Catholics to the Vatican: Put a Mitre on that Pope!
Catholics worldwide support changing the Church's position on condom use to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS. Catholics for A Free Choice, which commissioned the five country poll, released the findings today. The major discoveries include: - More than six in ten Catholics from all five countries say Catholic hospital that receive government funding should be required to provide condoms to prevent AIDS and HIV.
- In each of the five nations, Catholics see condom use for AIDS prevention as a prolife measure.
The studies found that in the United States, the Catholic Church is deeply out of step with the values of its laity on this issue. Sixty-three percent of American Catholics believe the Church position banning condom use for any reason, including as protection from HIV/AIDS, is wrong.
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Republican Presidential Candidates Announce a Bold New Plan for American Women: Do-it-Yourself Abortion
Any casual watcher of last night's Republican debate may have come away thinking that women don't have much at stake in this election. After all, of the questions CNN chose, less than a third were even from women. (Sadly even in cutting edge political forums, like the Daily Show, that's typical. In the last year, of the 140 guests of the Jon Stewart Show 13 have been women of which only 4 were not actresses.) The Democrats have Hillary as a candidate this year, which puts women front and center. For the Republicans, though, it's pretty much a choice between graying, gray or bald white men, all of whom seemed to nod in agreement on one breathtaking policy initiative for women that surfaced in last night's debate: the DIY abortion. The question from the "young lady" was: If abortion is outlawed then who is the criminal, woman, doctor, both? This has always been the sticky question for the anti-abortion side. Do they intend to start locking up people for murder? Fascinatingly, Fred Thompson, National Right to Life's endorsed candidate, said no. He suggested that some people will be able to perform abortions at any stage of pregnancy with no fear of prosecution: women on themselves. Thompson explained his (and one would figure, National Right to Life's,) bold new plan that would kick in once Roe is overturned: "The question is who get penalized and what should be the penalty. I think it should be fashioned along the same lines it is now. Most states have abortion laws that outlaw abortion after viability and it [the criminal penalty] goes to the doctor performing the abortion not the girl, the young girl, her parents, or whoever it might be. I think that same pattern needs to be followed." So, under this plan, a woman is free to perform abortions on herself, possibly with the help of her parents or "whoever it might be" as long as a physician or healthcare provider who is actually skilled to provide safe abortion care isn't involved. The last time the United States banned abortion – pre- Roe – doctors faced only minimal penalties for providing safe care. Apparently Thompson, and every GOP candidate except Giuliani appeared to agree, that was a mistake. The crime of abortion, if (and apparently only if) performed by a doctor, will be murder and extreme penalties will apply. Of course, the details will have to be worked out. Electric chair or lethal injection, that's still up for grabs. But it seems clear that the environment post-Roe will be harsher than pre-Roe. The clandestine network of safe abortion services that sprung up last time might not emerge this time. The risk for physicians would be too great. And so women who can't reach safe care will be much more likely than women before Roe to matters into their own hands, which apparently the Republicans don't mind. During last night's debate, there were some anti-abortion ideas dismissed as too preposterous. Will there be a "federal abortion police" force? Candidate Ron Paul seemed to think that would be too difficult. But it's not been too difficult for other "pro-lifer" wonderlands and so it's probably not exactly off the table as a possibility. In El Salvador, for example, they do use police. Actually they're called "Forensic Gynecologists," and they investigate possible crime scenes (aka: women's bodies) after a miscarriage because, of course, once abortion is illegal every miscarriage is suspect. The immediate past AG of Kansas, Phil Kline, attempted some version of this; seizing abortion patients records in an attempt to find misdeeds on the part of the physician. Given the pro-life movement's attempts to conflate abortion and contraception, with the cooperation of "pro-life" politicians, it's any wonder the scope the GOP has in mind. While Governor of Massachusetts, a bill that would have made emergency contraception (EC) more widely available came to Romney's desk. He vetoed it because, he believes, EC is an "abortive" drug. So, would Romney propose that doctors who dispense EC face the same criminal penalties as those providing what is traditionally known as abortion? In 2005, Geraldo Flores was a boyfriend of a desperate pregnant teen. Flores' girlfriend, believing she was unable to get a legal abortion in her state of Texas, asked him to strike her in the belly and cause a miscarriage. He did, and succeeded. He's now serving life in prison for doing it. Under the GOP plan, he would have to be a doctor to do that kind of time. --
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Experts Send Open Letter to Pelosi and Reid
Last week, leading experts in the field of adolescent sexual and reproductive health sent House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senator Harry Reid a letter raising serious concerns about the refunding of abstinence-only programs. The experts call for them to reconsider investing in these programs that have proven to fail. They identify key problems with abstinence-only education including the withholding of potentially life-saving information from youth; the lack of evidence of efficacy for federally-sponsored abstinence education; the programs undermine critical public health programs in the U.S. and abroad; and all of the major professional organizations promoting adolescent health have strongly criticized federal support for abstinence-only programs.
