“我的意思是,我真的没有任何选择:”监禁如何影响堕胎决策,并阻止在美国堕胎。

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health Pub Date : 2023-09-01 Epub Date: 2023-07-02 DOI:10.1363/psrh.12235
Carolyn B Sufrin, Ashley Devon-Williamston, Lauren Beal, Crystal M Hayes, Camille Kramer
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的:了解美国监禁的惩罚性、权利限制和种族分层环境如何影响孕妇、跨性别男性和性别非二元个体的堕胎欲望、堕胎机会和怀孕经历。方法:从2018年5月到2020年11月,我们对处于支持堕胎和限制堕胎状态的监狱和监狱中的孕妇进行了半结构化的定性访谈。访谈探讨了参与者是否考虑为这次怀孕堕胎;试图在拘留期间堕胎;监禁是否以及如何影响他们对怀孕、分娩、养育子女和堕胎的想法;以及在拘留期间选择咨询和产前护理经验,或缺乏这些经验。结果:监禁的条件深深地影响了我们39名参与者的堕胎和怀孕决定,其中一些人将继续怀孕作为惩罚。出现了四个主题:(1)医疗提供者公开阻碍想要的堕胎;(2) 参与者认为被监禁的妇女无权堕胎;(3) 限制堕胎机会的尸体官僚主义;(4)尸体状况使妇女希望自己流产。支持州和限制州的主题相似。结论:监禁塑造了参与者对怀孕的想法以及他们获得堕胎的能力,考虑堕胎是否是一种可以实现的选择,并做出与怀孕相关的决定。这些微妙的尸体控制方面比明显的后勤障碍更频繁地阻碍堕胎。在塑造堕胎体验方面,尸体环境比该州的整体堕胎环境发挥了更重要的作用。监禁以惩罚性的方式限制和贬低生殖健康,这是美国社会更广泛的生殖控制力量的缩影。
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"I mean, I didn't really have a choice of anything:" How incarceration influences abortion decision-making and precludes access in the United States.

Objective: To understand how the punitive, rights-limiting, and racially stratified environment of incarceration in the United States (US) shapes the abortion desires, access, and pregnancy experiences of pregnant women, transgender men, and gender non-binary individuals.

Methods: From May 2018-November 2020, we conducted semi-structured, qualitative interviews with pregnant women in prisons and jails in an abortion supportive and an abortion restrictive state. Interviews explored whether participants considered abortion for this pregnancy; attempted to obtain an abortion in custody; whether and how incarceration affected their thoughts about pregnancy, birth, parenting, and abortion; and options counseling and prenatal care experiences, or lack thereof, in custody.

Results: The conditions of incarceration deeply shaped our 39 participants' abortion and pregnancy decisions, with some experiencing pregnancy continuation as punishment. Four themes emerged: (1) medical providers' overt obstruction of desired abortions; (2) participants assuming that incarcerated women had no right to abortion; (3) carceral bureaucracy constraining abortion access; and (4) carceral conditions made women wish they had aborted. Themes were similar in supportive and restrictive states.

Conclusions: Incarceration shaped participants' thoughts about pregnancy and their abilities to access abortion, consider whether abortion was an attainable option, and make pregnancy-related decisions. These subtle carceral control aspects presented more frequent barriers to abortion than overt logistical ones. The carceral environment played a more significant role than the state's overall abortion climate in shaping abortion experiences. Incarceration constrains and devalues reproductive wellbeing in punitive ways that are a microcosm of broader forces of reproductive control in US society.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
3.40%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health provides the latest peer-reviewed, policy-relevant research and analysis on sexual and reproductive health and rights in the United States and other developed countries. For more than four decades, Perspectives has offered unique insights into how reproductive health issues relate to one another; how they are affected by policies and programs; and their implications for individuals and societies. Published four times a year, Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health includes original research, special reports and commentaries on the latest developments in the field of sexual and reproductive health, as well as staff-written summaries of recent findings in the field.
期刊最新文献
Understanding abortion legality and trimester of abortion care in Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky, three abortion‐restrictive states Exploring adolescent-facing US clinicians' perceptions of their contraceptive counseling and use of shared decision-making: A qualitative study. "It shouldn't be just hush-hush": A qualitative community-based study of menstrual health communication among women in Philadelphia. Amicus brief of over 300 reproductive health researchers supports mifepristone's safety and effectiveness. Brief of over 300 reproductive health researchers as Amici Curiae in FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine.
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