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Sterilization of Native American women

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In the 1960s and 1970s, the Indian Health Service (IHS) and collaborating physicians sustained a practice of performing sterilizations on Native American women, in many cases without the free and informed consent of their patients. In some cases, women were misled into believing that the sterilization procedure was reversible. In other cases, sterilization was performed without the adequate understanding and consent of the patient, including cases in which the procedure was performed on minors as young as 11 years old. A compounding factor was the tendency of doctors to recommend sterilization to poor and minority women in cases where they would not have done so to a wealthier white patient.[1] Other cases of abuse have been documented as well, including when health providers did not tell women they were going to be sterilized, or other forms of coercion including threatening to take away their welfare or healthcare.[2]

In 1976, a U.S. General Accountability Office (GAO) investigation found that four Indian Health Service areas were noncompliant with IHS policies regulating consent to sterilization.[3] Inadequate consent forms were a recurring problem; the most common form did not record whether the elements of informed consent had been presented to the patient or what they were told prior to obtaining consent, and physician misunderstanding of IHS regulations was widespread.[4] The investigation found that these four service areas sterilized 3,406 women between the years 1973 and 1976, including 36 cases where women under the age of 21 were sterilized despite a declared moratorium on these sterilizations.[5]

Limitations of the GAO investigation were quickly noted. Senator James Abourezk pointed out that while even 3,406 sterilizations would represent a startling proportion of Native American women, this number was the result of a report which examined only four out of twelve IHS areas.[6] Attempts to count the total number of sterilizations that happened during this period differ widely in their results. While the limited count by the GAO represents a minimum, studies have accused the IHS of sterilizing between 25-50% of Native American women from 1970 to 1976.[7] Should the highest estimate be accurate, up to 70,000 women may have been sterilized over the period. In comparison, the rate of sterilization for white women over the same period was approximately 15%.[2]

Types of sterilization

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Hysterectomies and tubal ligation were the two main sterilization methods used. A hysterectomy is a procedure used to sterilize women where the uterus is removed through the women's abdomen or vagina. This operation was routinely used to sterilize Native American women during the 1960s and 1970s in the United States.[8] Another common form of sterilization was tubal ligation, a sterilization procedure in which a woman's fallopian tubes are tied, blocked, or cut.[9] For many women these procedures were done without consent, resulting in some approaching doctors for procedures like "womb transplants".[10] In 1971, Dr. James Ryan stated that he favored hysterectomies over tubal ligations because "it's more of a challenge... and it's [a] good experience for the junior resident".[11] This is suggestive of the attitude IHS doctors had towards their patients, as hysterectomies have a much greater rate of complications.[6]

Some forms of birth control other than sterilization were sometimes used, including Depo-Provera and Norplant. Both of these are female contraceptives. The former entails receiving a shot every three months, whereas the latter, a form that is no longer used in the U.S., required the implantation of hormone-filled capsules beneath the skin.[12][13] Depo-Provera was used on intellectually disabled Native American women before it gained clearance from the FDA in 1992.[14] Norplant, promoted by the IHS, was marketed by Wyeth Pharmaceuticals (who were sued over insufficient disclosure of side effects including irregular menstrual bleeding, headaches, nausea and depression). Side effects of these two forms of birth control included the cessation of the menstrual cycle and excessive bleeding.[15]

Using 2002 data from the National Survey of Family Growth, the Urban Indian Health Institute found that among women using contraception, the most common methods used by urban American Indian and Alaskan Native women age 15–44 years were female sterilization (34%), oral contraceptive pills (21%), and male condoms (21%). However, among the urban Non-Hispanic Whites, the most common methods were oral contraceptive pills (36%), female sterilization (20%) and male condoms (18%).[16]

Today, although the Indian Health Service continues to use sterilization as a method of family planning, tubal ligation and vasectomy, which is a male sterilization procedure, are the only procedures which may be performed for the primary purpose of sterilization. Today legally, the IHS requires the patient to give informed consent to the operation, be 21 years of age or older, and not be institutionalized in a correctional or mental health facility.[17]

The history of forced sterilization in the United States

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Native American women were not the only individuals to be subjected to forced sterilizations; black and poor women were also affected by these practices.[18] The practice of eugenics stemmed from Francis Galton's writings on using genetics to improve the human race.[19][20] The eugenics movement became increasingly popular, and in 1907, Indiana was America's first state to enact a compulsory sterilization law.[20] The practice became normalized and over the next twenty years fifteen more states would enact similar laws.[20]

