More Than a Physical Burden: Women's Mental and Emotional Work in Preventing Pregnancy

被引:48
作者
Kimport, Katrina [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Adv New Stand Reprod Hlth, 1330 Broadway,Suite 1100, Oakland, CA 94612 USA
关键词
CONTRACEPTIVE USE; HEALTH BEHAVIOR; UNITED-STATES; STERILIZATION; VASECTOMY; GENDER; DISCONTINUATION; ACCEPTABILITY; EXPERIENCES; CONDOMS;
D O I
10.1080/00224499.2017.1311834
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
In the United States, responsibility for preventing pregnancy in heterosexual relationships disproportionately falls on women. While the biotechnological landscape of available methods may explain the assignment of the physical burden for contraception to women, this does not mean the concomitant time, attention, and stress that preventing pregnancy requires must also be primarily assumed by women. Building on work identifying health care providers as contributors to the construction of normative ideas about reproduction, this study analyzed 52 contraceptive counseling visits with women who reported they did not want future children for the construction of responsibility for the mental and emotional aspects of contraception. Offering a case of how gender inequality is (re)produced through clinical encounters, findings demonstrate that clinicians discursively constructed these responsibilities as women's and point to structural aspects of the visit itself that reify this unequal burden as normal. Results are consistent with research identifying the broader feminization of family health work in heterosexual relationships. To the extent that the distribution of the mental and emotional responsibilities of preventing pregnancy is both a product of and contributor to gender inequality, this analysis yields insight into the production-and possible deconstruction-of (reproductive) health care as a gendered social structure.
引用
收藏
页码:1096 / 1105
页数:10
相关论文
共 41 条
  • [1] MORE AND LESS THAN EQUAL: How Men Factor in the Reproductive Equation
    Almeling, Rene
    Waggoner, Miranda R.
    [J]. GENDER & SOCIETY, 2013, 27 (06) : 821 - 842
  • [2] Gendered Divisions of Fertility Work: Socioeconomic Predictors of Female Versus Male Sterilization
    Bertotti, Andrea M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY, 2013, 75 (01) : 13 - 25
  • [3] Boonstra H., 2006, ABORTION WOMENS LIVE
  • [4] Burt R.S., 2005, Brokerage and Closure: An Introduction to Social Capital
  • [5] What qualities of long-acting reversible contraception do women perceive as desirable or undesirable? A systematic review
    Coombe, Jacqueline
    Harris, Melissa L.
    Loxton, Deborah
    [J]. SEXUAL HEALTH, 2016, 13 (05) : 404 - 419
  • [6] Daniels C.R., 2006, Exposing men: The science and politics of male reproduction
  • [7] Disparities in Abortion Rates: A Public Health Approach
    Dehlendorf, Christine
    Harris, Lisa H.
    Weitz, Tracy A.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2013, 103 (10) : 1772 - 1779
  • [8] DeVault Marjorie., 1994, Feeding the Family: The Social Organization of Caring as Gendered Work
  • [9] Men's heightened risk of AIDS-related death: the legacy of gendered HIV testing and treatment strategies
    Dovel, Kathryn
    Yeatman, Sara
    Watkins, Susan
    Poulin, Michelle
    [J]. AIDS, 2015, 29 (10) : 1123 - 1125
  • [10] MEN BRING CONDOMS, WOMEN TAKE PILLS Men's and Women's Roles in Contraceptive Decision Making
    Fennell, Julie Lynn
    [J]. GENDER & SOCIETY, 2011, 25 (04) : 496 - 521