When doctors deny drugs: Sexism and contraception access in the medical field

Bioethics 31 (9):703-710 (2017)
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Abstract

Politicians, employers, courts, and health insurance companies are often discussed as problematically preventing access to birth control. However, doctors have more direct control over women's health and quietly have been much more effective at preventing patients' access to contraception. Obstetrician/Gynecologists routinely deny their patients access to contraception ostensibly in the name of health by withholding birth control until patients undergo yearly pap smears. I argue that those in the medical field are motivated by similarly sexist concerns as those in other major institutions in the United States, but that they are often overlooked in discussions of biomedical ethics. After providing background, I argue that using birth control as a bargaining chip to control patients is morally impermissible, is paternalistic, and is contrary to consent. I next argue that sexism explains, though does not justify, this practice. I discuss the medical harms of routine pap smears and withholding birth control. These claims make medical malpractice likely. Withholding birth control to coerce individuals seeking medical care is medical malpractice, paternalistic, violates autonomy, and is contrary to consent.

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Similar books and articles

Case studies in biomedical ethics: decision-making, principles, and cases.Robert M. Veatch - 2010 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Amy Marie Haddad & Dan C. English.
The Politics of Contraception: Birth Control in the Year 2001.J. Bury - 1982 - Journal of Medical Ethics 8 (4):208-209.
Medical Ethics.Robert M. Veatch - 1989 - Jones & Bartlett Publishers.

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Jill B. Delston
University of Missouri, St. Louis

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