Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and the Department of Health, Behavior and Society and the Department of Population, Family, and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland; and the Guttmacher Institute, New York, New York.
Obstet Gynecol. 2021 Sep 1;138(3):330-337. doi: 10.1097/AOG.0000000000004497.
To understand abortion incidence among incarcerated people and the relation to prison and jail pregnancy policies.
We collected abortion numbers and policy data from convenience sample of 22 state prison systems, all Federal Bureau of Prisons sites, and six county jails that voluntarily reported monthly, aggregate pregnancy outcomes for 12 months in 2016-2017. Sites also completed a baseline survey of institution characteristics and pregnancy policies, including abortion. We reported facility policies and abortion incidence according to state-level abortion characteristics.
Only half of state prisons in the study allowed abortion in both the first and second trimesters, and 14% did not allow abortion at all. Of the 19 state prisons permitting abortion, two thirds required the incarcerated woman to pay. Four jails of the six study jails (67%) allowed abortions in the first and second trimesters, and 25% of those required the incarcerated woman to pay for the procedure. The three prisons and two jails that did not allow abortions were in states considered hostile to abortion access. In the state and federal prisons studied, 11 of the 816 pregnancies (1.3%) that ended during the study time period were abortions. Of the 224 pregnancies that ended at study jails, 33 were abortions (15%), with more than half of those (55%) occurring in the first trimester. The abortion ratio (proportion of pregnancies ending in abortion) was 1.4% for prisons and 18% for jails.
Although some incarcerated individuals have abortions, many prisons and jails have restrictive policies surrounding abortion, either through self-payment requirements or explicit prohibition. Findings from this study should prompt further inquiry into abortion incidence in these settings and address interventions to ensure incarcerated people, in accordance with legal requirements and health equity, have access to abortion.
了解监禁人群中的堕胎发生率以及与监狱和看守所妊娠政策的关系。
我们从 22 个州立监狱系统、所有联邦监狱局站点以及自愿报告 2016-2017 年 12 个月每月妊娠结局的 6 个县看守所中收集了堕胎数量和政策数据。这些机构还完成了关于机构特征和妊娠政策(包括堕胎)的基线调查。我们根据州级堕胎特征报告了设施政策和堕胎发生率。
在所研究的州立监狱中,只有一半允许在第一和第二孕期进行堕胎,而 14%的监狱完全不允许堕胎。在允许堕胎的 19 个州立监狱中,有三分之二要求被监禁的女性付费。在所研究的 6 个看守所中,有 4 个(67%)允许在第一和第二孕期进行堕胎,其中 25%要求被监禁的女性支付手术费用。不允许堕胎的三个监狱和两个看守所所在的州被认为对堕胎准入持敌对态度。在所研究的州立和联邦监狱中,在研究期间结束的 816 例妊娠中,有 11 例(1.3%)是堕胎。在研究看守所结束的 224 例妊娠中,有 33 例(15%)是堕胎,其中超过一半(55%)发生在第一孕期。监狱的堕胎比例(堕胎结束妊娠的比例)为 1.4%,看守所为 18%。
尽管一些被监禁的人进行了堕胎,但许多监狱和看守所对堕胎政策限制颇多,要么通过自付费用要求,要么明确禁止。本研究的结果应促使进一步调查这些环境中的堕胎发生率,并解决干预措施,以确保被监禁者根据法律要求和公平原则获得堕胎服务。