Women at Texas Community Colleges Aren’t Getting the Birth Control They Want
Austin Community College student Katran Packard聽said she was hoping not to get pregnant before her expected graduation in December.
“And now we’re having a baby in December,” said the business administration student and mother of two.
For Packard, 28, it’s been a battle to find effective聽birth control for the past several years. While living in Austin, she got聽聽shots 鈥 an effective form of birth control 鈥 at a Planned Parenthood clinic. After moving about聽80聽miles away聽to Caldwell in 2011, she was unable to continue the injections聽because the clinic was too far away and she could no longer afford them.听Instead,聽Packard said, she turned to condoms and the withdrawal method to avoid pregnancy.
Packard, who had her first baby after getting pregnant at 18,聽said financial barriers and a lack of access to clinics are barring her from getting the birth control she wants.听
She is not alone. A new聽聽from the聽聽at the University of Texas at Austin聽found that Texas community college women are using condoms and withdrawal even though they would prefer to use more effective methods like intrauterine devices, or IUDs,聽and birth control pills.听
鈥淲hat that tells us is that we could do a better job 鈥 we as in colleges, clinics 鈥 could be doing a better job in helping women to get the more effective methods they want to be using,鈥 said Kristine Hopkins, the lead author of the report, which surveyed more than 1,000 Texas community college women in fall 2014 and spring 2015.
The withdrawal method and condoms are some of the聽聽of birth control. A couple who uses the withdrawal method has a 22 percent chance of getting pregnant in a year; for condoms, it’s 18 percent. More effective methods include IUDs (.05 percent) and birth control implants (.2 percent).听
The report found that 38 percent of women surveyed had no health insurance. Nationwide, 13.5 percent of community college students and聽3.5聽percent of聽.
In 2011, GOP state leaders聽聽from state programs that supported family planning services,聽. These closures may partially explain why only 7聽percent of surveyed women cited Planned Parenthood as their source of care, the report said.听
The study also found that 59 percent of uninsured community college women do not have a usual source of care for reproductive health services. Among community college women with private health insurance, 27 percent did not have a source of care.
Hopkins called these numbers 鈥渟triking.” For sexually active women, getting聽services聽like birth control,聽Pap smears and聽testing for聽sexually transmitted infections is vital. But for many women, getting pregnant is the first time they come in contact with reproductive health services, Hopkins said.
While community college women聽seek out more effective birth control,聽they may not find it at their campus health center,聽the report said.听
For example,聽聽does not聽have doctors at its health clinics and does not聽provide prescriptions for medications like birth control. So nurses at the clinics refer students to outside doctors and clinics for IUDs and other birth control. Linda Skidmore is one of those nurses. She said some of her students can’t afford stronger birth control methods, or might not know how to find a doctor.
Skidmore provides students with condoms and encourages them to “make their own decisions” about the kind of birth control they want to use.听
By contrast, a nearby four-year university 鈥 the University of North Texas at Dallas 鈥 provides women鈥檚 health services at its Student Health and Wellness Center,聽, according to its website.
The report offered recommendations聽for聽colleges such as providing pregnancy prevention information at orientations聽or connecting students with family planning services for low-income women like the federal聽Title X grant聽program聽or the state鈥檚 family planning program 鈥 both of聽which serve uninsured and undocumented聽people.
鈥淐ommunity college students are attempting to improve their lives,鈥 Hopkins said. 鈥淎nd an unplanned pregnancy and an unplanned birth can really derail their educational goals.鈥
Disclosure: The University of Texas at Austin, the Texas State University System, Planned Parenthood and the Austin Community College District have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them聽.听
This article in the Texas Tribune.