Planned Parenthood Sociology

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The sociological impact that Planned Parenthood has on the community and the lives of its clients is another aspect of the issue examined by scholars. Amanda Stevenson, Imelda Flores-Vazquez, Richard Allgeyer, Pete Schenkkan, and Joseph Potter (2016) conducted a study to evaluate how the defunding of Planned Parenthood in Texas impacted the society, specifically for the clients of the health center. In 2013, the state of Texas decided to exclude Planned Parenthood from being a state-funded replacement program. This resulted in the inability for Planned Parenthood to receive funding from companies like Medicaid. The scholars examined claims for contraceptives, a popular service provided by Planned Parenthood, from two years before and two years after the legislation. Specifically, they measured the rates of method provision, continuation, and the childbirth covered by Medicaid. …show more content…

The claims for long-acting, reversible contraceptives had a relative reduction rate of 35.5 percent and injectable contraceptives had a reduction rate of 31.1 percent (Stevenson, Flores-Vazquez, Allgeyer, Schenkkan, & Potter, 2016, p.853). The number of clients who returned for subsequent on-time contraceptive injections declined, as well. The scholars also determined that counties with Planned Parenthood affiliates had a relative increase of 27.1 percent, from the baseline, of the rate of childbirth covered by Medicaid. In response to the increase of Medicaid childbirths covered, the scholars concluded with

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