“When Is Health Care Actually Going to Be Care?” The Lived Experience of Family Planning Care Among Young Black Women

2021 ◽  
Vol 76 (7) ◽  
pp. 415-416
Author(s):  
Rachel G. Logan ◽  
Ellen M. Daley ◽  
Cheryl A. Vamos ◽  
Adetola Louis-Jacques ◽  
Stephanie L. Marhefka
Contraception ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 320-321
Author(s):  
M. D'Amore ◽  
L. McCloskey ◽  
B. Bokhour ◽  
M. Paasche-Orlow ◽  
B. Jack ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 104973232199309
Author(s):  
Rachel G. Logan ◽  
Ellen M. Daley ◽  
Cheryl A. Vamos ◽  
Adetola Louis-Jacques ◽  
Stephanie L. Marhefka

While family planning care (FPC) visits may serve as opportunities to address gaps in knowledge and access to limited resources, young Black women may also face structural barriers (i.e., racism, discrimination, bias) to engaging in care due to the intersections of racial identity, age, and socioeconomic status. Findings from interviews with 22 Black women, ages 18 to 29 years, about the lived experience of FPC highlighted dynamic patient–provider encounters. Women’s narratives uncovered the following essences: silence around sex impedes engagement in care, patient–provider racial concordance as protection from harm, providers as a source of discouragement and misinformation, frustration as a normative experience, decision making excludes discussion and deliberation, medical mistrust is pervasive and a part of Black consciousness, and meaningful and empathic patient–provider encounters are elusive. Health systems should prioritize developing and enhancing young Black women’s relationship with FPC providers to help mitigate persistent inequities that perpetuate disadvantage among this population.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josephine Etowa ◽  
Wanda T. Bernard ◽  
Brenda Beagan
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Pinar Döner ◽  
Kadriye Şahin

Abstract Purpose: Reproductive health includes the capability to reproduce and the freedom to decide. In this context, both women and men have rights. In this study, it is aimed to reveal the obstacles in using these rights and to describe perceptions on marriage and family planning (FP) of Syrian women and men and to increase awareness for developing new policies on the Primary Health Care. Methods: The study was conducted using qualitative method, consisting of in-depth interviews with 54 participants; 43 women and 11 men who had to emigrate from varied regions of Syria at different times since 2011. Syrian women living in Hatay, in the south of Turkey were identified from Primary Health Care Center. Most of the Syrian women had given birth to the first two children before the age of 20 years. The interviewees were selected by purposive and snowball sampling. Results: The result was examined under seven headings: knowledge about FP and contraceptive methods, hesitation about contraceptive methods, emotional pressure of family and fear of maintaining marriage, embarrassing of talking about sexuality and contraception, the effects of belief and culture on contraception, psychological reflections of war, and changes in the perception of health during the process of immigration. The most significant factors affecting the approaches to FP and contraceptive methods of the women in this study were determined to be education, traditions, economic status, and religious beliefs. The most important factors affecting participants’ FP and contraceptive method approaches are education, cultural beliefs, economic status, and religious beliefs. Conclusions: The primary healthcare centers are at a very strategical point for offering FP services to help address patients’ unmet contraceptive needs and improve pregnancy outcomes. More attention should be paid to social determinants that influence the access to reproductive health. Moreover, efforts can be done to address gender inequality that intercept FP. The most important strategy for primary health systems to follow the gender barriers that hinder access to FP services and men are empowered to share responsibility for FP.


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