Report Examines How State and National Policies Affect Access to Reproductive Health Care for Low-Income Women in Five Communities

As policy debates over the future of access to reproductive and sexual health services heat up at the national and state levels, a new KFF report examines how these policies have played out in five communities across the United States.

Earlier this year KFF, working with Health Management Associates, conducted interviews with local clinicians, social service providers, community-based organizations, researchers, and health care advocates as well as a focus group with low-income women in five different communities: Selma and Dallas County, AL; Tulare County, CA; St. Louis, MO; Crow Tribal Reservation, MT; and Erie County, PA. Based on the interviews and the focus groups, the study identifies themes that cut across all five “medically underserved” communities, but play out in different ways depending on the policy, political, and social environments in each place:

In addition to an executive summary report, KFF has also published case study briefs that detail the findings in each of the five communities. A briefing will be held today featuring a panel discussion with health leaders from each of the communities. A recording of the briefing will be posted on kff.org.

Contact

Nikki Lanshaw
nlanshaw@kff.org
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