http://ms.foundation.org/grants/grantees-in-the-news/latinas-and-the-high-cost-of-birth-control

Latinas and the High Cost of Birth Control [The Huffington Post]


10 August 2010

By Silvia Henriquez, Executive Director of National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health [Ms. Foundation grantee]

After Jersey Garcia welcomed her first baby earlier this year in a planned pregnancy, she was shocked to learn that, despite having health insurance through her employer, she couldn't afford to resume her birth control.

 

The IUD had been her reliable form of birth control for years, but she was told she must pay $800 in fees beyond what her health insurance covers. Switching to the birth control pill was also not affordable; the pill will cost her up to $480 per year in insurance co-payments. Both options are out of reach as she takes on the cost of a newborn. Jersey is reluctantly weighing one final option to access a reliable form of birth control: reveal private information on this deeply personal subject to a co-worker who is charged with submitting appeals to the insurance company.

 

As it stands, health care reform does nothing to minimize or eliminate these costly co-payments for birth control for working women. Women spend on average 30 years over their lifetime trying not to get pregnant. For women like Jersey, that could mean more than $15,000 in co-pays and related fees.

 

Despite health care reform, many Latinas are still without access to birth control even when they have health insurance. The country is mired in stigmatizing, sensationalized debates about Latinas and reproduction (Latina teens have twice the birth rate of white teens! Latinas are having babies so they can become citizens!). Yet scant attention is paid to the financial, regulatory and social barriers that stop many Latinas from accessing the birth control they seek.

 

Why is there more focus on stigmatizing Latinas and pregnancy than empowering Latinas to manage their fertility?

 

Just recently the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced new regulations for implementing health care reform and the Women's Health Amendment beginning in September. I was thrilled to see the new regulations will allow an estimated 31 million people with new insurance plans to access services that ensure a healthy pregnancy - including iron, hepatitis B screenings, well-baby and well-child visits.

 

Noticeably absent from the White House announcement was a determination as to whether the health care overhaul will offer birth control without co-payments and deductibles, a move that now could be years away. Also missing was recognition of the women most impacted by White House decision-making -- the voices of Latinas, immigrants and low-income women.

 

The National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health recently conducted focus groups among Latinas of Mexican origin in the Lower Rio Grande Valley in Texas. These women told us how they feel devalued by the fact that they qualify for health services when they are pregnant, but are largely ignored otherwise. As one woman put it when asked what she would need to maintain her health, she would need "to be able to get health care without being pregnant." Public health programs like Medicaid and Title X family planning services ban women without proof of legal residency status, and even make immigrants who can prove legal status wait five years for health care services like birth control.

 

The fact is: contraception is a critical component of both public health initiatives and women's health care.

 

Out of frustration that the Latina experience is stigmatized while the Latina voice is silenced, this week a coalition of Latina-focused organizations is sponsoring the Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice. Women like Jersey will be speaking out and inspiring others to action with their stories.

 

When health care reform passed, we were told that all men and women deserved access to affordable insurance coverage and preventative care. For millions of women, birth control, by definition, is prevention.

 

It's time for the White House to listen to these voices and deliver on that promise for women and their families.

[Source: The Huffington Post]

 

Latest Blog Postings
Ms. Foundation Launches Fellowship Program

31 January 2012

The Ms. Foundation is launching a new fellowship program!We’re seeking lead...

Call For Papers on "Social Justice Feminism"

26 January 2012

Anika Rahman, President and CEO of the Ms. Foundation for Women, will be th...

   

Massachusetts Citizens for Children created the Enough Abuse Campaign to address child sexual abuse through a statewide education and training effort. Learn more and view video

   

CAAAV organizes across diverse, low-wage, and poor Asian communities in New York City, to expose and struggle against violence with the goal of building community capacity to exercise self-determination. Building coalitions enables CAAAV to contribute to a unified strategy for a broader, multi-racial and multi-issue movement for social change. Learn more and view video

   

Domestic Workers United is an organization of Caribbean, Latina and African nannies, housekeepers, and elderly caregivers in New York, organizing for power, respect, fair labor standards and to help build a movement to end exploitation and oppression for all. Learn more and view video

   

SMART (Sisterhood Mobilized for AIDS Research and Treatment) University welcomes all women living with or affected by HIV/AIDS who are interested in getting control of their lives; willing to listen and be heard; and interested in learning how to better their health in order to live longer and healthier lives. Learn more and view video

   

2009 Ms. Foundation Women of Vision Awardee Naina Khanna, Director of Policy and Community Organizing at Women Organized to Respond to Life-Threatening Disease (WORLD), supports, educates and mobilizes women living with and affected by HIV/AIDS encouraging them to advocate for policy change that meets their unique and, often, unmet needs. Learn more and view video

   

2009 Ms. Foundation Women of Vision Awardee Gina Womack, Director and Co-Founder of Families and Friends of Louisiana's Incarcerated Children (FFLIC), is an impassioned community organizer dedicated to creating a better life for all of Louisiana's youth, especially those involved in or targeted by the juvenile justice system. Learn more and view video

   

2009 Ms. Foundation Women of Vision Awardee Kirbie Platero, a member and organizer at Young Women United, is a 19-year old activist, mother and artist working to secure reproductive justice for girls and women. She recently helped lead a successful campaign in New Mexico that brought young women of color to advocate before state officials for the implementation of comprehensive sexuality education in public schools. Learn more and view video

   

2008 Ms. Foundation Women of Vision Awardee Yunuen Rodriguez is an advocate for media justice, violence prevention and culture change that respects women and girls. She successfully led negotiations with a Chicago radio station to drop a sexually exploitative ad campaign and testified before the Federal Communications Commission... Learn more and view video

