"我被区别对待":美国西南部医疗服务不足地区近期有监禁、无家可归和/或药物使用经历的妇女的生殖保健经历。

Community health equity research & policy Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-21 DOI:10.1177/2752535X241277352
Colleen Hackett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:具有上游社会健康决定因素的妇女,尤其是那些最近有被监禁、无家可归和/或使用药物经历的妇女,在获得医疗保健服务方面遇到了一系列障碍,因此面临着不良的性健康和生殖健康结果。由于社区关注结构上处于不利地位的妇女梅毒和先天性梅毒发病率不断上升的问题,本研究重点关注她们在不同医疗机构获得生殖保健服务的经历:这项以社区为基础的对话式研究项目收集了 12 个深入访谈和证词,访谈对象是美国西南部一个小城市中报告存在上游犯罪障碍(监禁、无家可归和/或使用药物)的妇女,其中大多数妇女被认定为拉丁裔/西班牙裔:本研究采用基础分析法,并借鉴了墨西哥裔女权主义者的方法,确定了四大主题:(1)无家可归与经济脆弱性;(2)监禁与医疗保健;(3)药物使用、医疗服务提供者的污名化与母亲身份;以及(4)希望对医疗保健体验做出的改变:结论:研究结果突出表明,需要提供经济和交通支持、以社区为基础的预防性服务来替代监禁式医疗保健,以及提供者与患者之间更具同情心和结构性能力的对话。
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"I Was Treated Differently": Reproductive Health Care Experiences Among Women With Recent Experiences of Incarceration, Homelessness, And/Or Substance Use in a Medically Underserved Area in the Southwestern US.

Background: Women with upstream social determinants of health, particularly those with recent experiences of incarceration, homelessness, and/or substance use, encounter a series of barriers in accessing health care services and consequently face poor sexual and reproductive health outcomes. Driven by a community concern for increasing rates of syphilis and congenital syphilis among women who are structurally disadvantaged, this study focuses on their experiences with reproductive healthcare access across healthcare settings.Research Design and Study Sample: This community-based pláticas (conversational) research project gathered 12 in-depth interviews and testimonios (testimonies) with women who reported a criminalized upstream barrier (incarceration, homelessness, and/or substance use) in a small city in the southwestern U.S. - most of whom identified as Latina/Hispanic.Analysis and Results: Using a grounded analysis and drawing upon Chicana feminist methodologies, this study identifies four major themes: (1) homelessness and economic vulnerabilities, (2) incarceration and health care, (3) drug use, provider stigma, and motherhood, and (4) desired changes to the healthcare experience.Conclusion: Results highlight the need for economic and transportation supports, community-based preventive services as alternatives to incarcerated healthcare, along with more compassionate and structurally competent provider-patient dialogue.

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