4.7 Article

Without any indication: stigma and a hidden curriculum within medical students' discussion of elective abortion

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Volume 214, Issue -, Pages 26-34

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.07.014

Keywords

United States; Abortion; Elective; Reproductive health; Medical education; Hidden curriculum; Stigma

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Pregnancy termination is a common, beneficial medical procedure, but abortion care in the United States is stigmatized. Language, including categorization of some abortions as elective, may both reflect and convey stigma. We present a history of the term elective in reference to abortion, followed by data demonstrating its use by a sample of contemporary medical trainees and an analysis of the term's relationship to abortion stigma, medical training, and patient access to abortion care. We analyzed interviews with 41 U.S. medical students who had applied to residency programs in obstetrics and gynecology. Participants discussed experiences with, and attitudes toward, abortion before and during medical school, and plans to perform abortions in future practice. We inductively coded participants' use of elective in reference to abortion and analyzed their meanings. Participants did not use elective according to its medical definition, which conveys an absence of urgency for surgery. Instead, elective identified a subset of abortions that lacked maternal or fetal medical indications. Elective negatively marked and isolated some abortions, and participants used the term to convey judgment about patients' social and reproductive histories. Participants saw medical and psychosocial indications as mutually exclusive, and became confused when interrelated factors influenced patients' abortion decisions. They ignored the voluntary nature of abortion in the setting of medical illness, sexual violence, or fetal complications, and accepted discrimination against women seeking abortion for psychosocial indications as normal and ethical. The term.:elective enables the creation and perpetuation of abortion stigma, and contributes to a hidden curriculum for abortion training in medical education that distracts from core content, incorportates social judgment of patients into medical practice, and promotes normative gender concepts. Our findings support calls to improve the language of abortion care to ensure policies and training environments are consistent with professional standards.

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