Kreitzer Rebecca J, Smith Candis Watts, Kane Kellen A, Saunders Tracee M
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Pennsylvania State University.
J Health Polit Policy Law. 2021 Apr 1;46(2):277-304. doi: 10.1215/03616878-8802186.
This article focuses on whether, and the extent to which, the resources made available by Title X-the only federal policy aimed specifically at reproductive health care-are equitably accessible. Here, equitable means that barriers to accessing services are lowest for those people who need them most.
The authors use geographic information systems (GIS) and statistical/spatial analysis (specifically the integrated two-step floating catchment area [I2SFCA] method) to study the spatial and nonspatial accessibility of Title X clinics in 2018.
The authors find that contraception deserts vary across the states, with between 17% and 53% of the state population living in a desert. Furthermore, they find that low-income people and people of color are more likely to live in certain types of contraception deserts.
The analyses reveal not only a wide range of sizes and shapes of contraception deserts across the US states but also a range of severity of inequity.
本文关注的是第十条修正案所提供的资源——唯一一项专门针对生殖保健的联邦政策——是否以及在何种程度上能够公平获取。在此,公平意味着对于最需要服务的人群而言,获取服务的障碍最低。
作者使用地理信息系统(GIS)和统计/空间分析(具体为综合两步浮动集水区 [I2SFCA] 方法)来研究2018年第十条修正案诊所的空间和非空间可及性。
作者发现避孕服务荒漠在各州有所不同,17%至53%的州人口生活在荒漠地区。此外,他们发现低收入人群和有色人种更有可能生活在某些类型的避孕服务荒漠地区。
分析不仅揭示了美国各州避孕服务荒漠的大小和形状各异,还揭示了不平等的严重程度范围。