Long-Acting but Reversible: Opportunities to Address Provider Bias in Contraceptive Care.

Q1 Nursing Hospital pediatrics Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1542/hpeds.2023-007673
Carrie L Nacht, Jenna Contreras, Mary Ehlenbach, Kelly McGregory, Laura Houser, Brittany J Allen
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Abstract

Jasmine is an 18-year-old Black female bringing her infant to the pediatrician for a newborn weight check. She asks her pediatrician's opinion about hormonal contraceptive injections, sharing that they were strongly recommended after she gave birth. The recommending health care provider told her, "We don't want you to end up back here any time soon." Rosita, a 16-year-old Latina female, visits her pediatrician for a well check. She reports a history of vaginal sex with 2 male partners and agrees to have a hormonal subcutaneous implant placed to avoid pregnancy. After 4 months of bothersome spotting, Rosita returns to have the implant removed. Rosita's provider strongly counsels against removal. Jasmine and Rosita are members of populations that have been systematically marginalized throughout American history. Their stories are derived from real cases and reveal how structural racism impacts modern contraceptive care. Specifically, their cases are examples of statistical discrimination, wherein the tendency to disproportionately recommend long-acting reversible contraception to historically marginalized communities does not follow the central tenants of sexual and reproductive justice, including acknowledging historical harms in health care and honoring bodily autonomy for all people. By sharing Jasmine and Rosita's stories, we use a reproductive justice lens to (1) examine the historical roots of disproportional prescription of long-acting reversible contraception to historically marginalized individuals, (2) discuss provider bias related to sexual and reproductive health care, and (3) illustrate how trauma-informed care with a recognition of historical trauma and the use of individuation can facilitate positive and equitable health outcomes.

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长效但可逆:解决提供者在避孕护理方面的偏见的机会。
Jasmine 是一名 18 岁的黑人女性,她带着自己的婴儿到儿科医生处进行新生儿体重检查。她询问儿科医生对注射荷尔蒙避孕针的看法,并告诉医生在她分娩后强烈建议她注射这种避孕针。推荐的医护人员告诉她:"我们不希望你很快又回到这里。罗西塔是一名 16 岁的拉丁裔女性,她去儿科医生那里做健康检查。她报告说曾与两名男性伴侣有过阴道性交史,并同意植入荷尔蒙皮下植入物以避免怀孕。4 个月后,罗西塔出现了令人烦恼的点滴出血,她再次来到医院要求取出植入物。罗西塔的医疗服务提供者强烈建议她不要取出植入物。茉莉和罗西塔属于美国历史上被系统性边缘化的人群。她们的故事源自真实案例,揭示了结构性种族主义如何影响现代避孕护理。具体来说,她们的案例是统计歧视的例子,即向历史上被边缘化的群体不成比例地推荐长效可逆避孕药具的倾向,并没有遵循性和生殖正义的核心原则,包括承认医疗保健中的历史伤害和尊重所有人的身体自主权。通过分享茉莉和罗西塔的故事,我们使用生殖正义的视角来(1)研究向历史上被边缘化的个人不成比例地开具长效可逆避孕药具处方的历史根源,(2)讨论与性健康和生殖健康护理相关的提供者偏见,以及(3)说明创伤知情护理如何通过承认历史创伤和使用个体化来促进积极和公平的健康结果。
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来源期刊
Hospital pediatrics
Hospital pediatrics Nursing-Pediatrics
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
204
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