In 1927, the Supreme Court case Buck v. Bell upheld a compulsory sterilization law in Virginia. The case involved three generations of women from the Buck family: Emma, Carrie and Vivian. By examining multiple generations of women from the same family, advocates for eugenics hoped to convince the Court that Carrie Buck had intellectual deficiencies that were hereditary and a danger to public welfare; they succeeded, and she was sterilized. Oliver Wendell Holmes' decision stated, "it is better for all the world if instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime, or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind. The principle that sanctions compulsory vaccination is broad enough to cover cutting the Fallopian tubes."[20] The case had the effect of legitimizing existing sterilization laws, resulting in greater acceptance of the practice. During the 1960s and 70s as sterilization practices increased there was no legislation that prohibited it and it was seen as a viable form of contraception.[21][22][20]

In the 1974 case Relf v. Weinberger, a district court found that Department of Health and Human Services regulations on sterilization were "arbitrary and unreasonable" because they failed to adequately guarantee the consent of the patient.[17] This case was part of a growing awareness during the 1970s that abuse of sterilization procedures was becoming a serious problem. Among other facts revealed in the case, it was found that 100,000 to 150,000 people were sterilized every year using money from federally funded programs. Exposure from the case resulted in recognition that the poor and minorities were at risk of being targeted for sterilizations they did not consent to, and this led to the legal requirement that informed consent be received before the operation.[23]

The Indian Health Services

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The IHS logo

The Indian Health Services (IHS) is a government organization created in 1955 to help combat poor health and living conditions of Native Americans and Alaska Natives. The IHS still exists in the United States, and is a blend of various organizations created to combat specific health problems for Native American and Alaskan Natives.[17][24] The IHS's website states that "the IHS is the principal federal health care provider and health advocate for Indian people, and its goal is to raise their health status to the highest possible level. The IHS provides a comprehensive health service delivery system for approximately 2.2 million Native Americans and Alaska Natives who belong to 573 federally recognized tribes in 37 states."[24] In 1955, Congress had given IHS the responsibility of providing these health services, but at the time they did not have enough physicians to conduct safe and proper procedures. After raising the pay for physicians' wages, safety improved, and they began to provide birth control treatment which ultimately led to the practice of sterilization.[17]

Motivation for the practice of sterilization

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This was a pamphlet created by the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) to urge Native American women to have fewer children. The left shows how the parents would be before adopting promoted family planning practices (tired and with little resources) and afterwards (happy and wealthy).

Native American women were not the only individuals to be subjected to forced sterilizations; black and poor women were also affected by these practices.[18] In the 1970s, after being forced onto reservations by the United States government, or relocated into urban areas without adequate support, many Native Americans were struggling with poverty. Native American people depended on government organizations like the IHS, Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) and the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA).[20] The Indian Health Service (IHS) was their main health provider. Because Native Americans were dependent on these government organizations for health services, they were more at risk for forced sterilization than other groups.[20]

Six years after the passing of the Population Research Act of 1970, it is estimated that physicians sterilized perhaps 25% of Native American women of childbearing age. Evidence suggests that the numbers were higher. These high numbers could be linked to the law subsidizing sterilizations for patients who utilized Indian Health Service and Medicaid patients.[25]

Most of the physicians performing this procedure viewed sterilization as the best alternative for these women. They claimed it would improve their financial situation and their family's quality of life.[26] Many of these physicians believed that Native American women were not intelligent enough to use other methods of birth control, wrote Jane Lawrence in American Indian Quarterly.[27] Thus, sterilizing these patients was seen as the most reliable birth control method.[20][28] When doctors were polled on their recommendations to patients they received in private practice,[when?] only 6% recommended sterilization, while 14% would recommend it to those on welfare.[29] When they were asked about their attitudes regarding birth control policies,[when?] 94% said they would approve of compulsory sterilization for a mother on welfare with three or more children.[29] With fewer people applying for Medicaid and welfare, the federal government could decrease spending on welfare programs.[17] Poor women, the disabled, and the women of color were targeted for similar reasons. In addition, the influx of surgical procedures was seen as good training for physicians and as a practice for resident physicians.[11]

