This study discusses factors related to the state's First Steps program, family planning efforts, economic indicators, all of which led to reductions in infant mortality, low birth weight babies, and an improvement in access to prenatal care in the 1990s and early 2000s. Findings suggest that impacting community values and personal/individual behavior regarding use of effective birth control measures is a complex undertaking. Success requires many strategies. Despite efforts to decrease the numbers of unintended pregnancies, dramatic changes in Washington's economic climate created a radically different environment for assessing the impact of program effectiveness. Authors find that Washington's family planning efforts are well positioned. Given the economic changes that have occurred over the past three years, it is likely that the pregnancy caseload growth would have been even greater, had certain family planning efforts not been in place.
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Related Publications:
- County Profiles, Birth and Unintended Pregnancy Statistics 1990 to 2002 (9.70)
- County Profiles, Birth and Unintended Pregnancy Statistics 1990 to 2006 (9.91)
- County Profiles, Birth and Unintended Pregnancy Statistics 1991 to 1994 (9.58)
- County Profiles, Birth and Unintended Pregnancy Statistics 1991 to 1996 (7.96)
- County Profiles, Birth and Unintended Pregnancy Statistics, 1991 to 1998 (9.59)
- County Profiles, Birth Statistics and Maternity Care Access 2000 to 2008 (9.98)
- CSO Profiles, Birth and Unintended Pregnancy Statistics for Community Services Offices, 1990 to 1997 (9.56)
- Evaluation of the Health Care Authority’s First Steps Maternity Support Services Program in Washington State (7.122)
- Family Planning in Washington State Community Services Offices: Challenges and Strategies (9.57)
- First Steps Database - Postpartum Family Planning Services (9.60)
- First Steps Database - Unintended Pregnancy (9.55)
- First Steps Database: Birth Rates after Welfare Reform (9.61)
- First Steps Database: Infant Mortality and SIDS (9.81)
- Improving Women’s Access to Long-Acting Reversible Contraception: Role of Medicaid Reimbursement Policy Change (13.04)
- Infant Mortality and SIDS/SUID (9.101)
- Pregnant and Parenting Youth in Foster Care in Washington State: Comparison to Other Teens and Young Women who Gave Birth (11.202)
- Prior Gestational Age and Subsequent Risk for Preterm Birth among Washington State Women (9.118)
- The Effect of Dispensing One-Year Supply of Oral Contraceptive Pills- Findings from Washington State (7.113)
- The First Steps Program: 1989-1997 (7.99)
- Unintended Pregnancy and Family Planning (9.54)
- Use of Effective Contraceptive Methods by Women on Medicaid in Washington State (7.119)