At the time of the study, Wanicha Burapa and Jeremy R. Martinez were with the Medical Assistance Division, New Mexico Human Services Department, Santa Fe. Katharine Winkel Daniel was with the Family Planning Program, Public Health Division, New Mexico Department of Health, Santa Fe.
Am J Public Health. 2022 Jun;112(S5):S541-S544. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2022.306817.
Two New Mexico state agencies implemented a statewide contraceptive access initiative in a sizable rural border state through the provision of low- or no-cost contraception, provider training and technical assistance, public awareness campaigns, and policy changes. These interventions resulted in successful expansion of reproductive health services provision and contraceptive use among Medicaid-enrolled adolescents and young women of reproductive age between 2014 and 2020. These findings demonstrate how multilevel interventions can expand contraceptive access, even in rural limited-provider settings. (. 2022;112(S5):S541-S544. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2022.306817).
两个新墨西哥州的机构通过提供低成本或免费的避孕措施、提供者培训和技术援助、公共宣传活动以及政策改革,在一个边境大农村的全州范围内实施了一项避孕措施获取倡议。这些干预措施成功地扩大了 2014 年至 2020 年间接受医疗补助的青少年和育龄年轻女性的生殖健康服务提供和避孕措施使用。这些发现表明,多层次干预措施如何能够扩大避孕措施的获取,即使在农村有限提供者环境中也是如此。(2022 年;112(S5):S541-S544. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2022.306817)。