One theory suggests that IHS doctors were underpaid and overworked and they sterilized Native American women so they would have less work in the future.[30] The average new IHS recruit made $17,000 to $20,000 a year and worked around 60 hours per week.[31] In 1974 the ratio of doctors to patients was dangerously low, with "only one doctor to 1,700 reservation Indians."[20] The problems caused by a lack of doctors were exacerbated even further when a program to draft doctors into the military was terminated in 1976. This directly affected the IHS because they recruited many of their doctors from the military.[20][32] Between 1971 and 1974 applications for vacant IHS positions went from 700 to 100 applications, meaning that the burden of additional work fell on an ever decreasing number of doctors.[31][30]

One important distinction is between doctors who worked for the IHS directly and other doctors who performed sterilizations through a contractual arrangement with the IHS. For IHS doctors, there was no financial incentive to perform sterilizations,[20] and therefore other considerations likely played the primary role. Doctors under contract were paid more when they sterilized women instead of giving them oral contraceptives, making a financial incentive more plausible.[30] Even though there was no financial incentive for the IHS doctors to recommend sterilization, as previously discussed, sterilization was seen as the ideal form of contraception for Native American patients during the 1960s and 1970s.[22] IHS doctors had mostly Protestant and middle-class views of family planning, with an emphasis on a nuclear family containing a small number of children.[20] The presumption that Native American women desired the same family structure as middle class white Americans helped make sterilization abuse possible.[20]

Effects of sterilization on these women

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A direct effect of sterilization of Native American women was that the Native American birth rate decreased.[20] In 1970, the average birth rate of Native American women was 3.29, but it declined to 1.30 in 1980. The birthrate of Apache women fell from 4.01 to 1.78. In comparison, the average white woman birth rate fell from 2.42 to 2.14.[33] By some counts, at least 25% of Native American women between the ages of 15 and 44 were sterilized during the most intensive period.[7][25] Native women lost economic and political power by not being able to reproduce at the same rate as their white counterparts. One potential effect of this is the increased risk of extinction of Native American cultures.

The decline in birth rate was a quantifiable effect. But sterilization impacted many Native American women in non-quantifiable ways as well. Within Native American culture a woman's fertility is greatly valued, leading to psychological and social consequences from sterilization. For a woman to be unable to bear children would cause shame, embarrassment and possible condemnation from the individual's tribe due to how Native American peoples view motherhood.[20] In 1977, lawyer Michael Zavalla filed a case with Washington State after three Cheyenne women from Montana were sterilized without their consent.[20] However, the sterilized women remained anonymous because they feared tribal repercussions. As Marie Sanchez, Chief tribal judge for the Northern Cheyenne Reservation, explained, "even more discouraging than high legal bills is the risk of losing one's place in the Indian community, where sterilization has particular religious resonance."[20] In some areas, the sterilization procedure was insufficiently sterile, which led to complications. When complications arose, additional medical treatment was required, but government funding only covered the procedure itself. Because most women could not afford follow-up medical care, in many cases they did not receive it, and some died as a result.[20] Marie Sanchez equated the mass sterilization of Native Americans to genocide.[25]

