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APHA Scientific Session and Event Listing |
Gregory Dorr, PhD, Center for the Study of Diversity in Science, Technology, and Medicine, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave, E51-185, Boston, MA 02139-4307, 617-253-4041, gdorr@MIT.EDU
In 1973, social workers in Montgomery, Alabama persuaded Minnie Relf, an illiterate African-American mother, to make her mark on a form. Believing she was authorizing “shots” for her daughters, Mrs. Relf was shocked when doctors sterilized her two youngest daughters, ages 14 and 12. The Southern Poverty Law Center helped the Relfs to file a federal lawsuit. Suddenly, women across the country complained that they, too, had been sterilized without informed consent. As sinister links to the Nixon Administration's population policy emerged, the Relf case spurred changes in federal health policy, ironically reducing poor women's access to sterilization, then and today the favored form of birth control.
Learning Objectives: The purpose is to provide historical analysis to remind of us past abuses and inform current work about reproductive rights. Organized by Alexandra M. Stern (who has previously presented on this topic in the Spirit of 1848 history session), the session will be introduced by Anne-Emanuelle Birn, from the Spirit of 1848 social history subcommittee, and will include presentations by
Keywords: Reproductive Health, African American
Presenting author's disclosure statement:
Any relevant financial relationships? No
Any institutionally-contracted trials related to this submission?
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.
The 135th APHA Annual Meeting & Exposition (November 3-7, 2007) of APHA