This week the New York Times landed in the news in a way the paper probably wishes it had not. A reporter teased a story she was working on, and another outlet promptly published a link to said story before the New York Times did.
But the good news to come from the so-called media scoop is that the story probably got more coverage as a result, and that’s a great thing because the subject matter is incredibly important and should be read by everyone.
The story follows the life of a beautiful and brilliant homeless girl named Dasani. The piece is both inspiring and enraging. The principal at Dasani’s school says she has the capacity to become a Supreme Court Justice someday, which is what makes the countless obstacles she faces in her day-to-day life all the more infuriating to those of us reading and cheering her on.
The article profiles Dasani’s life at a Brooklyn, N.Y., homeless shelter, where she lives in a 520-square-foot room with her family, which includes her mother, stepfather and seven siblings. While her parents had some personal and legal problems in the past, including arrests for drugs, they come across in the article as loving and involved parents. They are married, which as I have previously written on The Root, indicates that Dasani will have some lifetime advantages over her peers raised by single parents. Yet Dasani will still face many disadvantages in life and her parents will, too. While Dasani’s parents are working hard to turn their lives around and save some money, they face an uphill climb because of the size of their family.
What makes the challenges that Dasani and her family face so frustrating is that there are no easy answers and no easy culprits to blame. For instance, there are those reading the story who will simply blame Dasani’s parents for some less-than-great choices they have made. But I couldn’t help being reminded of those who have done everything in their power to make it harder for low-income Americans to pursue one of the clearest routes out of poverty, and that is through effective family planning.
As previously covered on The Root, one of the most contentious debates regarding implementation of the Affordable Care Act involves requiring coverage of birth control, with no co-pay. Employers who claim to oppose birth control on religious grounds are challenging the measure all the way to the Supreme Court. But as I have previously noted, data consistently affirms a link between poverty and family planning. After releasing a landmark report on the connection between poverty and high fertility rates, the executive director of the UN Population Fund declared, “There is a vicious circle that links fertility with poverty.”
International studies have found children from smaller families tend to get better grades, are more likely to attend better schools and generally do better in life because their parents can invest more resources in them. According to the Guttmacher Institute, “Births resulting from unintended or closely spaced pregnancies are associated with adverse maternal and child health outcomes, such as delayed prenatal care, premature birth and negative physical and mental health effects for children.”
Here are a few more highlights from other data on the connection between family planning and poverty, as well as race:
- A Guttmacher study (pdf) found three out of four women making under $75,000 have delayed seeing a doctor for birth control because of cost.
- The rate of unintended pregnancy among poor women is more than five times the rate among high-income women.
- Poor women’s high rate of unintended pregnancy results in higher abortion rates (52 per 1,000) and unplanned births (66 per 1,000) than the rest of the population.
- In 2006, poor women had an unintended birth rate six times as high as that of higher-income women.
- Black women had the highest unintended pregnancy rate of any racial or ethnic groups. At 91 per 1,000 women aged 15-44, it was more than double that of non-Hispanic white women (36 per 1,000).
- A Planned Parenthood study found that 54 percent of young African-American women ages 18-34 have struggled with the cost of prescription birth control.