Native American women and men do not fully trust the U.S. government due to forced sterilization, and remain skeptical of contraceptive technologies.[20]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Volscho, Thomas (2010). "Sterilization Racism and Pan-Ethnic Disparities of the Past Decade: The Continued Encroachment on Reproductive Rights". Wíčazo Ša Review. 25 (1): 17–31. doi:10.1353/wic.0.0053.
  2. ^ a b Ralstin-Lewis, D. Marie (2005). "The Continuing Struggle against Genocide: Indigenous Women's Reproductive Rights". Wíčazo Ša Review. 20 (2): 71–95. doi:10.1353/wic.2005.0012. JSTOR 4140251. S2CID 161217003.
  3. ^ "Investigation of Allegations Concerning Indian Health Service". U.S. GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE: A Century of Non-Partisan Fact-Based Work. November 4, 1976. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  4. ^ "Investigation of Allegations Concerning Indian Health Service" (PDF). Government Accountability Office. December 3, 2019. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  5. ^ "Native Voices". NLM.
  6. ^ a b Torpy, Sally J. (2000). "Native American Women and Coerced Sterilization". American Indian Culture and Research Journal. 24 (2): 1–22. doi:10.17953/aicr.24.2.7646013460646042. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  7. ^ a b Lawrence 2000, p. 410.
  8. ^ Kelly, Mary E. (1979). "Sterilization Abuse: A Proposed Regulatory Scheme". DePaul Law Review. 28 (3): 734. PMID 11661936.
  9. ^ Carpio, Myla (2004). "The Lost Generation: American Indian and Sterilization Abuse". Social Justice. 31 (4): 46. JSTOR 29768273.
  10. ^ Lawrence 2000, p. 400.
  11. ^ a b Peal, Tiesha. "The Continuing Sterilization of the Undesirables in America". Rutgers Race and the Law Review. 6 (1): 234.
  12. ^ "Depo-Provera | Birth Control Shot | Birth Control Injection". www.plannedparenthood.org. Retrieved 2021-10-12.
  13. ^ "Glossary of Sexual Health Terms | Planned Parenthood". www.plannedparenthood.org. Retrieved 2021-10-12.
  14. ^ Ralston-Lewis, D. Marie (2005). "The Continuing Struggle against Genocide: Indigenous Women's Reproductive Rights". Wíčazo Ša Review. 20 (1): 71–95. doi:10.1353/wic.2005.0012. JSTOR 4140251. S2CID 161217003.
  15. ^ Ralstin-Lewis, D. Marie (2005). "The Continuing Struggle against Genocide: Indigenous Women's Reproductive Rights". Wíčazo Ša Review. 20 (1): 86. doi:10.1353/wic.2005.0012. S2CID 161217003.
  16. ^ "Reproductive Health of Urban American Indian and Alaska Native Women: Examining Unintended Pregnancy, Contraception, Sexual History and Behavior, and Non-Voluntary Sexual Intercourse" (PDF). Urban Indian Health Institute. Urban Indian Health Institute, Seattle Indian Health Board. May 2010. p. 22. Retrieved Oct 11, 2021.
  17. ^ a b c d e Lawrence 2000.
  18. ^ a b Springer, Nieda (1976-03-27). "Sterilization-A Means of Social Manipulation". Sun Reporter.
  19. ^ Trombley, Stephen (1988). The Right to Reproduce: A History of Coercive Sterilization. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 978-0297792253.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Torpy, Sally J. (2000). "Native American Women and Coerced Sterilization". American Indian Culture and Research Journal. 24 (2): 1–22. doi:10.17953/aicr.24.2.7646013460646042. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  21. ^ Grosboll, Dick (1980). "Sterilization Abuse: Current State of the Law and Remedies for Abuse". Golden State University Law Review. 10 (3): 1149–1150. PMID 11649446.
  22. ^ a b Rothman, Sheila M. (February 1977). "Sterilizing the Poor". Society. 14 (2): 36–38. doi:10.1007/BF02695147. PMID 11661391. S2CID 42981702.
  23. ^ "Relf v. Weinberger". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 2019-10-10.
  24. ^ a b "Indian Health Services". U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. IHS. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  25. ^ a b c "A 1970 Law Led to the Mass Sterilization of Native American Women. That History Still Matters". Time. November 28, 2019. Archived from the original on April 26, 2022.
  26. ^ Carpio, Myla (2004). "The Lost Generation: American Indian and Sterilization Abuse". Social Justice. 31 (4): 50. JSTOR 29768273.
  27. ^ Blakemore, Erin (2016-08-25). "The Little-Known History of the Forced Sterilization of Native American Women". JSTOR Daily. Retrieved 2019-10-10.
  28. ^ McGarrah Jr., Robert (1979). "Voluntary Female Sterilization: Abuses, Risks and Guidelines". Hastings Center Report: Institute of Society, Ethics and Life Sciences. 9 (5): 5–7. doi:10.2307/3560699. JSTOR 3560699. PMID 4457503.
  29. ^ a b Jarrell, RH (1992). "Native American and Forced Sterilization, 1973-1976". Caduceus. 8 (3): 45–58. PMID 1295649.
  30. ^ a b c Rutecki, Gregory W. (2011). "Forced Sterilization of Native Americans: Later Twentieth Century Physician Cooperation with National Eugenic Policies?" (PDF). Ethics and Medicine. 27 (1): 33–41.
  31. ^ a b Hostetter, CL; Felsen, JD (1975). "Multiple variable motivators involved in the recruitment of physicians for the Indian Health Service". Rural Health. 90 (4): 319–324. PMC 1437733. PMID 808817.
  32. ^ "Shortage of Doctors and Money Poses Serious Indian Health Threat; Nixon Impounds Funds 4 out of 5 Years". Liberation New Service. July 6, 1974.
  33. ^ Lawrence 2000, p. 402-403.

Works cited

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