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Social Determinants of Women’s Reproductive Health

Social Determinants of Women’s Reproductive Health. Wendy Hellerstedt, MPH, PhD Epidemiology, University of Minnesota. Inequities in Women’s Reproductive Health. May reflect gender inequity within race, age, etc. . U.S. Pregnancy, Childbearing and Abortion Statistics.

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Social Determinants of Women’s Reproductive Health

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  1. Social Determinants of Women’s Reproductive Health Wendy Hellerstedt, MPH, PhD Epidemiology, University of Minnesota

  2. Inequities in Women’s Reproductive Health • May reflect gender inequity within race, age, etc.

  3. U.S. Pregnancy, Childbearing and Abortion Statistics • Average of 3.2 pregnancies per woman • Average of 1.8 (57%) pregnancies result in wanted births • 85% of adolescent pregnancies are unintended • On average, black women (4.6) have more pregnancies than white women (2.7)

  4. Consequences of Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs) • Systemic infections • Infertility • Ectopic pregnancy • Spontaneous pregnancy loss • Preterm pregnancy risk

  5. Prevalence of STIs • Chlamydia: 322 cases/100,000 • HIV: 3750- new cases among women each year • Human papillomavirus (HPV): as many as 50% of young women infected • Bacterial vaginosis: perhaps 16% of pregnant women are affected • Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID): 175/100,000 women are hospitalized every year

  6. STI Rates • 2/3 of new cases are in persons 25 or younger • Black women have higher STI rates than white women • Low income women have higher STI rates than middle- and upper-income women

  7. AIDS and women • 4th leading cause of death for black women (ages 25-44) • AIDS rate for black females: 59/100,000 • AIDS rate for American Indians, Asians, and whites: 2-5/100,000

  8. Gender Roles and Health • Two sources of imbalance • Societal level – Historical and sociopolictial forces segregate power and ascribe social norms that maintain discriminatory roles • Institutional level – Imbalances maintained by social institutes via practices like unequal pay, discriminatory admissions or hiring, and degradation of individuals through the media

  9. Gender Imbalances and the Division of Labor • Allocation of women and men to certain occupations • Can occur in the workplace, family, social institutions

  10. Gender Imbalances & Employment • Women earn about 78 cents for every dollar earned by a man in a comparable position • Women represent: • 99% of secretaries • 97% of child care workers • 20% of lawyers • 25% of physicians

  11. Issues of Working Women • Child-care issues • Support systems for balancing multiple roles • Exposures that can effect pregnancy or fertility • Worksite-based prenatal and reproductive health counseling

  12. Work and Women’s Health • Good health • Many studies report work positively associated with self-esteem, perceived health, and physical functioning • Poor health factors • High-demand and low-control jobs • Lack of employment • Absence of family responsibilities • Time constraints • Conflicting responsibilities • Non –supportive work environments

  13. Household Structure & Income

  14. Gender Imbalances in Interpersonal Power • Individual's control over and vulnerability to environmental and behavioral risk affects health outcomes • Political institutions, language, etc. convey societal acceptance of gender inequalities in control and authority

  15. E.g., Domestic violence • Risks of domestic violence • Injury • Chronic pain • Disability • Substance use • Depression • Unintended pregnancy • Increased STI risk • Adverse pregnancy outcomes

  16. Violence and Pregnancy • Estimated that the prevalence of violence during pregnancy ranges from .9-20.1% • Violence may be more prevalent than diabetes

  17. Conclusion • Gender inequity affects women AND men • Importance to keep gender inequities in mind when providing reproductive health care for both men AND women

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