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General and reproductive healthcare experiences of formerly incarcerated women in the United States: a qualitative study

Sarah K. O’Connor (Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA)
Rachna Vanjani (Alameda Health System, Oakland, California, USA)
Rachel Cannon (Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA)
Mary Beth Dawson (Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA)
Rebecca Perkins (Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA)

International Journal of Prisoner Health

ISSN: 1744-9200

Article publication date: 19 May 2023

Issue publication date: 28 November 2023

256

Abstract

Purpose

The US prison population has recently reached an all-time high, with women representing the fastest growing subpopulation. Correctional health-care system in the USA remains fragmented and nonuniform in practice, particularly in women’s health care, with poor transitions between incarceration and release. This study aims to examine the qualitative health-care experiences of women while incarcerated and their transition into the community health-care setting. Additionally, this study also examined the experiences of a subset of women who were pregnant while incarcerated.

Design/methodology/approach

After obtaining institutional review board approval, adult, English-speaking women with a history of incarceration within the past 10 years were interviewed using a semi-structured interview tool. Interview transcripts were analyzed using inductive content analysis.

Findings

The authors completed 21 full interviews and identified six themes that were both the most significant and most novel: “feeling stigmatized and insignificant,” “care as punishment,” “delay in care,” “exceptions to the rule,” “fragmentation of care” and “obstetric trauma and resilience.”

Originality/value

Women face numerous barriers and hardships when accessing basic and reproductive health-care services while incarcerated. This hardship is particularly challenging for women with substance use disorders. The authors were able to describe for the first time, partially through their own words, novel challenges described by women interacting with incarceration health care. Community providers should understand these barriers and challenges so as to effectively reengage women in care upon release and improve the health-care status of this historically marginalized group.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding: Funding for participants was from internal, departmental funds.

Citation

O’Connor, S.K., Vanjani, R., Cannon, R., Dawson, M.B. and Perkins, R. (2023), "General and reproductive healthcare experiences of formerly incarcerated women in the United States: a qualitative study", International Journal of Prisoner Health, Vol. 19 No. 4, pp. 545-564. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPH-09-2021-0094

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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