It's hard to imagine what it will take to end these destructive programs since no more can be said and no better group can come forward to say it. It's ironic that the extremist supporters of these ineffective and ideological campaigns are the same people who want to see Pelosi and Reid out of office. The following is the final say on the matter. Hopefully Pelosi and Reid will be moved by their plea and expertise. The letter is followed by the best research available on the subject (which the authors included in some cases with links.)
11/21/2007
Dear Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi and Senator Harry Reid:
As a group of leading scientists who have recently conducted research on adolescents, reproductive health, and abstinence-only education, we are writing to express our strong concern about increasing federal support for abstinence-only education (AOE) programs. This federal support includes monies going to states (Section 510 of the Social Security Act) and those going directly to community and faith-based organizations (the Community-Based Abstinence Education program). Recent reports in professional publications by the authors of this letter have highlighted multiple deficiencies in federal abstinence-only programs. As such, we are surprised and dismayed that the Congress is proposing to extend and even increase funding for these programs. In this letter we identify key problems with abstinence-only education. We also have attached recent scientific reports that are pertinent to the debate over these programs. We note that many of these studies have used nationally-representative data from surveys sponsored by the National Institutes of Health or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The federal programs promoting AOE have prompted multiple scientific and ethical critiques. These critiques were summarized in a January 2006 paper by Santelli, Ott and others. By design, abstinence programs restrict information about condoms and contraception — information that may be critical to protecting the health of young people and to preventing unplanned pregnancy, HIV infection, and infection with other sexually transmitted organisms. They ignore the health needs of sexually active youth and youth who are gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, and questioning for counseling, health care services, and risk reduction education. Withholding lifesaving information from young people is contrary to the standards of medical ethics and to many international human rights conventions. International treaties and human rights statements support the rights of adolescents to seek and receive information vital to their health. Governments have an obligation to provide accurate information to adolescents and adolescents have a right to expect health education provided in public schools to be scientifically accurate and complete.
Rigorous evaluations of AOE programs find little evidence of efficacy for federally-sponsored abstinence education. Several weeks ago Kirby, working with the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, released a comprehensive review of prevention programs for youth (Emerging Answers 2007). This review found that none of the well-designed evaluations of abstinence-only programs presented strong evidence of an impact on abstinence behaviors. (By contrast, Kirby finds clear evidence that many comprehensive sexuality education programs, which include information on both abstinence and contraception, do help young people delay initiation of intercourse.) The large-scale Mathematica evaluation of the Section 510 program (Trenholm et al 2007), released in April 2007, found no measurable impact on increasing abstinence or delaying sexual initiation among participating youth or on other behaviors such as condom use. This well funded and very well conducted evaluation examined four exemplary local programs, tracking youth over four years. One of the few measurable impacts of the programs was a decrease in adolescent confidence regarding the ability of condoms to prevent HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases. Similar results on program efficacy were found by Underhill, who reviewed abstinence-only programs in a spring 2007 systematic review.
Virginity pledging, one aspect of abstinence programming, appears to have little long-term benefit in preventing outcomes such as sexually transmitted infections, although prevention of these infections is a stated goal of the programs. A spring 2005 longitudinal study by Bruckner and Bearman found that abstinence pledgers, when compared to non-pledgers, experienced similar rates of sexually transmitted infection. Pledgers did delay sexual intercourse for a limited period, but when they did start having sex, they were less likely to use condoms. They were also less likely to seek reproductive health care compared to non-pledgers.
