Angela Hooton,
Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund
05/27/2005
While our country remains polarized over the pro-choice/pro-life
debate, and the political climate becomes increasingly hostile to
reproductive rights, Latinas continue to face basic health care
challenges that affect their reproductive health. For Latinas, whose
choices have been constrained by discriminatory policies and a high
rate of poverty, the fight for reproductive justice has never been
simply a matter of choice.
The long and tragic history of forced and coercive sterilization
of Latinas in the United States and on the island of Puerto Rico
demonstrates how Latinas have been prevented from fulfilling their
reproductive choice to bear children.
Thousands of Latinas, specifically Puerto Rican and Mexican-American
women, suffered from forced or coercive sterilization during the
1960s and 1970s. Many of these women were sterilized in public hospitals
immediately following childbirth without their knowledge or fully-informed
consent.
Other Latinas were coercively sterilized during this time as a condition
to receiving probation or welfare benefits. Although forced sterilization
has been largely eliminated thanks to the work of activists in the
1970s, including the pioneer Latina reproductive rights activist
Dr. Helen Rodriguez-Trias, current family cap laws raise similar
reproductive control concerns for the growing Latina welfare population.
Latinas have been constrained in their ability to prevent or terminate
unwanted pregnancies because of financial barriers and restrictive
state and federal laws.
Many states have similar laws that deny funding for abortion, even
in cases of medical necessity. At the same time, federal and state
governments are limiting funding for family planning clinics, which
provide essential pregnancy prevention and reproductive health services.
These restrictive funding policies, as well as state laws that require
women to wait 24 or 48 hours and minors to obtain parental consent
before undergoing an abortion, affect the reproductive choices of
Latinas, especially those who live in rural areas.
While abortion laws place significant constraints on Latinas’
ability to exercise our reproductive rights, many of the disparities
that Latinas suffer stem from an inability to access basic reproductive
health care services. For example, lack of health insurance prevents
many Latinas from receiving essential reproductive health care,
including sexually transmitted infections (STIs) testing and prenatal
care, and it reduces the likelihood of routine check-ups. Latinas
have the highest uninsured rate of any racial or ethnic group, with
over one-third (37 percent) currently uninsured.
Welfare laws that have been tied to immigration status also affect
the reproductive health of immigrant Latinas by limiting access
to health care programs. Under federal law, legal immigrants who
have arrived after 1996 do not have access to federal public health
care programs for their first five years in the United States. Undocumented
immigrants only have access to emergency care, which does not include
prenatal care. Language barriers also pose a significant problem
in accessing reproductive health care for the many immigrant and
non-immigrant Latinas who are limited English proficient.
Finally, religious beliefs, social customs, and the lack of accurate
and comprehensive sex education at home and in school affect how
well Latinas are able to prevent unintended pregnancies and access
the services and information they need to make healthy decisions.
The result of these compounding obstacles is that Latinas have worse
reproductive health outcomes than other groups. For example, Latinas
have the highest teen pregnancy birth rate of any racial or ethnic
group, and we also have higher rates of cervical cancer, STIs and
HIV infection than white women. In addition, at least 28 percent
of Latinas do not receive prenatal care during their first trimester.
Recognizing the importance of addressing the range of problems that
affect Latinas’ reproductive health, Latina reproductive rights
activists are currently mobilizing a new, national reproductive
rights movement that centers on Latinas’ unique reproductive
health issues. We are fighting for reproductive rights from a broad
social justice framework, acknowledging that one’s reproductive
health status is profoundly affected by the intersectionality of
identities, such as race, ethnicity, social class and immigration
status. As our health disparities continue to grow, Latinos must
voice our concerns to ensure the health and well-being of our communities.
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