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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Lopez
DATE TYPED 3/8/05
HB
SHORT TITLE Study Reproductive Health Care Disparities
SB SJM 94
ANALYST Collard
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
Moderate
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SB785, SB786, SB1067
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Alan Guttmacher Institute website
http://www.guttmacher.org/statecenter/new_mexico.html
New Mexico Selected Health Statistics
Medicaid Paid Births-How Are Newborns and Mothers Faring Under Medicaid
Responses Received From
Health Policy Commission (HPC)
Department of Health (DOH)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Joint Memorial 94 requests the Department of Health (DOH) to conduct a study of repro-
ductive health care disparities among racial, ethnic and socioeconomic groups within New Mex-
ico. The joint memorial specifies that
.
Minority women are in poorer health and use fewer health services than Caucasian women,
.
Minority women face significant barriers in reaching optimal health,
.
Minority women are less likely to receive prenatal care in the first trimester of pregnancy and
experience significantly higher maternal and infant mortality rates,
.
Minority women are disproportionately affected by sexually transmitted diseases, but receive
inadequate care,
.
Many low-income women face substantial barriers that prevent them from obtaining regular
pg_0002
Senate Joint Memorial 94 -- Page 2
and necessary medical attention,
.
Health disparities are commonly attributed to differences in income and access to medical
services, and
.
Minority and low-income women are not benefiting from the health improvement seen in the
general population, nor benefiting from reproductive health care service that could improve
health, longevity and quality of life.
The joint memorial also requests DOH to conduct a study of racial, ethnic and socioeconomic
disparities in reproductive health care in New Mexico. The joint memorial specifies the study
should include:
.
Examination of the disparities in use of, and access to, reproductive health services such as
family planning; abortion; treatment and prevention for sexually transmitted diseases, HIV
and AIDS; incidence of infant and maternal mortality, sexually transmitted diseases, HIV,
AIDS and diseases affecting the reproductive system.
.
Examination of the gaps in delivery of reproductive health services, including review of ser-
vices provided by state agencies to minority or low-income women, and identifying strate-
gies to eliminate gaps in service and disparities.
.
Identification of federal funds available from any federal source such as the National Insti-
tutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Health Resources
and Services Administration, that can be utilized to develop surveillance system or further re-
search.
The joint memorial requests a report to the interim legislative Health and Human Service Com-
mittee no later than October 2006, including findings, conclusions and recommendations.
Significant Issues
DOH indicates data showing the health disparities in family planning faced by minority women
in New Mexico are available in the 2004 DOH Family Planning Annual Report. These data
show the total number of clients seen by the Title X Family Planning Program stratified by race
and ethnicity. These data, as well as other data including birth and death, sexually transmitted
disease, and cancer screening could be further analyzed and reported to the interim legislative
health and human services committee no later than October 2006, as requested in the memorial.
FISCAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The joint memorial does not contain an appropriation to complete the study.
DOH indicates current staff could further analyze available data and provide the report requested
for DOH data. The assessment of all services provided by all state agencies to minority or low-
income women will involve coordination with other state agencies to obtain available data on
services provided.
RELATIONSHIP
Senate Joint Memorial 94 relates to Senate Bill 785 which studies cultural competence in health
care; Senate Bill 786 focusing on data on health care disparities; and Senate Bill 1067, which
creates a multicultural health office.
pg_0003
Senate Joint Memorial 94 -- Page 3
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
DOH notes a needs assessment conducted by the Family Planning Program using 2003 data es-
tablishes a need for family planning services reported according to Public Health District. This
chart shows the demand for family planning services that is not being met by Title X clinics,
Medicaid and Primary Health Clinics.
To estimate the demand for services, the number of women at risk was obtained from the Alan
Guttmacher Institute's (AGI) website which provides New Mexico data by county, age, race, and
poverty level for women in need of family planning services. The unmet need was determined
by subtracting the need met from the total demand for services estimated by AGI. AGI is con-
sidered the most reliable source of this information.
According to the National Center for Health Statistics, Black and Hispanic mothers in New Mex-
ico are less likely to receive prenatal care in the first trimester than are White non-Hispanic
mothers (Black 68.5 percent, Hispanics 66.4 percent, White non-Hispanic 76.8 percent).
White Hispanics, Blacks and Native Americans all exhibit higher infant death rates than do
White Hispanics for the combined 2000-2002 period.
