Bring Back Public Health Standards for Women's Reproductive
Health
By Joycelyn Elders
By Joycelyn Elders
As
Americans, we strive for safety -- the safest medicines, safest cars, safest
toys. But when it comes to women's reproductive health, our state legislatures
are passing laws putting women's health at risk -- about 250 since 2011. And
now they do it under the guise of "womens safety."
Women of color,
especially African-American women, are disproportionately being affected by
these policies throughout the Southern states where I live and spend much of my
time mentoring young physicians and health professionals.
The
most serious health risks for women are coming from politicians cutting back
access to family planning services and telling doctors how to practice medicine
especially around procedures related to terminating a pregnancy.
Costly
clinic licensing standards, invasive ultrasound procedures and lengthy
mandatory waiting periods (as if women haven't already thought about this
decision) are unnecessary because legal abortion is one of the safest surgical
procedures available. In the United States, nearly 90 percent are done in the
first trimester when abortion is safest.
Once
again Texas is the battleground in the war over women's bodies. Whereas just a
few years ago there were 41 abortion clinics, the recent federal appeals court
decision to uphold restrictions will likely close about half of Texas'
remaining 18 clinics.
Those of us in the public health community know what is
likely to happen as a result: more unintended pregnancy since many of these
clinics also provide contraceptive services and more unintended births since
abortion will become less available.
According
to the Guttmacher Institute, unintended pregnancy is highest among poor women,
young women and women of color. Addressing institutional barriers to culturally
and linguistically appropriate health information and services would help
reduce these disparities, as would more and better age-appropriate sexual
health education programs in our public schools.
Yet funding for these programs
is being cut. Again it is politicians making many of these decisions, not
public health professionals.
The
Affordable Care Act addresses disparities by requiring that certain preventive
services including contraception be provided at no cost. The Republican --
mostly male -- Congress' constant attacks on Obamacare, coupled with the US
Supreme Court's pending decisions concerning access to insurance plans, stand
to jeopardize any gains that have been made.
Ironically,
some legislators and courts talk about the "sanctity of life" while
railing against affordable contraception, prenatal care and a living wage,
which all serve to enhance the quality of life for women.
Consider a young woman who finds herself pregnant and working for minimum wage, unmarried and not yet ready to raise a child because she wants to stay in school. Or an older woman with serious health conditions which could become life threatening if she stays pregnant.
Since at least 93 percent of Texas
counties do not have an abortion provider, a woman may have to travel long
distances, take time off from a job that likely has no paid sick leave, find
childcare for her child(ren) and arrange transportation.
And, due to Texas'
waiting period, she will have to find a place to stay overnight, adding to her
costs. Once at the clinic, she will hear state-mandated pseudo-science about
the "risks" of abortion, much of which is not based on scientific
evidence.
Research
shows that 42 percent of women obtaining abortions have incomes below the
federal poverty level ($11,770 for a family of one in 2015). And due to the
federal Hyde Amendment, Medicaid funding for abortions is prohibited under most
circumstances and in most states.
The
irony is that the United States ranks 47th, among 183 countries, in the world
for maternal deaths due to pregnancy-related conditions. And, childbirth is 14
times more likely to result in death than an abortion. These rates go up for
women with diabetes and other health conditions, which are more prevalent among
women of color.
Before
the 1973 Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade, the public health community
publicly expressed concern about the high rates of maternal deaths in the United
States and the need for universal access to a full range of reproductive health
services including abortion.
The big drop in maternal deaths came in the
mid-1970s soon after Roe when illegal back-alley abortions gave way to safe and
accessible procedures along with a wider range of contraceptive services
available under government programs and private insurance.
The
recent restrictions, rollbacks and defunding of reproductive health services
will inevitably drive up maternal morbidity and mortality rates, again placing
women's health at serious risk. As a nation, I do hope we take a hard look at
how our public policies stand to jeopardize the safety and health of women and
prevent this from happening.
We
must have healthy mothers and healthy babies if we expect to have a healthy
nation.
Dr.
Elders is a Professor at the School of Public Heath, University of Arkansas and
served as Surgeon General of the United States from 1993 to 1994.