Abstinence until marriage is another stated goal of the federal program; however, evidence from the past several decades indicates that establishing abstinence until marriage as normative behavior would be a highly challenging policy goal. Teitler has shown that over the past 40 years, the median age at first intercourse has dropped (and stabilized) to age 17 in most developed countries. At the same time, the median age at marriage has risen dramatically. Today, sexual intercourse is almost universally initiated during adolescence worldwide. A January 2007 study by Finer found that almost all Americans initiate sexual intercourse before marriage. In fact by age 44, virtually everyone has experienced sexual intercourse but only 3% have remained abstinent until marriage. Moreover this is not a new trend; Finer’s data suggest this pattern has been true for much of the second half of the 20th century.
Importantly, the emphasis on abstinence-only programs and policies appears to be undermining critical public health programs in the U.S. and abroad, including comprehensive sexuality education and HIV prevention programs. During the period of increased state and federal emphasis on abstinence, declines have occurred in the percentage of teachers in U.S. public schools who teach about birth control and the number of students who report receiving such education. In December 2006, Lindberg and colleagues found that the percentage of teenagers who had received formal instruction about condoms and contraception declined from 89% in 1995 to 70% in 2002.
We also note that a December 2004 Congressional report on federal abstinence programs from the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Government Reform - Minority Staff found that 11 of the 13 most frequently used curricula contained false, misleading or distorted information about reproductive health — including inaccurate information about contraceptive effectiveness, purported health risks of abortion, and other scientific errors. Recent reviews of these abstinence curricula from Santelli and colleagues at Columbia University have found similar inaccuracies, particularly misinformation about the efficacy of condoms and contraception. This was the basis of an ACLU declaration on this topic from Santelli in the spring of this year.
Abstinence-only requirements also appear to be harming our foreign aid efforts. In April 2006, the U.S. Government Accountability Office issued a report titled “Spending Requirement Presents Challenges for Allocating Prevention Funding under the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief” that concluded that the “…requirement that country teams spend at least 33 percent of prevention funding appropriated pursuant to the act on abstinence-until-marriage programs has presented challenges to country teams’ ability to adhere to the PEPFAR sexual transmission strategy…[and] challenged their ability to integrate the components of the ABC model and respond to local needs, local epidemiology, and distinctive social and cultural patterns.”
We would note that all of the mainstream organizations of health professionals that focus on the health of young people have strongly criticized federal support for current abstinence programs. These include the American Public Health Association, the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Psychological Association, and the Society for Adolescent Medicine. We have also attached the weblinks to the policy statements from each of these groups.
The recent Congressional testimony of former Surgeon General Richard Carmona underscores these critiques from mainstream health organizations. Dr. Carmona’s testimony confirms the political motivations behind abstinence funding and the failure to address issues of efficacy and scientific accuracy. He suggested that ideology and theology have taken priority over women’s health in the current administration. Dr. Carmona reported that the Bush administration "did not want to hear the science but wanted to, if you will, ‘preach abstinence,’ which I felt was scientifically incorrect.”
Given these serious scientific and ethical shortcomings, we strongly urge the U.S. Congress to reconsider federal support for abstinence-only education programs and policies. We would be very willing to advise you on shaping alternatives to the current program.
Sincerely,
John S Santelli, MD, MPH, Columbia University Peter Bearman, PhD, Columbia University Claire Brindis, DrPH, University of California, San Francisco Hannah Bruckner, PhD, Yale University Lawrence B Finer, PhD, Guttmacher Institute Laura Duberstein Lindberg, PhD, Guttmacher Institute Mary Ott, MD, Indiana University Julien Teitler, PhD, Columbia University Deborah Tolman, EdD, San Francisco State University Kristen Underhill, DPhil, Yale University
(Organizational affiliations are listed for identification purposes only.)
Cc Senate and House Leadership and Appropriations Committees
List of papers (either attached as pdf files or with weblink) Bruckner H, Bearman PS. After the Promise: the STD consequences of adolescent virginity pledges. Journal of Adolescent Health 2005, 36, 271-278. Lindberg LD, Santelli JS, Singh S. Changes in Formal Sex Education: 1995 and 2002. Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health. 2006, 38, 82–189. Finer LB. Trends in Premarital Sex in the United States, 1954-2003. Public Health Reports 2007, 122, 73-78.
