutral, not a negative. Your GPA and EC’s are both strong, and the URM bump is likely to move you from “one well-qualified applicant among many” to “one of the well-qualified applicants we definitely want.” They really are great places to be premed. Both Scripps and Bryn Mawr have post-bac premed programs in addition to their undergrad programs, so they have a lot of supportive infrastructure in place for premeds.
Do you love biology, or are you just assuming that you need a life-sciences major to be premed? You could absolutely major in something that’s more directly linked to the justice and equity issues you care about, and still take all of the premed science classes; it’s not a disadvantage for a med school applicant to have a non-science major as long as the GPA in the prereq science classes is high.
At Ohio State, for example, take a look at the undergrad Public Health major - that could be a great way to center your major right where health care and social justice intersect. (If you like the public health idea, Agnes Scott has a great public health major, developed in cooperation with Emory’s school of public health. It’s also a great women’s college with a strong female-leadership/social-justice focus. It’s not a full-need-met school but they recruit for diversity have have some big merit scholarships that you could be competitive for.)
At the LAC’s, you can absolutely be a pre-med Gender/Women’s Studies and/or African-American Studies major. There’s not a lot of value added, employability-wise or med school preparation wise, to doing all of the upper-division lab-science stuff that a bio major requires, unless you really have a strong interest in that coursework. A bio major is fine if it’s genuinely your primary interest, but it needn’t be the default.