2013-2015年墨西哥市教育程度、居住地及合法堕胎服务的使用情况

IF 4.4 3区 医学 Q1 Social Sciences
Leigh Senderowicz, Patricio Sanhueza, Ana Langer
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引用次数: 8

摘要

背景:虽然堕胎在墨西哥大部分地区是非法的,但2007年,墨西哥城将堕胎合法化,在限制堕胎的海洋中形成了一个合法堕胎的岛屿。墨西哥城寻求堕胎的妇女的特征——尤其是她们的社会经济地位和居住地——并没有得到很好的记录。方法:使用2013-2015年在墨西哥城四家基层诊所之一寻求堕胎的22,732名妇女的医疗记录来检查寻求合法堕胎的妇女的特征。利用教育作为社会经济地位的代表,使用线性回归分析来探索墨西哥城和墨西哥其他地方妇女之间的差异。由于人口结构的地域差异,在一些模型中,女性受教育水平被归一化。结果:大多数寻求堕胎的人来自墨西哥城(66%)或其周边大都市区(22%),其余来自边境州(7%)或墨西哥其他地区(5%)。墨西哥其他地区寻求堕胎的人比墨西哥城的人平均多受教育1.4年。在标准化教育水平的回归模型中,墨西哥其他地区妇女与墨西哥城妇女的受教育程度差异为4.9年(未调整模型)和3.2年(调整模型)。结论:这些发现,结合墨西哥不安全堕胎的文献,表明来自墨西哥城以外受教育程度较低的妇女可能比受教育程度较高的同龄人更不可能从该市提供的安全堕胎服务中受益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Education, Place of Residence and Utilization of Legal Abortion Services in Mexico City, 2013-2015.

Context: Although abortion is illegal in most of Mexico, it was decriminalized in Mexico City in 2007, creating an island of legal abortion in a sea of restricted access. The characteristics of women seeking abortions in Mexico City-notably their socioeconomic status and place of residence-have not been well documented.

Methods: Medical records from 22,732 women who sought abortions at one of four primary-level clinics in Mexico City in 2013-2015 were used to examine characteristics of women seeking legal abortion. Linear regression analyses were used to explore differences between women from Mexico City and those from elsewhere in Mexico, using education as a proxy for socioeconomic status. Because of geographic differences in population structure, women's education level was normalized in some models.

Results: Most abortion seekers came from Mexico City (66%) or its surrounding metropolitan area (22%), while the remainder came from bordering states (7%) or the rest of Mexico (5%). Abortion seekers from the rest of Mexico had, on average, 1.4 more years of education than did those from Mexico City. In regression models that normalized education levels, the difference in educational attainment between women from the rest of Mexico and those from Mexico City was 4.9 years (unadjusted model) and 3.2 years (adjusted model).

Conclusions: These findings, in conjunction with the literature on unsafe abortion in Mexico, suggest that women from outside Mexico City who have low levels of education may be less likely than their more educated peers to benefit from the safe abortion services provided in the city.

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