Kirby D. Emerging Answers, 2007. The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, Washington, DC, 2007. http://www.thenationalcampaign.org/EA2007/default.aspx Santelli JS. Declaration of John S. Santelli, MD, MPH, for the American Civil Liberties Union. Available at: http://www.aclu.org/reproductiverights/sexed/29486lgl20070426.html. Santelli JS, Ott MA, Lyon M, Rogers J, Summers D, Schleifer R. Abstinence and abstinence-only education: a review of U.S. policies and programs. Journal of Adolescent Health, 2006, 38, 72-81.
Teitler JO. Trends in youth sexual initiation and fertility in developed countries: 1960–1995. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 2002, 580, 134–152
Trenholm C, Devaney B, Fortson K, Quay L, Wheeler J, Clark M. Impacts of Four Title V, Section 510 Abstinence Education Programs, Final Report. Princeton, NJ: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.; April 2007. http://www.mathematica-mpr.com/publications/pdfs/impactabstinence.pdf
Underhill K, Montgomery P, Operario D. Sexual abstinence only programmes to prevent HIV infection in high-income countries: systematic review. British Medical Journal. 2007; 335: 248. U.S. Government Accountability Office. Global Health: Spending Requirement Presents Challenges for Allocating Prevention Funding under the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. Available at: http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d06395.pdf. U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Government Reform - Minority Staff. The Content of Federally Funded Abstinence-Only Education Programs, Prepared for Rep. Henry A. Waxman, December 2004. http://www.advocatesforyouth.org/publications/abstinenceonlycontent.pdf Position Papers from Leading Medical and Health Professional Organizations American Academy of Pediatrics: Committee on Psychosocial Aspects of Child and Family Health and Committee on Adolescence. (2001). Sexuality education for children and adolescents. Pediatrics, 108, 498-502. Available at: http://aappolicy.aappublications.org/cgi/reprint/pediatrics;108/2/498.pdf. American Medical Association. H-170.968 Sexuality Education, Abstinence, and Distribution of Condoms in Schools. Available at: http://www.ama-assn.org/apps/pf_new/pf_online?f_n=browse&doc=policyfiles/HnE/H-170.968.HTM. American Public Health Association. Abstinence and U.S. Abstinence-Only Education Policies: Ethical and Human Rights Concerns Policy Statement. Available at: http://www.apha.org/advocacy/policy/policysearch/.
Society for Adolescent Medicine. Abstinence-only education policies and programs: a position paper of the Society for Adolescent Medicine. Journal of Adolescent Health, 2006, 38, 83-87. Available at: https://www.adolescenthealth.org/PositionPaper_Abstinence_only_edu_policies_and_programs.pdf.
American Psychological Association. Ad Hoc Committee on Psychology and AIDS. Resolution In Favor of Empirically Supported Sex Education and HIV Prevention Programs for Adolescents: Resolution; 2005 February 18-20. Available at: http://www.apa.org/releases/sexed_resolution.pdf
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Thankful for New (and Surprising) Allies
This Thanksgiving we here at Birth Control Watch have much to be thankful for. Some of our sweetest gifts have come from the most unlikely of places. For example, two recent actions by Christian organizations offer encouraging signs that a more moderate and reasonable Christian (and truly pro-life) movement is afoot. The first sign is from Catholics United which has launched a campaign to out anti-child members of Congress who are masquerading as "pro-life" (more on that below). The second sign is from the magazine The Christian Century. This month the editors offer up a staggeringly logical idea in their editorial entitled "Preventing Abortion." So staggering, I've included it here in its entirety. They write, "People who have knowledge of and access to contraceptives tend to have fewer unwanted pregnancies and therefore fewer abortions. It's no accident that the world's lowest abortion rates are found in Belgium and the Netherlands, where contraception is widely available, or that the highest rates are in Cuba and Vietnam, where access is limited. If you really want to reduce the number of abortions, a logical place to begin is with the expansion of family planning programs.
That logic has been mostly ignored in the United States. A "Prevention First" bill, which would expand family planning and teen-pregnancy prevention programs, has been stalled for years in Congress. On teen pregnancy, the U.S. has for a decade focused on abstinence-only programs that encourage sexual abstinence and don't refer to contraceptive methods except to indicate their relative failure rates. From the start, health experts have doubted the effectiveness of these programs. This month the nonpartisan National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy reported that there is no evidence that abstinence-only programs "delay the initiation of sex, hasten the return to abstinence or reduce the number of sexual partners" among teens. Meanwhile, the report said, programs that educate teens about contraception while encouraging abstinence have been shown to have a positive effect on behavior.
