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Sexual and Reproductive Health Issues for Underserved Women. Lourdes A. Rivera, JD Managing Attorney National Health Law Program May 25, 2006. Reproductive Health Status of Women of Color.
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Sexual and Reproductive Health Issues for Underserved Women Lourdes A. Rivera, JD Managing Attorney National Health Law Program May 25, 2006
Reproductive Health Status of Women of Color • African American and Latina Women highest rates of reported new AIDS cases (48.2/100,000, 11.1/100,000, respectively) in 2004. • Rate of 6.4 for NA/AN; 1.6 for API • In 2000, teen pregnancy rate: African-Americans -- 153/1,000 teens; 138/1,000 for Latinas; 55/1,000 for Whites. All declining. • More than 1/3 of US women need publicly-supported contraceptive services and supplies because income is below 250% federal poverty level • Cervical cancer disproportionately affects Latinas, African American and Korean women in Los Angeles County. Sources: The Alan Guttmacher Institute/LAC DHS
Reproductive Health: Abortion • Unintended pregnancy: 98.4/1,000 African-American women ages 15-44; 69.4/1,000 for Latina; 35.5/1,000 for Whites • Poor women 4x’s as likely to experience unplanned pregnancy as higher income woman • In 2000, 21/1,000 women ages 15-44 had abortions • 49/1,000 African American; 33/1,000 Latina; 13/1,000 White • Rate of abortion increased for women with family income below 200% poverty and women on Medicaid between 1994 – 2000 Source: The Alan Guttmacher Institute
Barriers To Comprehensive Reproductive Health • Cost/affordability of health services • Immigration status • Lack of language and cultural accessibility • Lack of comprehensive information and sex education • Breaches of confidentiality • Geographic access/lack of transportation/lack of childcare • Discrimination and lack of access for LGBTQ • Social beliefs & gender roles within communities • Ideological restrictions of health entities and provider refusals • Dissatisfaction with doctor/health care visits • Low education levels/low health literacy
Barrier to Reproductive Health: Lack Of Health Coverage • Among women, Latinas are at highest risk for being uninsured with almost 40% lacking coverage in 2004. • Latinas: 38% uninsured • African American: 17% uninsured • White: 13% uninsured • Latinas least likely to have regular doctor or to have had an Ob-Gyn visit in past year; 1 in 3 report delaying or going without care in past due to cost Source: The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
Health Insurance Coverage of Women, by Race/Ethnicity, 2004Source: The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
Medicaid’s Role in Reproductive Health • Coverage to over 7 million women of reproductive age (15-44) (11.5% of all women in that age & 36.6% with incomes below poverty line) – prevention, screening and treatment services • Nearly 2/3 of spending on publicly financed family planning • Over 1/3 of all births in the U.S. • All 50 States and the District of Columbia -- breast and cervical cancer treatment for women otherwise not be eligible for Medicaid. • Single largest public funding source for HIV/AIDS care in the U.S. Sources: Kaiser Family Foundation & Alan Guttmacher Institute/Smith & Moody, Health Management Assoc./Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Medicaid Under Attack • Cuts to Medicaid - Deficit Reduction Act • Cut $6.9 B over 2006-2010; $28.3 B over 2006-2015 • Higher premiums and co-pays • Family planning no longer mandated benefit • Show birth certificate/passport to apply if citizen • Administration’s proposed FY 2007 Budget • Federal Medicaid funding cuts equal to $14 billion over the next five years and $35.5 billion over ten
Health Coverage for Immigrants • Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) – a.k.a “Welfare Reform” • Five-year ban for new, otherwise qualified immigrants • Affidavits of support by sponsors • Concerns about “public charge” • Only Emergency Medicaid for unqualified immigrants • Some states provide Medicaid prenatal care for immigrants, regardless of immigration status • SCHIP coverage of “unborn” • Otherwise county, charity services, community clinics • What will happen with immigration bill and Inhofe amendment?
