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Silvia Henriquez

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Policies to Curb Latina Teen Pregnancies Have the Reverse Effect

Posted: 09/16/09 12:39 PM ET

Are the nation's efforts to curb Latina teen pregnancy actually making young Latinas more vulnerable?
Vanessa,* age 19, watched President Obama's recent education address to students while holding her infant son and sitting with her niece Liz,* age 13. A few weeks earlier Vanessa had become one of the growing number of Latina teen moms in the United States, surviving on her fiancé's minimum wage job at Target and temporarily postponing a college education. What are the country's leaders telling Vanessa about her socioeconomic future as a young mom? What are they telling Liz?

Vanessa's story is quite common: Latina teens give birth at a rate more than twice that of white teens. Latinos have a much lower high school and college graduate rate compared to white teens. The millions poured into programs aimed at curbing the Latina teen pregnancy rate and urging Latinos to pursue higher education have been largely ineffective. In fact, some of these campaigns may have inadvertently worsened the situation by misplacing blame and perpetuating bias. Instead of stigmatizing Vanessa, policy experts ought to be looking at the complex structural barriers that offer her starkly different choices than many of her teen counterparts.

Myths -- rather than realities -- have too often guided the public discourse about Latinas and pregnancy. Latina teens don't have sex more often than their white counterparts and most desire a college education. In addition, despite the demonization of immigrants in recent health care debates, most Latina teen moms are not immigrants. So what is underneath the startling pregnancy statistics?

Compared to white teens, Latina teens have higher pregnancy rates because they use birth control much less often and reject abortion much more often. Religion and family influence are very important factors, but for sexually active Latina teens these are not the only or even most relevant obstacles to birth control usage. For many Latinas, the top barriers to birth control usage are much more mundane: transportation, lack of health insurance or cash for health services, confusing and intimidating immigration regulation for households with a combination of citizens and non-citizens, and lack of guidance about available services. When teen pregnancy prevention programs and messages ignore these obstacles, Latinas become distanced from sex education efforts.

Sex education programs often tell teens that delaying parenthood until they finish high school and college will bring them some version of the American dream: a good job, economic security, family stability. The troubling reality is that for Latinas this promise comes true for only a limited few. Recent research confirms that Latina teen mothers have roughly the same socioeconomic circumstances at age 30 as those Latina teens who delay childbirth. The unfortunate reality is that access to college and the opportunities that emerge as a result is starkly different for Latina teens and white teens.

Latinas ought to be given the support they need to finish high school and attend college. But it's simply not enough to lecture Latina teens about prioritizing education; we must make real investments in tearing down barriers to educational opportunities and health care. We must find better ways to support young parents like Vanessa who wish to pursue college. Unfortunately too often the opposite happens. For example, legislation recently proposed to address teen pregnancy would have given a financial reward to college graduates who agreed to mentor youth living in poverty, but would not have provided additional resources to the young women. Shouldn't the youth living in poverty get the federal dollars to help them gain access to birth control and other resources that might give young women the power to plan their families the way they want them, rather than giving the money to college graduates?

Worsening this situation is the silly practice of one-size-fits-all messaging for all Latina teens. A thirteen-year-old sexually active teen poses very different concerns than a 19-year-old sexually active teen. In fact, about 44% of teen mothers are adults like Vanessa when they give birth -- 18 or 19 years old -- and they have needs that are different than those of young teens like Liz. Messages that treat teen pregnancy as an urgent health risk serve to stigmatize young adult mothers rather than empower teens to live healthy lives.

It may be politically expedient to treat high Latina teen pregnancy rates as the problem to be solved rather than the result of social inequities -- but it isn't likely to be effective. Many reproductive health advocates choose to focus narrowly on birth control messaging and avoid the related issues of immigration status, poverty, educational disparities and discrimination. But the result of this narrow vision has so far proved disastrous. Politicians need to get to the tough work of breaking down structural barriers to health care and education, and re-focus their efforts on giving young women the knowledge, access and power to plan their families in the ways that work best for them.

In a nutshell, if we can clamp down on the ways that Vanessa and Liz are stigmatized, and ramp up measures that expand access to education and health care, our entire society wins.

*Names have been changed to protect identities

 

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05:41 PM on 09/16/2009
I would like to request that the author cite the source from which she obtained the following information "recent research confirms that Latina teen mothers have roughly the same socioeconomic circumstances at age 30 as those Latina teens who delay childbirth." I am very interested in learning more about this and would appreciate having an opportunity to personally read and review the materials the author used to write her piece.
05:51 PM on 09/18/2009
all our resources are meticulously cited in our full report, which you can access here:

http://www.latinainstitute.org/documents/NLIRH-HealthyPregnancyWhitePaper9.11.09FINAL.pdf

thanks for reading!
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02:58 PM on 09/16/2009
getting pregnant isn't like catching the flu, there is a consciece act that the potential parent takes. I fail to see why it is my responsibility to pay for birth control for anyone other than me.
02:23 PM on 09/16/2009
While the author does a commendable job of calling attention to the problem, she fails to address it in any meaningful way. What are these "barriers to access" to healthcare and education that Latinas, specifically, endure? It seems to me that, institutionally, Latinas have as much access to education and health care as any other working class group. No one is stopping the Latina teens from patronizing Planned Parenthood or other similar services, nor are high schools barring them from attending classes based on either gender or ethnicity. Transportation? Condoms are available for a couple of bucks at every convenience store in the nation, and there are plenty of programs to give them away freely.