   

2008 Ms. Foundation Women of Vision Awardee Brenda Dardar Robichaux is the Principal Chief of the United Houma Nation and founder of the United Houma Nation Relief Fund. After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita devastated her tribe in Southeastern Louisiana, Robichaux mobilized to meet the immediate needs of the Houma Nation and established training in non-traditional jobs for women... Learn more and view video

   

2007 Ms. Foundation Women of Vision Awardee Ashley Nicole Tomlinson. After participating in Odyssey Youth Center's legislative lobby day trip on comprehensive sexuality education, Tomlinson became inspired to change her life and her community... Learn more and view video

   

2007 Ms. Foundation Women of Vision Awardee Ai-Jen Poo was Lead Organizer and Founder of Domestic Workers United where she worked to build the power of the New York domestic workforce... Learn more and view video

   

2007 Ms. Foundation Women of Vision Awardee Vanessa Johnson is co-founder of the National Women and AIDS Collective (NWAC) a coalition of Ms. Foundation grantees representing groups run by and for HIV-positive women and aiming to change policy at the national level. Learn more and view video

   

Demetra Tennison is the peer advocacy coordinator for the Women Rising Project -- an organization devoted to addressing the needs of women and children affected by HIV/AIDS. Hear about her rise to advocacy and her continued fight against stigma and fear. Learn more and view the slide show

 

   

Migrant Health Promotion works to make sure migrant farm workers throughout the US get access to health and health services, mobilizing migrant farm communities to fight for the services, resources, and rights they deserve. Learn more and view the slide show

   

StoryCorps -- the national storytelling organization -- joined the Atlanta 2010 Building Movements convening. Grantees shared stories of their work, lives and vision for a more just and safe world. Learn more and listen to the stories

   

2010 Marie C. Wilson Young Woman's Leadership Awardee, Jasmin Woodbury, was the youngest youth organizer to ever join Direct Action for Rights and Equality (DARE). In her time at DARE Jasmin elevated the voices of youth, spearheading a campaign to make the local school board and the superintendent pay attention to the root causes of high drop-out rates in public schools. Learn more and view the video

   

2010 Ms. Foundation Woman of Vision Awardee, Carol Burnett, is the founding executive director of the Mississippi Low-Income Child Care Initiative (MLICCI). Through her work at MLICCI Carol advocates for state policy reform and strengthens the capacity of child-care centers across Mississippi to deliver quality, affordable care. Learn more and view video

   

2010 Ms. Foundation Woman of Vision Awardee, Silvia Henriquez, is the executive director of the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health. Silvia envisions a world where "women and girls, Latinas, are able to make decisions about their health that are free from stigma, free from coercion, and that these decisions are respected and made with dignity.” Learn more and view video

   

Throughout our history, the Ms. Foundation for Women has been driven by the fundamental belief that the tough challenges we face as a nation cannot be solved without the full participation and leadership of women and girls in all aspects of society.
See how the Ms. Foundation and our grantees are helping to lead the way. Watch the Video

   

Hollaback! was started in 2005 to address the failure of public policy to combat street harassment. The organization harnesses the story-telling and sharing ability of new technologies in order to track, catalogue and report instances of street harassment. Ultimately, Hollaback! fights for a culture that does not allow street harassment to be the &"’price you pay’ for being a woman or for being gay." Learn more and view the video

   

The prevalence of sexual assault in our armed services is a national disgrace -- and Ms. Foundation grantee Service Women's Action Network (SWAN) is doing all it can to end to this epidemic. The following is the story of one Marine's story of sexual assault in the military, as told to us by her mother. Her abuse at the hands of her attacker -- and the military's response to it -- make it all too clear how important SWAN's work is. Learn more and view the video

   

In early 2011 the Ms. Foundation brought together two grantees, Sarita Gupta of our National Jobs with Justice and Attica Woodson Scott of Kentucky Jobs with Justice, for a conversation about KJwJ's recent victory in defeating harsh anti-immigrant legislation in the Bluegrass State -- and how legislating hate harms us all. Learn more and view the video

   

2011 Women of Vision awardee, Kathy Miller, is President of the Texas Freedom Network in Austin, TX. Under Kathy’s leadership, the Texas Freedom Network has made critical progress in the struggle to bring comprehensive sexual health education to one of the most conservative states in the nation. Read more and view the video.

   

As Coordinator of Kentucky Jobs with Justice in Louisville, KY, our 2011 Woman of Vision awardee, Attica Woodson Scott, demonstrates a fierce commitment to social justice and progressive change. With Attica at the helm, Kentucky Jobs with Justice has evolved into a broad-based coalition of community groups, faith-based organizations and labor unions united to promote, protect and improve the quality of life for all workers. Learn more and view the video.

   

2011 Marie C. Wilson Young Women's Leadership awardee, Priscilla Rorie, worked as the Youth Coordinator for Close to Home in Dorchester, MA. Through her work with CTH, Priscilla has inspired dozens of youth to speak out, share their stories, and break the vicious cycle of silence and shame that perpetuates domestic, sexual and community violence. Read more and view the video


 
Learn More About the Ms. Foundation's work on Reproductive Justice.


share ms.foundation.org:


Bookmark at Delicious Bookmark at Google Digg it Bookmark at Yahoo! Share on Facebook Tweet this Email This Page
Ms. Foundation for Women, 12 MetroTech Center, 26th Fl, Brooklyn, NY 11201 Telephone:(212) 742-2300|Fax: (212) 742-1653|Email: info@ms.foundation.org