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- Megha Shankar, Meagan Williams, and Adelaide Hearst McClintock.
- VA Palo Alto Health Care System Center for Innovation to Implementation (Ci2i), Menlo Park, CA, USA. meghs@stanford.edu.
- J Gen Intern Med. 2021 May 1; 36 (5): 1395-1399.
AbstractReproductive justice is the human right to maintain personal bodily autonomy, have children, not have children, and to parent children in safe and sustainable communities. Historically, marginalized individuals have experienced reproductive oppression in multiple forms. This oppression continues in modern times through health policy and patient-clinician communication. To combat this, the framework of reproductive justice outlines four key actions: analyzing power systems, addressing intersecting oppressions, centering the most marginalized, and joining together across issues and identities. Primary care clinicians have a unique role and responsibility to carry out these four key actions in order to provide patient centered reproductive care. To translate reproductive justice into clinical practice, clinicians care can use reflective practice, the framework of cultural humility, and the concepts from the explanatory model of illness.
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