Which begs the question, if there are no specific institutional barriers to Latina teens to these services, then we must look to cultural, social and religious factors. Without delving into the fascinating world of Latino sexual culture, the strong bias against contraception within both the culture and the Roman Catholic Church is well known. So are the atavistic attitudes many undereducated working class Latino families have towards their daughters. The Federal government cannot change those patterns with legislation or government programs -- that's for the Latino community to do. Until there's a concerted effort on the part of the community to reject the idea that a Latina's only job after her sophomore year of high school is to attract a man and produce children, we're likely to see this trend continue indefinately.
06:23 PM on 09/18/2009
Latinas face a number of significant barriers to access to health care and education. Being able to get services in a language in which one feels comfortable is major concern for many Latinas, particularly Latina immigrants. Aside from this, however, there are many other barriers which are more insidious and complex. Even if there is not a "No Latinas Allowed" sign at, say, a Planned Parenthood clinic, a young woman might not feel welcome there for a variety of reasons: clinicians and/or attendants might be rude or discriminatory; she may not be able to afford the services; or she might be afraid to give identifying information for a variety of reasons, including fears around confidentiality or fears due to her immigration status. It is also important to note that women of color in general might have a very ambivalent relationship to birth control - birth control was tested (to harrowing effects) on our bodies, and there is an ongoing history of women of color experiencing contraceptive coercion, particularly with long-acting methods such as depo-provera and norplant. This is not distant history - it has been our grandmothers, our mothers, our sisters. It continues to happen today.
06:23 PM on 09/18/2009
Additionally, while high schools might not be barring Latinas specifically from their comprehensive sex-education classes, your mistake lies in the assumption that these classes are even offered. In fact, it is the states that teach abstinence-only in schools and have restrictive reproductive health policies that have the highest teen birth rates. Your skepticism about transportation as a barrier reflects a lack of consideration for Latinas who live in rural locations, who must sometimes drive miles to access the nearest drug store. Moreover, even urban Latinas might have trouble getting condoms - they are not, in fact, on every corner in every neighborhood, especially in particularly poor neighborhoods (maybe they are where you live - aren't you lucky!); and since condoms require the cooperation of men this might not be an ideal option for all women.

There are many institutional barriers to Latinas accessing all health care, and particularly reproductive health care, including racism, sexism and xenophobia. Strong biases against contraceptives and abortion exist strongly among white people as well - birth control is not a hot dinner-time topic for families of any race or ethnicity, and the conservative evangelical movement that is behind many policies that make access to reproductive health services increasingly difficult is predominantly white. Blaming culture ignores too many factors, is too easy, and is absolutely myopic.

For more information on this topic, please read our full report:
http://www.latinainstitute.org/documents/NLIRH-HealthyPregnancyWhitePaper9.11.09FINAL.pdf
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JuniperSunshine
Libertarian Homeschooling Mom
12:24 PM on 09/16/2009
The only one-size-fits-all message we hear is, "smart girls avoid motherhood like the plague- at any age before about 30." How ridiculous. We need to understand that there is nothing shocking about not wanting to spend $20,000 before becoming an at-home mother.
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JuniperSunshine
Libertarian Homeschooling Mom
12:20 PM on 09/16/2009
What's sad is that when a young couple marries and has a child after high school, it is now something to be mourned. Latino couples have MUCH higher marriage rates than other teen or young moms in this country. I find nothing shocking about young couples starting a family. I was married at 20, had my first child 18 months later, and have been happily married for over 7 years now. What's amazing to me is that we have gone from embracing young women who tenderly care for a new infant to denigrating them.

The PROBLEM here is that it's difficult for young families to earn a good living without many additional years of education. If you want to help them, encourage the development of job training programs that take from 6 months to 2 years. Available to BOTH men and women, married or single, of course. Young women have had babies at this age for about 2 million years. You think a little scorn is going to change that? Not everyone wants to be a single, childless career woman, a la Sex in the City.
06:25 PM on 09/18/2009
We absolutely agree, and we call for systems to be in place to support all families and all mothers.
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JuniperSunshine
Libertarian Homeschooling Mom
01:16 PM on 09/21/2009
Yes, birth control is no help to a family who want to have a baby! I bet that same family would love to get a loan for a job training program, though.