Baltimore Sun

Reproducti­ve health is grounded in human rights

- By Mishka Terplan Dr. Mishka Terplan (mishka.terplan@vcuhealth.org) is a professor in obstetrics and gynecology and psychiatry, and associate director in addiction medicine at Virginia Commonweal­th University.

As an obstetrici­an-gynecologi­st and addiction-medicine provider, I work in the intersecti­on of reproducti­ve and behavioral health. This is a neglected terrain in both public health and patient care.

Consider the current focus on neonatal abstinence syndrome within the current opioid crisis: Agreat deal of attention is paid to the withdrawal symptoms of newborns, yet the “upstream” reproducti­ve needs of women with opioid use disorder — specifical­ly family planning — often go ignored. This is precisely why federal Title X funding, which supports affordable birth control and reproducti­ve health care, is so important, as well as why a proposed gag rule that would limit the program’s services is so dangerous.

At its core, reproducti­ve health is grounded in human rights — specifical­ly the right to determine whether and when to have children. Modern contracept­ive technologi­es developed over the past 50 years provide the means for the realizatio­n of this right, but inequities in access to reproducti­ve health services abound. Unplanned birth rates differ by socio-economic status, primarily due to the fact that low-income women are less likely to use contracept­ion and less likely to have an abortion once pregnant.

Title X is the nation’s only program focused on leveling this public health playing field. It was born from a campaign pledge made by Richard Nixon, who vowed to specifical­ly address these inequities. "We can achieve the goal of providing adequate family planning services within the next five years to all those who want them but cannot afford them" Nixon said in the signing statement of this landmark legislatio­n. In the half century since, the Title X funding stream has been essential to ensuring the reproducti­ve liberty of lowincome and/or underinsur­ed Americans.

It is also an incredibly useful public health tool — especially in response to the opioid crisis.

Most pregnancie­s among women with opioid use disorder are unplanned. This is not to say that these women won’t love their children or parent as well or poorly as women with planned pregnancie­s; it is just to say that at the time that they learned they were pregnant, pregnancy was not what they had in mind as their immediate life plan. This disparity in unplanned pregnancie­s between women with and without a substance use disorder is directly related to the availabili­ty of family planning services — as a large percentage of women with substance abuse disorder report no contracept­ive use and very few utilize highly effective methods such as implants or IUDs.

Title X has made possible innovative public health work, specifical­ly the Baltimore Reproducti­ve Health Initiative. In collaborat­ion with the local health department and funded by the Abell Foundation, we integrated reproducti­ve health services into substance use disorder treatment by establishi­ng family planning clinics within two addiction treatment programs, one residentia­l and one outpatient. We considered multiple different models, but in the end, the only viable and sustainabl­e means of providing essential reproducti­ve health care to women in addiction treatment was through the establishm­ent of clinics under the Title X umbrella. To date, over 600 women with substance use disorder have received a contracept­ive method of their choice through this program because of Title X.

There are other critical intersecti­ons between the opioid crisis and Title X, as well. Title X clinics are often the point of entry for care and often the only places where women and young people receive any preventive medicine services. Title X-funded health centers are therefore important sites for substance use assessment, and, as such, they enable early interventi­on to prevent the developmen­t of opioid misuse and addiction.

Another project I worked on in Baltimore integrated substance use screening into a family planning health center. We trained the staff on brief interventi­ons to reduce unhealthy drug and alcohol use and created linkages between family planning and local addiction treatment clinics. Within that one center, we uncovered a large, previously unrecogniz­ed and unmet need for behavioral health: Over 20 percent of patients used an illicit substance, and over 40 percent reported excessive alcohol consumptio­n. The Title X gag rule completely disregards opportunit­ies like this to address reproducti­ve health services and substance use, only to worsen existing gaps in care.

The opioid crisis reflects the failure of our fragmented health care system, specifical­ly the absence of behavioral health integratio­n. The continued segregatio­n of addiction medicine and the massive gulf between reproducti­ve and behavioral health hamstring our response.

A comprehens­ive response to the opioid crisis demands the thoughtful utilizatio­n of meaningful and evidence-based public health tools. This includes Title X. The proposed gag rule will widen disparitie­s, erode personal liberty and worsen the opioid crisis.

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