Given this recent history, it is especially good news that Congress has put an extra $615 million in an appropriations bill to expand family planning and teen- pregnancy prevention programs as well as to improve access to health care for women and children and to fund child care. The measure, dubbed the "Reducing the Need for Abortion Initiative," is modest in financial terms. But if it does make it into law, it will represent a major step toward creating a "third way" on abortion—a way that offers practical help to women in preventing unplanned pregnancies and carrying their babies to term.
In describing the funding package to reporters, Representative Tim Ryan (D., Ohio), one of the sponsors, acknowledged that birth control has become the "fault line" in the search for a third way on abortion. But Ryan, himself a Catholic, said that "we can't run from the fact that if we do not provide birth control for women we're going to have an increasing number of abortions." He added that he doesn't think contraception is a radical idea. "This is mainstream stuff. Ninety-eight percent of women [in the U.S.] have used birth control."
Ryan is right: birth control is not controversial for the vast majority of Catholic or Protestant women. Providing education and consistent access to birth control is one of the best strategies for helping families and reducing the number of abortions. It's about time politicians recognized it." Another way to prevent abortion is to make caring for a child easier. Enter, Catholics United, a group formed to "promote the message of justice and the common good found at the heart of the Catholic Social Tradition." The group recently launched an ad campaign to out the 13 so-called "pro-life" members of Congress who voted against the SCHIP bill. SCHIP would provide high-quality health coverage to more than six million children whose families would otherwise be unable to afford insurance. James Salt, Catholics United organizing director, explained, "Apparently, some members of Congress think their responsibility to protect life ends at birth. To build a true culture of life, our nation must be willing to stand with women and children. Passing this legislation is one clear way we can do this." The following radio ads will air on local radio stations in the 13 Congressmember's districts. Rep. Ginny Brown-Waite, Florida Rep. Joseph Knollenberg, Michigan Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, Michigan Rep. Tim Walberg, Michigan Rep. Steve Chabot, Ohio Rep. Michele Bachmann, Minnesota Rep. Sam Graves, Missouri Rep. Thelma Drake, Virginia Rep. John Peterson, Pennsylvania Rep. Jim Marshall, Georgia Rep. Virgil Goode, Virginia Rep. Todd Tiahrt, Kansas Rep. Kenny Hulshof, Missouri Seems like the real pro-lifers may finally be surfacing and taking charge. For this we give thanks.
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Over Her Dead Body: Mitt Romney Lost a "Very Close" Relative to an Illegal Abortion. If He Becomes President, You Could Too.
In the 1960s, Mitt Romney lost a "dear" and "close" relative to an illegal abortion. She was the sister of his brother-in-law, Loren "Larry" Keenan, husband to Mitt's sister Lynn. By all accounts, her death "deeply impacted members of the family." Romney's sister Jane explained, "'She was a beautiful, talented young gal we all loved. And [her death] pretty much ruined the parents -- their only daughter. You would do anything not to repeat that." She, apparently "was very close" to Mitt personally and he too appeared moved by the loss explaining, it "obviously makes one see that regardless of one's beliefs about choice, that you would hope it would be safe and legal." During a debate with Senator Ted Kennedy in 1994, Romney pledged, "It is since that time my mother and my family have been committed to the belief that we can believe as we want, but we will not force our beliefs on others on that matter. And you will not see me wavering on that." She seems to have disappeared from his memory (as has his promise to not waiver.) There's no more " Weekend at Bernie's" political strategy, he no longer exhumes her body to serve as proof of his pro-choice credentials as he did routinely when running for Governor of Massachusetts. These days, he's promising to overturn Roe v Wade. Indeed, he seems eager to reinstate those laws that drove his close relative to fatally take matters into her own hands. Some imply that his pro-choice pledge may have always been a ruse. Ann Coulter explained, " He tricked liberals into voting for him. I like a guy who hoodwinks liberals so easily." Is it possible for a politician to stoop that low--using the tragic death of someone so close for political expediency? (And is it possible that, as Coulter would have it, we (not Romney) are the assholes for expecting more of him?) But here's worst part: the average American isn't paying any attention to what politicians like Romney say about reversing Roe. So here's the key political question: Is it a lie if no one hears it? The majority of the American public wants Roe v Wade to remain the law of the land ( 54% approve of Roe, while only 32% approve of the President). Most Americans also persistently believe Roe v Wade will never be overturned. What Romney and the rest of the GOP contenders say is white noise to most people. Throughout the bunker bombing Roe