Improving Health in Incarcerated Women
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Abstract
Whereas, research often uses gendered language such as “women” or “woman” to describe patients; however, the authors of this resolution recognize that individuals of all gender identities can become pregnant; and Whereas, between 1980 and 2020, the number of incarcerated women in federal and state prisons and county jails has increased by more than 475%; and Whereas, though more men are incarcerated than women, the rate of growth for incarceration of women has been twice that of men since 1980; and Whereas, the imprisonment rate for Black women was 1.7 times the rate of imprisonment for White women, and the rate of imprisonment for Latinx women was 1.3 times the rate of White women in 2020; and Whereas, in 2020, Indiana had the 12th highest female imprisonment rate nationally, at 64 per 100,000, while the national average was 42 per 100,000; and Whereas, the number of women incarcerated in Indiana’s jails has increased more than 25-fold from 1970 to 2015, while the number of women in Indiana prisons has increased more than 19-fold from 1978 to 2017; and Whereas, a 1999 report by the Federal Bureau of Justice Statistics, which is the most recent report to study abuse prior to incarceration, found that 57% of women in state facilities had experienced sexual or physical abuse prior to their incarceration; and Whereas, the link between domestic violence and incarceration of women is evidenced by the fact that the crimes for which women are incarcerated are often directly related to domestic abuse; and Whereas, a 2008 report from the Bureau of Justice found 4% of state and 3% of federal inmates to be pregnant at the time of admission, while only 54% received some type of prenatal care; and Whereas, Indiana does not provide screening and treatment for high-risk pregnancies and only recently passed legislation to limit the use of restraints; and Whereas, a 2016-2017 survey conducted by the Pregnancy in Prison Statistics Project found 3.8% of newly admitted women and 0.6% of all women were pregnant in December 2016, with 92% of these pregnancies resulting in live births, meaning that policymakers and public health practitioners can optimize outcomes for incarcerated pregnant women and their newborns; and Whereas, a 2008 report from the Bureau of Justice found a statistically significant difference between reported specific medical problems among females (57% in state prisons, 52% in federal prisons) compared to their male counterparts (43% in state prisons, 36% in federal prisons), with arthritis, asthma, and hypertension being the most commonly reported problems; and Whereas, three fourths of incarcerated women are of childbearing age (18-44 years old), and therefore are still menstruating but must pay for their own feminine hygiene products if they do not have the means to afford necessary hygiene products; and Whereas, the AMA (H-525.974) recognizes the financial burden of feminine hygiene products, classifies them as medical necessities, and advocates they be provided free of charge to all incarcerated women; and Whereas, women have specific health needs, including reproductive, gynecologic, and prenatal care, trauma- informed mental health care, and substance abuse care; and Whereas, prisons remain ill-equipped to provide adequate mental and physical healthcare for women inmates; and Whereas, ISMA (RESOLUTION 15-31) advocates for improved health care of incarcerated individuals; therefore, be it 78 RESOLVED, that ISMA seek and support legislation that improves access to comprehensive reproductive and physical health care services to women throughout their incarceration from intake to re-entry into the community; and be it further, RESOLVED, that ISMA seek and support legislation that increases allocation of healthcare for women’s prisons within the Indiana Department of Corrections and local county jails in Indiana; and be it further, RESOLVED, that the ISMA adopt AMA H-525.974, as amended, as follows: AMA ISMA: (1) recognizes encourages the Internal Revenue Service to classify feminine hygiene products as medical necessities; (2) will work with federal, local, state, and specialty medical societies, and other relevant stakeholders to advocate for the removal of barriers to feminine hygiene products in state and local prisons and correctional institutions to ensure incarcerated women be provided free of charge, the appropriate type and quantity of feminine hygiene products including tampons for their needs; and (3) encourages the American National Standards Institute, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, and other advocates and seeks legislation for the state to provide access to free, readily-available feminine hygiene products to all incarcerated women. relevant stakeholders to establish and enforce a standard of practice for providing free, readily available menstrual care products to meet the needs of workers.