Literature DB >> 24807338

Adding injury to injury: ethical implications of the Medicaid sterilization consent regulations.

Benjamin P Brown1, Julie Chor.   

Abstract

The need for contraceptive and family planning services is often unmet, especially among lower-income women. However, the history of the provision of these services is fraught with coercion and mistrust: in 1979, in response to forced sterilization practices among doctors working with poor and minority populations, the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare imposed regulations on the informed consent process for Medicaid recipients requesting sterilization. The government mandated, among other requirements, a 30-day waiting period between consent and surgery and proscribed laboring women from providing consent. Initially intended to prevent the exploitation of poor women, these rules have instead become a barrier to many women receiving strongly desired, effective, permanent contraception. More critically, the regulations are ethically flawed: by preventing women from accessing needed family planning services, the Medicaid consent rules violate the standards of beneficence and nonmaleficence; by treating publically insured women differently from privately insured women, they fail the justice standard; and by placing constraints on women's free choice of contraceptive methods, they run afoul of the autonomy standard. The current federal sterilization consent regulations warrant revising. The new rules must simultaneously reduce barriers to tubal ligation while safeguarding the rights of women who have historically suffered mistreatment at the hands of the medical profession. These goals could best be obtained through a combined approach of improved clinician ethics education and a new standardized sterilization consent policy, which applies to all women and which abolishes the 30-day waiting period and the prohibition on obtaining consent in labor.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24807338     DOI: 10.1097/AOG.0000000000000265

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Obstet Gynecol        ISSN: 0029-7844            Impact factor:   7.661


  8 in total

1.  Desired Sterilization Procedure at the Time of Cesarean Delivery According to Insurance Status.

Authors:  Jane Morris; Mustafa Ascha; Barbara Wilkinson; Emily Verbus; Mary Montague; Brian M Mercer; Kavita Shah Arora
Journal:  Obstet Gynecol       Date:  2019-12       Impact factor: 7.661

2.  An updated assessment of postpartum sterilization fulfillment after vaginal delivery.

Authors:  Kristen K Wolfe; Machelle D Wilson; Melody Y Hou; Mitchell D Creinin
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2017-05-31       Impact factor: 3.375

3.  Female permanent contraception policies and occurrence at a sample of U.S. prisons and jails.

Authors:  Y Linda Pan; Lauren Beal; Kareen Espino; Carolyn B Sufrin
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2021-08-13       Impact factor: 3.375

4.  Variation in the interpretation and application of the Medicaid sterilization consent form among Medicaid officials.

Authors:  Colin B Russell; Neena Qasba; Megan L Evans; Angela Frankel; Kavita Shah Arora
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2022-01-14       Impact factor: 3.051

5.  Perceptions and practice of state Medicaid officials regarding informed consent for female sterilization.

Authors:  Heather Bouma-Johnston; Roselle Ponsaran; Kavita Shah Arora
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2020-07-30       Impact factor: 3.375

6.  Attitudes and beliefs of obstetricians-gynecologists regarding Medicaid postpartum sterilization - A qualitative study.

Authors:  Kavita Shah Arora; Roselle Ponsaran; Laura Morello; Leila Katabi; Rosemary T Behmer Hansen; Nikki Zite; Kari White
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2020-08-25       Impact factor: 3.375

7.  Variation by state in Medicaid sterilization policies for physician reimbursement.

Authors:  Heather Bouma-Johnston; Roselle Ponsaran; Kavita Shah Arora
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2020-12-28       Impact factor: 3.375

8.  Association between neighborhood disadvantage and fulfillment of desired postpartum sterilization.

Authors:  Kavita Shah Arora; Mustafa Ascha; Barbara Wilkinson; Emily Verbus; Mary Montague; Jane Morris; Douglas Einstadter
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2020-09-22       Impact factor: 4.135

  8 in total

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