Ramaswamy Megha, Chen Hsiang-Feng, Cropsey Karen L, Clarke Jennifer G, Kelly Patricia J
1 Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, University of Kansas School of Medicine , Kansas City, Kansas.
2 Center for Research Methods and Data Analysis, University of Kansas , Lawrence, Kansas.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2015 Jun;24(6):530-9. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2014.4942. Epub 2015 Jan 2.
We examined factors associated with women's use of highly effective birth control before and after incarceration, since women with ongoing criminal justice involvement bear a disproportionate burden of sexual and reproductive health problems, including high rates of unintended pregnancy and inconsistent contraceptive use.
Using a longitudinal study design, we conducted surveys with 102 women in an urban midwestern jail and then followed up with 66 of them 6 months after incarceration. We used stepwise logistic regression to assess individual, interpersonal, resource-based, organizational, and environmental factors associated with utilizing highly effective birth control.
Forty-two percent of women reported utilizing highly effective birth control (e.g., sterilization or other highly effective reversible methods) prior to incarceration, and 54% reported using these methods after release from jail (p<0.001). Ninety percent of women reported not wanting to get pregnant. Consistent use of birth control (p=0.001) and alcohol problems (p=0.027) were associated with utilization of highly effective birth control prior to incarceration. Previous pregnancies (p=0.012) were the only factor associated with utilization of highly effective birth control after release from jail.
Clinicians and public health practitioners can use findings from this study to develop clinical and intervention efforts aimed at improving unintended-pregnancy prevention among incarcerated women both during their confinement and during the tumultuous period after their release from jail.
我们研究了女性在入狱前后使用高效避孕措施的相关因素,因为持续涉及刑事司法系统的女性承担着不成比例的性健康和生殖健康问题负担,包括意外怀孕率高和避孕措施使用不一致。
采用纵向研究设计,我们对美国中西部城市一所监狱中的102名女性进行了调查,然后在她们入狱6个月后对其中66人进行了随访。我们使用逐步逻辑回归来评估与使用高效避孕措施相关的个人、人际、基于资源、组织和环境因素。
42%的女性报告在入狱前使用高效避孕措施(如绝育或其他高效可逆方法),54%的女性报告在出狱后使用这些方法(p<0.001)。90%的女性报告不想怀孕。入狱前持续使用避孕措施(p=0.001)和酗酒问题(p=0.027)与使用高效避孕措施有关。既往怀孕史(p=0.012)是出狱后使用高效避孕措施的唯一相关因素。
临床医生和公共卫生从业者可以利用本研究的结果,制定临床和干预措施,以改善被监禁女性在监禁期间及其出狱后的动荡时期预防意外怀孕的情况。