Medical Student at Case Western University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio USA.
Assistant Professor in the Department of Reproductive Biology at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio USA.
J Clin Ethics. 2022 Summer;33(2):112-123.
Women with opioid use disorder (OUD) face unique challenges meeting their reproductive goals. Because the rate of unintended pregnancy in this population is almost 80 percent, there has been a push to increase the use of contraceptives among reproductive-aged women with OUD.1 The patient-level ethical issues of such initiatives, however, are often overlooked. This review discusses the ethical issues in two realms: obtaining contraception when it is desired and avoiding contraceptive coercion when contraception is not desired. It is important that access to reproductive education and care be improved to ensure autonomous decision making by women with OUD. It is also necessary to be mindful of the history of oppressive and coercive contraception and sterilization policies in the United States. These policies have left a legacy of mistrust and continue to be manifested in the form of more subtly oppressive policies in contemporary medical practice. Such policies point to the ongoing stigmatization of, and implicit biases held against, women with OUD. Based on these ethical issues, solutions are suggested at the clinical, systemic, and societal levels.
患有阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)的女性在实现生育目标上面临着独特的挑战。由于该人群的意外怀孕率几乎达到 80%,因此一直在推动增加有 OUD 的育龄妇女使用避孕药具。1 然而,此类举措的患者层面的伦理问题往往被忽视。本文在两个领域探讨了伦理问题:一是在需要避孕时获得避孕措施,二是在不希望避孕时避免避孕强制。改善获得生殖教育和护理的机会,以确保 OUD 女性能够自主决策非常重要。还必须注意美国压迫性和强制性避孕和绝育政策的历史。这些政策留下了不信任的遗产,并继续以当代医疗实践中更微妙的压迫性政策的形式表现出来。这些政策表明,对患有 OUD 的女性仍然存在污名化和隐含偏见。基于这些伦理问题,在临床、系统和社会层面提出了一些解决方案。