距离问题:无家可归妇女长期可逆和永久避孕的地理障碍退伍军人。

IF 1.1 Q3 SOCIAL WORK
Lori M Gawron, Warren B P Pettey, Andrew M Redd, Ying Suo, David K Turok, Adi V Gundlapalli
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引用次数: 0

摘要

无家可归的女性退伍军人意外怀孕和不良后果的风险很高。避孕可以降低风险,但整个退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)都存在获取障碍。我们在2002-2015财政年度的VHA行政数据中确定了所有有无家可归证据的18-44岁美国女性退伍军人,以记录退伍军人医疗中心(VAMC)中曾经无家可归的女性退伍军人的地理分布,并评估长效可逆避孕药具(LARC)和永久避孕药具使用之间的地理关联。我们根据最后一个已知的邮政编码计算了VAMC的旅行距离。我们使用多变量逻辑回归模型来探索避孕方法的相关性。我们包括41722名曾经无家可归的女性退伍军人;9.2%的人有LARC暴露,7.5%的人有PC暴露。我们发现,29%的无家可归的女性退伍军人居住在距离最近的VAMC>40英里的地方,驾驶距离的增加与避孕暴露呈负相关,尤其是居住在距离VAMC>100英里的退伍军人。与最近的VAMC的距离不断增加,导致女性退伍军人获得最有效避孕选择的地理障碍。VHA处于独特的地位,可以利用其农村和无家可归者的医疗专业知识来解决地理障碍,并将全面的避孕服务纳入为高危退伍军人制定的计划中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Distance Matters: Geographic barriers to long acting reversible and permanent contraception for homeless women Veterans.

Distance Matters: Geographic barriers to long acting reversible and permanent contraception for homeless women Veterans.

Distance Matters: Geographic barriers to long acting reversible and permanent contraception for homeless women Veterans.

Distance Matters: Geographic barriers to long acting reversible and permanent contraception for homeless women Veterans.

Women Veterans who experience homelessness are at high risk of unintended pregnancy and adverse outcomes. Contraception could mitigate risks, yet access barriers exist across the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). We identified all US women Veterans, age 18-44y with evidence of homelessness in VHA administrative data between fiscal years 2002-2015, in order to document the geographic distribution of ever-homeless women Veterans in relation to VA Medical Centers (VAMCs) and assess geographic associations between long acting reversible contraceptives (LARC) or permanent contraception (PC) use. We calculated VAMC travel distance from last known ZIP Code. We used multivariate logistic regression models to explore contraceptive method associations. We included 41,722 ever-homeless women Veterans; 9.2% had LARC exposure and 7.5% PC. We found 29% of ever-homeless women Veterans resided >40miles from the nearest VAMC and increasing drive distance was negatively correlated with contraceptive exposure, especially for Veterans residing >100miles from a VAMC. Increasing distance to the nearest VAMC results in a geographic barrier to the most effective contraceptive options for women Veterans. The VHA is uniquely positioned to leverage its rural and homeless healthcare expertise to address geographic barriers and integrate comprehensive contraceptive services into established programs for high-risk Veterans.

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