DOH indicates program eligibility often depends on poverty status but public programs may not
include socio-economic status and usually do not include data on individuals not eligible for the
program. Consequently, data from two or more systems must be linked to provide data on par-
ticipants by program status. For example New Mexico Vital Records and Health Statistics has
worked with the Medical Services Division of the Human Services Department to link birth data
with Medicaid claims files for deliveries and newborns. The results of the most recent analysis
(1999-2000 births) indicate that Medicaid mothers tend to be younger, have fewer years of edu-
cation, have lower levels of prenatal care and are more likely to be Hispanic than are non-
Hispanic mothers.
HPC cites the following statistics from the National Association of Social Workers, Office of
Human Rights and International Affairs reported the following information in their December
2004 Health Disparities Practice Update (Reproductive Health Disparities for Women of Color):
Breast and Cervical Cancer Screening and Management
.
Mammography and Pap tests are underutilized by women with less than a high school educa-
tion, older women, women who live below the poverty level and women who are members of
certain racial and ethnic minorities.
.
Women of racial and ethnic minorities are less likely than White women to receive Pap tests.
.
Women of Vietnamese origin suffer from cervical cancer at nearly five times the rate of
White women. Alaskan Natives also have particularly high rates of cervical cancer.
District
Unmet Need
Unmet need as % of
District and NM Total
1
45,239
69.2%
2
5,559
33.2%
3
17,559
64.5%
4
4,767
26.3%
New Mexico 73,124
57.4%
pg_0004
Senate Joint Memorial 94 -- Page 4
.
Cervical cancer risk is high among Latinas, with incidence rates double those of Whites.
Cervical cancer mortality is also significantly higher among Latinas.
.
Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer deaths among African American Women,
exceeded only by lung cancer.
Infant Mortality
.
The infant mortality ratio for African Americans to Whites was 2.3 percent.
.
More than one-third of pregnant women who are African American, American Indian, Alas-
kan Native, Guamanian and Mexican American do not begin prenatal care during their first
trimester of pregnancy.
.
Per CDC, African American and Hispanic women were more than twice as likely to obtain
delayed or no prenatal care) compared to White women.
.
African American Women are four times as likely, and American Indian and Alaskan Native
women are nearly twice as likely, to die of pregnancy complications compared to White
women.
HIV/AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Diseases
.
African American women represent only 13 percent of the United States female population,
but accounted for nearly two-thirds of new AIDS cases reported among women (1999), Simi-
larly, Hispanics represent only 11 percent of the female population, but account for 18 per-
cent of new cases reported among women (1999).
.
HIV was the third leading cause of death for African American women ages 25-44 and the
fourth leading cause of death for Hispanic women.
.
African American, Asian American, Native American and Hispanic women all have higher
rates than White women for sexually transmitted diseases.
.
Gonorrhea rates among African Americans are more than 30 times higher than Whites, and
more than 11 times higher than Hispanics.
.
African American women’s chlamydia rate is almost 9 times the rate for White women,
while Native American women’s rate is more than 6 times the rate for white women.
The Health Disparities Practice Update goes on to report that women without insurance are more
likely to delay treatment, not fill prescriptions, and delay or forego important preventative care.
HPC research on the Intercultural Cancer Council (2001) indicates the council reported five rea-
sons for health care disparities:
.
Unequal socioeconomic status, leading to unequal availability, accessibility and use of health
services;
.
Unequal diagnostic workup and treatment;
.
Unequal scientific research, leading to unequal data collection and unequal understanding of
medical needs;
.
Social, racial and environmental injustice; and
.
Individual and institutional prejudices and discrimination.
New Mexico’s population is unique in that we are a “minority majority” state. In other words,
minority populations (added together) are the majority in New Mexico, while non-Hispanic
Whites are in the minority. Per the 2001 New Mexico Women’s Health Profile, non-Hispanic
Whites constitute nearly 39 percent of New Mexico’s female population, compared to only 10
percent of the United States female population. American Indian females constitute nearly 10
percent of New Mexico’s female population, while the United States figure is less than 1 percent.
pg_0005
Senate Joint Memorial 94 -- Page 5
Overall, less than 48 percent of New Mexico’s female population is non-Hispanic White, com-
pared to nearly 72 percent of the United States female population.
The New Mexico Women’s Health Profile goes on to state that New Mexico lags behind the
United States in receipt of prenatal care. Over 80 percent of births nationally were to women
beginning care in the first trimester. However, for New Mexico, only slightly more than 60 per-
cent of births were to women who began care in the first trimester. Interestingly, the percentage
of women receiving prenatal care in the first trimester was at the lowest percentage in 1998 for
the 1994-1998 time span, while the United States percentage was consistently improving.
KBC/sb