Reproductive Health Policies, Politics and Issues • Parental Involvement Laws • 34 states with parental involvement laws (21 require consent) • “Teen Endangerment Act” (H.R. 748) • Provider/institutional refusals for contraception • Emergency contraception and oral contraception • Politics of the FDA • EC access over-the-counter • HPV immunization – FDA and CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
Reproductive Health Policies, Politics and Issues • Rights of “Unborn” • Unborn Victims of Violence Act -- first law to recognize zygote as separate victim of crime, instead of protecting pregnant women from violence • SCHIP Coverage of Fetuses as “qualified children” • Abstinence-only education
Reproductive Health Policies, Politics and Issues: Attacks on Abortion Access • Federal funding restrictions on abortion • Hyde Amendment on Appropriations– Since 1976 • Abortion ban – “Partial-Birth Abortion” ban – SCT to Review • Weldon Amendment – Labor-HHS- Education Appropriations • Criminalization of assisting minors – “Teen Endangerment Act”/”Child Custody Protection Act” • States move to pass bans – e.g., S.D.
As said by Law Prof. Dorothy Roberts…. • “Reproduction is not just a matter of individual choice. Reproductive health policy affects the status of entire groups. It reflects which people are valued in our society; who is deemed worthy to bear children and capable of making decisions for themselves. Reproductive decisions are made within a social context, including inequalities of wealth and power.”
A human rights view of Reproductive Health • International Conference on Population and Development (Cairo, 1994) & International Conference on Women (Beijing, 1995). • A state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, in all matters related to the reproductive system and to its functions and processes. • Implies that people are able to have a satisfying and safe sex life; capability to reproduce and freedom to decide if, when and how often to do so.
Reproductive Health (cont.) • Right to: • Be informed • Have access to safe, effective, affordable and acceptable methods of family planning of their choice • Have access to other methods of regulation of fertility which are not against the law • Have access to appropriate health care services that will enable women to go safely through pregnancy and childbirth and provide couples with the best chance if having a healthy infant.
Sexual Health • Ability to Enjoy Mutually Fulfilling Sexual Relationships • Freedom from Sexual Abuse, Coercion, or Harassment • Safety from STDs/STIs • Success in Achieving or in Preventing Pregnancy
Health System Obligations • Respect • Refrain from interfering directly or indirectly with the enjoyment of the right to health • Protect • Prevent third parties from interfering with the freedom of people to enjoy the right to health
Health System Obligations (cont.) • Fulfill • Ensure that people have access to a system of heath care that provides equal opportunity for everyone [CESCR General Comment on Health]: • Availability – functioning public health and health care facilities, goods and services, and essential drugs are available in sufficient quantity. • Accessibility – non-discrimination; physical accessibility; affordability; information accessibility • Acceptability – ethically and culturally appropriate; sensitive to gender and life-cycle requirements; respect confidentiality; improve heath status. • Quality – scientifically and medically appropriate and of good quality.
Women of Color: A Vision of Reproductive Justice for All • The economic, social, political power and resources to make healthy decisions about our bodies, sexuality and reproduction • Addresses reproductive oppression -- control and exploitation of women and girls through our bodies, sexuality and reproduction by families, communities, institutions and society • Fights equally for the right to have – and not to have – a child Sources: Asian Communities for Reproductive Justice & SisterSong
Resources • Source: Rebecca J. Cook, et. al., Reproductive Health and Human Rights (Clarendon Press 2003). • Source: Asian Communities for Reproductive Justice, A New Vision for Advancing our Movement for Reproductive Health, Reproductive Rights, and Reproductive Justice (2005), www.reproductivejustice.org. • Jael Silliman, et al., Undivided Rights: Women of Color Organize for Reproductive Justice (South End Press 2004). • Dorothy Roberts, Killing the Black Body: Race Reproduction and the Meaning of Liberty (Vintage Books 1999).
Resources • Collective Voices (Sister Song Women of Color Reproductive Health and Sexual Rights Collaborative, Atlanta, GA), www.sistersong.net. • The Women’s Health Activist (National Women’s Health Network, Washington, D.C.), www.womenshealthnetwork.org. • The Health Advocate (National Health Law Program, Los Angeles, CA), www.healthlaw.org.