Poor Women, Powerful Men

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A01=Martha C Ward
adolescent pregnancy prevention
Altered Birth Rates
Author_Martha C Ward
Calcasieu Parish
Category=JBSF
Charity Hospital
Charity Hospital system
Cold Knife Conization
Contraceptive Usage
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eq_nobargain
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eq_society-politics
Family Planners
Family Planning Personnel
Family Planning Program
Family Planning Services
Family Planning Training
fiscal mismanagement
healthcare access inequality
IUD User
KAP
KAP Survey
Lincoln Parish
Louisiana family planning program history
maternal health disparities
medical-political establishment
Mobile Health Clinics
Model Cities Program
Neighborhood Health Clinics
Operating Room Experience
Orleans Parish
PCDCs
Pelvic Inflammatory Diseases
Postpartum Counseling
public health policy
reproductive justice
Septic Abortions
social determinants of health
Teen Agers
Tulane University Establishment
women's civil rights

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367299293
  • Weight: 320g
  • Dimensions: 157 x 241mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Poor Women, Powerful Men chronicles the achievements and subsequent failure of the Louisiana Family Health Foundation, the most extensive family planning program ever to operate in the United States. Martha C. Ward's even-handed account reveals the mechanisms—of politics, poverty, and public health policies—at work in the perpetual controversies surrounding reproductive rights and the delivery of health care services to the poor. Ward's book begins in the early 1960s when Louisiana was among the most underdeveloped states and ranked at the bottom of all scales measuring illiteracy, illegitimacy, and infant mortality. Despite the free statewide Charity Hospital system, many routine preventive medical and public health services were not available to poor women and their children, particularly if they were black. But in the mid-1960s, a visionary group of doctors and health care practitioners began to clear the hurdles erected by law, church, and the medical-political establishment. By 1970 they had set up the first statewide family planning program for poor people in the United States. The Louisiana experiment was a spectacular success. The Ford, Rockefeller, and Kellogg Foundations poured millions of dollars into the program. The Great Society and War on Poverty programs placed a high priority on the health of poor mothers and infants. With the help of the population lobby—including Planned Parenthood and the Agency for International Development—the Family Health Foundation moved into Latin America and other developing areas. But in 1974, the bubble burst. Accusations of fiscal mismanagement, fraudulent statistics, patronage, and political payoffs led to federal indictments and jail sentences for top officials. Poor women and powerful men, the black and white communities, and the liberal and conservative medical factions were pitted against each other. With the collapse of the program, methods for handling the epidemic of adolescent pregnancies and the high infant mortality rate reverted to the state bureaucracies. Poor Women, Powerful Men is the first book-length account of the Louisiana experiment. In a clear and dispassionate voice, Ward demonstrates that many of the questions raised by the experiment persist. Is family planning an answer to the cycle of poverty, teenage pregnancies, and infant mortality? How can the conflict between private and public delivery of medical care be resolved? Where do the reproductive rights of women fit into governmentally supported birth control programs? We seem no closer today to answering these questions than the Louisiana Family Health Foundation was more than a decade ago.

Martha C. Ward is professor of anthropology at the University of New Orleans. She has done extensive fieldwork in the U.S. Trust Territory of Micronesia on the relationship of social change and stress diseases and has published Them Children: A Study in Language Learning (1971), a book about black family structure and language in Louisiana.

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