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Healthcare Prof:
The following summarizes select women’s health-related blog entries.
~ “Steph Herold: Tweeting To End Abortion Stigma,” Serena Freewomyn, Feminists for Choice: As part of a weekly series, “Feminist Conversation,” Freewomyn features a Q&A with Steph Herold, a reproductive justice advocate who founded the website IAmDrTiller.com to commemorate the work of murdered Kansas abortion provider George Tiller and others. Herold “caused quite a stir” by creating the #ihadanabortion hashtag on Twitter, Freewomyn writes. Herold discusses her motivation for starting the blog, her involvement with all the New York Abortion Access Fund, and her views on feminism. She also describes the impetus behind the Twitter hashtag, noting that despite the fact that the “anti-choice movement has tried to make abortion the sin of a few bad women,” in reality, “abortion can be a regular part of women??s lives” (Freewomyn, Feminists for Choice, 11/10).
~ “Daddy I Do: ‘Purity’ World is Tough for Ladies,” Sarah Seltzer, RH Reality Check: A new documentary — “Daddy, I Do” — “explores the ‘purity’ movement and the consequences of abstinence-only policies in America,” Seltzer writes. The documentary suggests that the father-daughter aspects of the purity movement give it “a major ‘creep factor,’ which is one with the reasons that many in America’s mainstream turn away from the idea of abstinence,” Selzter adds. Despite this, “as ‘Daddy I Do’ reminds us, one in six girls actually do pledge purity in America and 90% break that vow.” The documentary also prompts questions about “whether these vow-breakers are armed together with the knowledge they require when statistics bear out and they do start ‘sinning’” and “whether the moral and ideological standards of one group has the right to determine, even intrude, on the educational standards of the whole population,” Seltzer continues. She writes that the documentary carries “an overarching theme that regardless of whether women are getting used for their bodies or told that their bodies are sacred, these girls are defined by men and don’t have control over their own sexuality — which leads to a lack of manage over their own identities” (Seltzer, RH Reality Check, 11/10).
~ “Mendacity Exposed: Researcher Debunks the Big Lie on Abortion and Mental Health,” Jodi Jacobson, RH Reality Check: Jacobsen cites a recent column on the Daily Beast that makes the case “about the complicity of both the Obama Administration and the mainstream media in perpetuating lies about [President] Obama’s policies told by the far right for the duration of midterm election campaigns.” Based on Jacobson, those lies not only “shaped public opinion” but also “the outcome of the election.” She argues that the column’s “analysis can easily be extrapolated to the failure of mainstream media — and of government officials — to do their job within the debate around abortion.” This point “was forcefully and eloquently argued” in a recent Washington Post opinion piece about false claims that abortion causes mental health problems — a claim that has sparked legislation in several states. Jacobson writes that “lies used to advance political and ideological agendas are a central component with the anti-choice uber-strategy, but these same efforts to distract, deflect, and misinform are becoming an increasingly prevalent and uncontested characteristic of our social discourse more broadly.” In “the abortion debate as within the political debate writ large, campaigns gear up to ‘inform’ via misinformation, leading to ‘misinformed choices’ that comport together with the agendas of those in power or who wish to be in power,” Jacobson adds (Jacobson, RH Reality Check, 11/10).
~ “Washington State Wants To Let Pharmacies Deny Ladies Plan B,” Alex DiBranco, Change.org’s “Women’s Rights”: DiBranco discusses the Washington state Board of Pharmacy’s recent 3-2 vote allowing the board to revise a rule that demands pharmacies to dispense legal medications, including emergency contraception. According to DiBranco, the board likely was forced to revise the rule due to the fact it was “faced together with the prospect of a lawsuit from a small group of pharmacists opposed to” EC. She notes that board member Dan Connolly was recently quoted inside the media as saying that “the state can’t afford to be involved in a lengthy lawsuit.” DiBranco writes, “You know what girls looking for emergency contraception can’t afford? To be denied access at their local pharmacy, to run out of time to take the medication since they can’t get to an actual comprehensive provider fast enough, to be faced with an unwanted pregnancy and the decision of regardless of whether or not to have an abortion because their attempt to be responsible and take Plan B when their standard birth control method failed was stymied.” She adds that more Washington residents “have already registered their intense disapproval of overturning the established rule, the vast majority of commenters with the opinion that pharmacies shouldn’t be able to refuse legal time-sensitive medication on a whim” (DiBranco, “Women’s Rights,” Change.org, 11/10).
~ “Anti-Choice Abortion Legislation and Pro-Choice Females Voters,” Amie Newman, RH Reality Check: In an article in The Nation, columnist Katha Pollitt “talks about the relentless pursuit, on the part of anti-choice lawmakers, given the outcome with the midterm elections, to chip away at abortion access in this country,” Newman writes. Newman adds, “During the campaign season, the health care reform law (PL 111-148) provided a perfect foil for anti-choice candidates who needed to find something about abortion to grab onto, as the larger public discussion focused on the state with the economy.” These candidates and the groups that supported them “dug deep into the intricacies of the well being care law and pulled out connections between state-created health exchanges (with federal funding), private insurance coverage, and females who may use a combination of both to build some mighty shaky bridges between abortion care and taxpayer money,” Newman writes. Pollitt “gives a great run-down of where she thinks anti-choice lawmakers and supporting groups will focus this session” and “provide[s] some relief” when she notes that abortion-rights supporters likely “made the difference” in some races, she continues. “It’s good to know that pro-choice females hold the key, as long as we use it,” Newman concludes (Newman, RH Reality Check, 11/11).
Reprinted with kind permission from http://www.nationalpartnership.org. You’ll be able to view the entire Daily Women’s Wellness Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for e-mail delivery here. The Daily Women’s Wellness Policy Report is actually a free service with the National Partnership for Women & Families.
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