Racism Runs Through It: Examining The Sexual And Reproductive Health Experience Of Black Women In The South.

Terri-Ann Monique Thompson, Yves-Yvette Young, Tanya M Bass, Stephanie Baker, Oriaku Njoku, Jessica Norwood, Monica Simpson
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引用次数: 26

Abstract

Few studies have illustrated how racism influences Black women's use of reproductive health care services. This article presents findings of a collaborative study conducted by a research team and a reproductive justice organization to understand Black women's concerns with sexual and reproductive health services. The qualitative research was conducted with Black women living in Georgia and North Carolina, using a community-based participatory research approach. Themes were developed from participant accounts that highlight how racism, both structural and individual, influenced their reproductive health care access, utilization, and experience. Structural racism affected participants' finances and led some to forgo care or face barriers to obtaining care. Individual racism resulted in some women electing to receive care only from same-race medical providers. These findings suggest a need for policies and practices that address structural barriers to reproductive health care access and improve the reproductive health experience of Black women.

种族主义贯穿其中:考察南方黑人妇女的性健康和生殖健康经验。
很少有研究表明种族主义如何影响黑人妇女使用生殖保健服务。本文介绍了由一个研究小组和一个生殖正义组织进行的一项合作研究的结果,以了解黑人妇女对性和生殖健康服务的关注。定性研究是对居住在乔治亚州和北卡罗来纳州的黑人妇女进行的,采用基于社区的参与性研究方法。从参与者的叙述中发展出主题,强调结构性和个人种族主义如何影响其生殖保健的获得、利用和经验。结构性种族主义影响了参与者的财务状况,导致一些人放弃治疗或面临获得治疗的障碍。个人种族主义导致一些妇女选择只接受同种族医疗提供者的护理。这些调查结果表明,需要制定政策和做法,解决获得生殖保健的结构性障碍,改善黑人妇女的生殖保健经验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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