Beyond the numbers: Access to reproductive health care for low-income women in five communities

Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Ranji, Usha
Long, Michelle
Salganicoff, Alina
Silow-Carroll, Sharon
Rosenzweig, Carrie
Rodin, Diana
Kellenberg, Rebecca
Publisher
Kaiser Family Foundation
Date
November 2019
Publication
Women's Health Policy
Abstract / Description

In Washington, DC, and in state capitols across the nation, policy debates over the future of access to reproductive and sexual health services are shaping the range of services and providers available to low-income women. Access to these services, including contraceptive care, sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention and treatment, obstetrical care, and abortion services, have a profound impact on women’s lives. While instructive, national statistics can mask wide regional and local variation, as well as disparities across socioeconomic, racial, and ethnic groups. In order to understand what is happening at the local level, we went beyond the statistics to see how these policies are playing out in diverse communities across the United States.
Service availability and policies related to health care, contraception, and abortion vary significantly across and within states. State policymakers determine whether to expand Medicaid coverage to low-income adults under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), establish and fund family planning programs for uninsured residents, and adopt rules that regulate abortion services. These state policies also intersect with local factors; the number and distribution of family planning and safety net providers, the content of school-based sex education, cultural traditions of local populations, and underlying social determinants of health all shape access to reproductive health care at the community level. (author introduction) #P4HEwebinarOctober2024

Artifact Type
Research
Reference Type
Report
Priority Population
Women and girls
Topic Area
Illness/Disease/Injury/Wellbeing » Reproductive/Sexual Health
Social/Structural Determinants