Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters (Dec 2022)

“I don’t regret it at all. It’s just I wish the process had a bit more humanity to it … a bit more holistic”: a qualitative, community-led medication abortion study with Black and Latinx Women in Georgia, USA

  • Elizabeth A. Mosley,
  • Sequoia Ayala,
  • Zainab Jah,
  • Tiffany Hailstorks,
  • Indya Hairston,
  • Whitney S. Rice,
  • Natalie Hernandez,
  • Kwajelyn Jackson,
  • Marieh Scales,
  • Mariana Gutierrez,
  • Bria Goode,
  • Sofia Filippa,
  • Shani Strader,
  • Mariana Umbria,
  • Autumn Watson,
  • Joya Faruque,
  • Adeola Raji,
  • Janae Dunkley,
  • Peyton Rogers,
  • Celeste Ellison,
  • Kheyanna Suarez,
  • Dázon Dixon Diallo,
  • Kelli S. Hall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/26410397.2022.2129686
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Traditional family planning research has excluded Black and Latinx leaders, and little is known about medication abortion (MA) among racial/ethnic minorities, although it is an increasingly vital reproductive health service, particularly after the fall of Roe v. Wade. Reproductive justice (RJ) community-based organisation (CBO) SisterLove led a study on Black and Latinx women’s MA perceptions and experiences in Georgia. From April 2019 to December 2020, we conducted key informant interviews with 20 abortion providers and CBO leaders and 32 in-depth interviews and 6 focus groups (n = 30) with Black and Latinx women. We analysed data thematically using a team-based, iterative approach of coding, memo-ing, and discussion. Participants described multilevel barriers to and strategies for MA access, wishing that “the process had a bit more humanity … [it] should be more holistic.” Barriers included (1) sociocultural factors (intersectional oppression, intersectional stigma, and medical experimentation); (2) national and state policies; (3) clinic- and provider-related factors (lack of diverse clinic staff, long waiting times); and (4) individual-level factors (lack of knowledge and social support). Suggested solutions included (1) social media campaigns and story-sharing; (2) RJ-based policy advocacy; (3) diversifying clinic staff, offering flexible scheduling and fees, community integration of abortion, and RJ abortion funds; and (4) social support (including abortion doulas) and comprehensive sex education. Findings suggest that equitable MA access for Black and Latinx communities in the post-Roe era will require multi-level intervention, informed by community-led evidence production; holistic, de-medicalised, and human rights-based care models; and intersectional RJ policy advocacy.

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