has withstood in the last few years, most Americans have been in a political stupor. They've missed the red flags, unaware of how close by a Roe reversal really is. They're the neighbors who, once the serial killer living next door is discovered, report that he seemed like a really nice guy, despite all that middle of the night digging in the backyard. The reason Roe won't be overturned, most Americans figure, is because it can't happen, not in this day and age. Recent national polls amplify this phenomenon. Lake Research Associates found that in states that have just passed bans on abortion (timed to go into effect the moment Roe is overturned), most residents think that the right to abortion in their state is safe. The majority of voters nationwide favor making changes in the law to increase protections for a woman's right to abortion. Meanwhile, over the last three years, 14 states have moved to immediately ban abortion and spark a direct Supreme Court challenge of Roe. The Center for Reproductive Rights' recently released an update of its " What if Roe Falls?" report. The Center found that since Justice O'Connor stepped down in 2005, there's been a 3.5 fold increase in the number of state legislative actions to immediately ban abortion. By the Center's estimate, 28 states are at risk of completely outlawing abortion if Roe is gone (19 of these states are at high risk). For some context, 400,000 women, mostly mothers, in these states had an abortion last year. According to anti-choice candidates' plans, they're the future dead close relatives of presidential candidates. The 2008 elections will decide if Roe falls, whether we believe it or not. We're now one Supreme Court justice away from an anti-Roe majority on the Court. Our strongest pro-choice justice, John Paul Stevens, is a vibrant 87. The next President will likely appoint two justices just as Bush did. Roe is in the crosshairs. For the one in three women who will seek an abortion in her lifetime, and everyone who loves her, it's time to start noticing, and mentioning, what the anti-Roe candidates are digging in their backyard.
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Virginia is for Lovers of Evidence-Based Results
Now, imagine you had over one billion dollars available to invest, signed up with a firm, invested it all based on its recommendations and a few years later had nothing to show for it. You'd probably not bring the firm any more business, safe to say the only thing you would be bringing is charges. Well, investing elsewhere may seem like common sense to you, the nearly exact same decision has prompted criticism of Governor Tim Kaine of Virginia. Governor Kaine decided he would no longer invest state funds, or accept federal funds, for abstinence-until-marriage programs until someone, anyone, could produce a shred of evidence-based results of the effectiveness of the programs. The Washington Post reports, "Delacey Skinner, Kaine's communications director, said the governor believes that effective sex education programs must include information about contraceptives as well as abstinence. "The governor supports abstinence-based education, but the governor wants to see us funding programs that are evidenced-based," said Skinner, who added that Virginia will now offer 'more comprehensive' sex education."
Kaine joins the long list of Governors who are bringing responsibility back to state, and federal, spending. To date, Governors Jon Corzine (NJ), Deval Patrick (MA), Jim Doyle (WI), Eliot Spitzer (NY), Ed Rendell (PA), John Baldacci (ME), Ted Strickland as well as the Department of Education for the State of Rhode Island (RI) and states of California (which has not accepted abstinence-only money for ten years), Montana and Connecticut have all passed on the money knowing the abstinence-until-marriage programs would cost the states dearly in the end.
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Anti-Family Planning Leader Mike Pence Introduces Bill to De-Fund Unintended Pregnancy Prevention Programs
Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN), after a failed attempt to de-fund international family planning efforts, has turned his attention to making contraception more difficult to access in the United States. Yesterday, Pence introduced a bill to eliminate federal funding to the nation's largest contraception provider, Planned Parenthood. Pence's bill comes packaged as an attack on abortion, its titled Title X Abortion Provider Prohibition Act, but the stated goal is to prevent Planned Parenthood from receiving Title X funding for the contraceptive services it offers. Only 3% of the health care services Planned Parenthood provides are abortion services while contraception represents 37% of services it provides. One third of Planned Parenthood’s operating budget is government grants. Last year, Planned Parenthood supplied pregnancy prevention services to over 4 million Americans and, it is estimated, prevented over 630,000 unintended pregnancies. Attempting to de-fund Planned Parenthood is a head-on attack on Americans' right to plan their families. Planned Parenthood often is the only source of family planning for a large proportion of the women it serves. Pence and his anti-family planning extremists would like you to think this is an anti-abortion bill but, if passed, it will lead to a lot more.
