Abstract

Background: Incarceration is associated with negative sexual and reproductive health outcomes. We examined contraceptive needs among women incarcerated at a rural Appalachian jail with emphasis on pregnancy history, recent contraceptive use, and current and near-future contraceptive needs.Materials and Methods: A survey was administered to newly incarcerated women at a jail in Southwest Virginia. It included questions about (1) prior pregnancies; (2) pregnancy intentions, contraceptive use, and sexual activity in the 3 months before jail; (3) unprotected sex in the 5 days before jail; (4) interest in contraceptive education and access during incarceration; and (5) post-release sexual activity, pregnancy, and contraceptive plans.Results: One hundred ninety-three women completed surveys. Analyses focused on the 95 at risk for pregnancy. Fifty-eight percent of prior pregnancies on which women provided intention information were unintended, with 74% of respondents reporting at least 1 such pregnancy. Ninety-four percent of women reported vaginal intercourse during the 3 months before jail. Only 46% of those who did not want to get pregnant reported consistent contraceptive use. Condoms and withdrawal were the most common methods used. Forty percent of women were eligible for emergency contraception (EC). Most (78%) participants anticipated sex with a man within 6 months of release, and most (63%) did not want to become pregnant within a year of release. Almost half (47%) expressed interest in receiving birth control while in jail.Conclusions: Results support the need to offer women EC on incarceration, family planning education during confinement, and effective birth control before release.

Highlights

  • Justice-involved women face inadequate access to health care before, during, and after incarceration,[1,2,3] and incarceration is associated with risky sexual behavior and poor sexual and reproductive health outcomes

  • We examined contraceptive needs among women incarcerated at a rural Appalachian jail with emphasis on pregnancy history, recent contraceptive use, and current and near-future contraceptive needs

  • Among the 94 women included in analyses who responded to demographic questions, ages ranged from 18 to 48 years (M = 28.4, SD = 6.2), with the majority White (n = 80, 85.1%), not Hispanic or Latina (n = 85, 95.5%a), not married (n = 67, 71.3%), and having at least completed high school or the General Educational Development (GED) test (n = 77, 81.9%)

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Summary

Introduction

Justice-involved women face inadequate access to health care before, during, and after incarceration,[1,2,3] and incarceration is associated with risky sexual behavior and poor sexual and reproductive health outcomes. Among the reproductive-aged women surveyed at Adult Correctional Institute in Rhode Island who reported not wanting to become pregnant, only 28% consistently used birth control in the 3 months before incarceration, and nearly 84% reported at least 1 previous unintended pregnancy.[4] Twenty-nine percent of women surveyed on intake at San Francisco County Jail had unprotected. Materials and Methods: A survey was administered to newly incarcerated women at a jail in Southwest Virginia. It included questions about (1) prior pregnancies; (2) pregnancy intentions, contraceptive use, and sexual activity in the 3 months before jail; (3) unprotected sex in the 5 days before jail; (4) interest in contraceptive education and access during incarceration; and (5) post-release sexual activity, pregnancy, and contraceptive plans. Conclusions: Results support the need to offer women EC on incarceration, family planning education during confinement, and effective birth control before release

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