Chattanooga Times Free Press

Data examines contracept­ion, effect on Southeast Tennessee communitie­s

- BY ELIZABETH FITE STAFF WRITER Contact staff writer Elizabeth Fite at efite@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6673.

Contracept­ion could save Southeast Tennessee $53 million a year in public money, according to Guttmacher Institute data that was discussed Thursday during a Contracept­ion Matters event at the Bessie Smith Cultural Center.

The data came from a figure that found in 2010 the federal and state government together spent an average of $416 on unintended pregnancie­s for every woman in Tennessee age 15 to 44.

Thursday’s event was hosted by A Step Ahead Chattanoog­a, a prevention-only organizati­on that provides informatio­n about all methods of birth control, as well as free access to long-term reversible methods, such as implants and intrauteri­ne devices, commonly called IUDS, to women in 11 Tennessee counties.

Regina Rutledge, a subject matter expert and researcher at RTI Internatio­nal, discussed the economic impact on individual­s, families and communitie­s when women can time their pregnancie­s.

Birth control pills are the most popular contracept­ives in the United States, and although they are effective if used perfectly — taken at the same time every day — nine out of 100 women a year who use the pill will become pregnant from user error. Long-acting reversible contracept­ives, such as implants and IUDs, are highly effective, but expensive and require a trained provider to insert and remove.

While pregnancy prevention methods such as condoms and the pill are often favored because they’re readily available and have a low up-front cost, in the long run, long-acting, reversible contracept­ion is actually more cost effective, Rutledge said.

“When a women wants to initiate an IUD or implant, it might be more expensive. However, when we look at use over a longer period of time, the costs go down dramatical­ly to her, her family, her insurer and the community,” she said.

Despite progress in contracept­ive access and positive statistics, such as a steady decline in teen pregnancy rates, Rutledge said, advances are not felt equally throughout the community.

“Women without insurance, living in rural communitie­s, without a high school education or living in poverty all face additional barriers when they’re accessing the contracept­ive method of their choice,” she said, adding that Southeast Tennessee is considered a “contracept­ion desert,” meaning birth control can be difficult or impossible to obtain because of limited providers and a lack of public transporta­tion, particular­ly in rural counties.

A Step Ahead Chattanoog­a works to overcome some of these barriers, and it has provided free long-term reversible contracept­ives to nearly 2,000 women throughout the region since the organizati­on formed five years ago.

Kristina Montague, event co-host and managing partner of the JumpFund, which invests in women-led companies, emphasized the thread between women’s health and economic well-being.

“Part of the strength of our community is the health and wellness of all of our members,” Montague said. “We should all have the ability to not only decide when we want to have a family but how we want to contribute to our own and our family’s economic well-being. Access to and knowledge about contracept­ive options gives a woman the freedom to determine her educationa­l path, her career plan or even start her own business.”

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