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Judge Rules Pharmacists Can Give Women the Run Around on Birth Control
According to the AP today, a federal judge appointed by President Bush suspended Washington state's requirement that pharmacists fill prescriptions for emergency contraception. The Court's ruling, now known as 'refuse and refer', allows a pharmacist to deny filling a woman's prescription as long as he or she refers the woman to another pharmacy. The AP reports, In an injunction signed Thursday, U.S. District Judge Ronald Leighton said pharmacists can refuse to sell the morning-after pill if they refer the customer to another nearby source. Pharmacists' employers also are protected by the order.
Critics consider the pill tantamount to abortion, although it is different from the abortion pill RU-486 and has no effect on women who already are pregnant.
Under pressure from Democratic Gov. Chris Gregoire, state regulators this year ruled that druggists couldn't withhold any prescription because of their personal objections.
Two pharmacists and a drugstore owner sued the state in July over the new rule, saying it violates their civil rights. They asked the judge to halt forced Plan B sales while the lawsuit is in play.
"On the issue of free exercise of religion alone, the evidence before the court convinces it that plaintiffs ... have demonstrated both a likelihood of success on the merits and the possibility of irreparable injury," Leighton wrote. It is, at this point, unclear how this ruling applies to over-the-counter sales of emergency contraception. No details have emerged about the referral process either or whether, when a woman is referred to another pharmacy, she is guaranteed to have her prescription filled by it and that there are no objecting pharmacists on staff at the referred to pharmacy. It is also unclear how this ruling applies to other contraceptive methods or if pharmacists in Washington are now allowed to refuse to fill prescriptions for other birth control methods as well. More to come...
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Wagging the Dog: Media Tries to Stir Up Contraception Controversy Where Majority of Americans Don't See One
A few weeks back I turned on Headline News. A lot passes for impartial journalism these days including, it seems, the Headline News daytime host beating the drum about a "controversy" that doesn't exist. In this case, the Portland, Maine school board decided to allow birth control to be distributed by school nurses to sexually active 11-13 years olds. The announcer wanted to know what the viewers thought of the "controversy" which seemed to me to be a leading question. What constitutes a controversy after all? CNN coverage? The news had just broken that day and CNN was the main news source broadcasting it nationally (with its not so subtle implication that this was a scandal). Within hours CNN had completed the self-fulfilling prophesy: The Portland Maine birth control decision became a bona fide controversy. News outlets across the country joined in on the shock and coverage. Portland's Mayor didn't take the bait however. He knew that contraception is the only effective way to reduce teen pregnancy. And after all, he's been through the nearly same exact exercise years earlier, just version 1.0. As the Portland Press Herald reported, "Mayor Nicholas Mavodones Jr., who heads the City Council, said he has no interest in intervening in the School Committee's action.Mavodones said school officials faced controversy when they developed a policy to offer condoms at the high school health centers. Back then, much of the opposition came in the form of letters and telephone calls from people from ''out of town,'' which meant elsewhere in Maine. Now, thanks to the Internet and the proliferation of national news media, ''out of town'' has no boundaries. ''I think we've got to be sensible about this,'' Mavodones said. ''We can't let talk radio and TV commentators influence what we do here in Portland. We have to answer to the people of Portland. We have to do what's right for Portland.'' Lucky for Portland, cool-headed Mavodones is the go-to guy. Many other a Mayor would have folded under the intense fabricated pressure. Today, thankfully, Mavodones and Portland were delivered some vindication by an Associated Press-Ipsos poll which discovered that sixty-seven percent of Americans support giving contraceptives to sexually active students in school. Most don't believe that doing so encourages teens to have sex earlier. Now, finally, the dog is wagging the tail and not the other way round.
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