Category Archives: dialogue

Closing 2013 with New, Questionable Abortion Restrictions

As many news feeds have consolidated and well documented, legal access to abortion services has become restricted over the past few years. The latest report from Erik Eckholm for the New York Times includes the graphic shared here that portrays the news in no uncertain form: State legislatures passed 70 new abortion restrictions in 2013 and more over the past three years than they did from 2000 to 2010.

AbortionRestrictions 2013

Here a summary of legislation enacted in 2013
3 Bans on abortions at 20 weeks post-fertilization (22 weeks after a woman’s last menstrual period)
4 Restrictions related to reason for abortion, like gender or fetal impairment
4 Amendments to abortion reporting laws
9 Restrictions on abortion providers
10 Limitations on insurance coverage of abortion
17 Limitations on medication abortion
23 Other, includes parental involvement requirements, bans on abortion at 6 or 12 weeks, ultrasound requirements and extended waiting periods.

For the discerning observer, however, some details seem worth dissecting.

1. Restrictions related to reason for abortion includes gender and fetal impairment. For many, these may seem two vastly different reasons, one sounding like but I wanted a boy/girl and the other where something terrible has gone wrong, often cases where the fetus may not make it or be born into a life of tubings. Our supporters may astound at the former, yet sympathize with the latter.

2. Bans on abortions at 20 weeks post-fertilization also seems to be a melting pot. Many fetal deformities are not assessed prior to this time. Is it fair for legislatures to lump expecting parents now facing traumatic circumstances in with those who may just decide very late?

3. The new Restrictions on abortion providers include requiring doctors performing abortions to have local hospital admitting privileges and imposing surgery-center standards on abortion clinics. Here again, what do we believe? What is truly in a woman’s best interest? Many medical procedures nowadays are performed in-office and all procedures are not without risk. For example, plastic surgery and vascular surgery are regularly performed in practices. Are these also unregulated? Actually, we understand no. The same requirements of local hospital registration and surgery-center standards apply. Are the standards inappropriate? Do we accept lesser standards for the sake of upholding access to abortion?

4. Waiting periods: many strong pro-choicers argue against any waiting period at all; they support abortion-on-demand. The cases of failing access to birth control and lack of education are often cited in defense. But the fact is, about half of women having abortions today have been there before, at least once.  So the reasoning is shaky. Perhaps such waiting periods would enable care-givers at least two chances to consult patients on their going forward needs. Would this help reduce repeat visits? Imagine, we could halve the abortion rate just by eliminating repeat business. Why is this so difficult?

It seems obscene to even have to pose these questions, yet being in favor of legal abortion access is not without it testing our common sense and any realm of limits.

Here is a full schedule of state laws provided by the Guttmacher Institute if you would like to check where your state stands.

As we move forward toward hopefully keeping legal abortion available and safe, yet making it the rare exception, we need to be cautious of assessments and labeling all legislative initiatives as direct assaults rather than efforts to also bring individual accountability and responsibility into these services. Would you agree?

“More teens are using more contraceptives”
32% fewer abortions in 2009 than in 1990.
The rate of teen abortions in 2009 was less than one-half the rate it was in 1990.

These are really great headlines for a change!

So the title of the article really should read
“Women Now Planning Their Families”  or “Less Unintended Pregnancies Among Women”

Women are being empowered to take charge of their lives and plan their families through the use of contraception, including for teens, simply waiting longer before becoming sexually active.
More such highlights, please!

Read the CNN interview here

26 Women Share Their Abortion Stories — New York Magazine

Here is a very touching if not gut wrenching article put forth by New York Magazine. 26 interviews with those who have been there, all entitled: My Abortion

One in three women has an abortion by the age of 45.
How many ever talk about it? New laws, old stigmas. 26 stories.

Nicole, 19, Kentucky
(Photo: Christopher Anderson/Magnum Photos/New York Magazine)

What is missing?
Any mention of these women being bombarded with information and tools to prevent their being there again. Several of the stories point to horrific clinic handling as well.
Half of women having an abortion today have had at least one previously. Please help us change that.

26 Women Share Their Abortion Stories — New York Magazine.

 

What Women Don’t Know About Birth Control Is Frightening

This is the information age – or is it?
Why is it then, that “Only 1 in 5 Women Know Which Birth Control is Most Effective“?
Do you know?

Only1in5WomenKnow HuffPost 2013_10_BirthControl

What Women Don’t Know About Birth Control Is Frightening (INFOGRAPHIC).
with thanks to Jan Diehm and the Huffington Post!

You’ll notice that the easiest and most widely available form of contraception – the male condom – shows up in the graphic at an overall effective rate of 12-24 pregnancies in 100 women.
Why such a poor showing?
Poor usage…
The real rate should be 98% !
Here is a great video from the NAF with everything you need to know about how to use condoms correctly

Check your knowledge – and PLEASE pass along to your friends! and children!

 

 

U.S. teenage birth rate at new low

Some great news worth cheering about!

Go kids!

 

Excerpt: The [pregnancy] rate for girls ages 15-19 dropped to 29.4 births per 1,000 last year…. This was less than half the 61.8 births per 1,000 teenage girls recorded in 1991.

U.S. teenage birth rate at new low, government report shows | Reuters.

A Test for Republican Government | Terry Newell

This article says a lot and is refreshing in that it points to the extremism on both sides of the coin. 

“It is time for politicians of all strands to recognize the danger with which they are flirting. The belief that extremism can achieve its ends while preserving public liberty flies in the face of too much of recorded history to be seriously entertained in this nation. Courage, not rashness or cowardice, to achieve the political center is the only thing that stands between us and anarchy …”
A Test for Republican Government | Terry Newell.

Do you think it possible that we all move a bit closer to the middle?

America, the oops! society?

According to Guttmacher’s “Incidence and Outcomes of Unintended Pregnancy,” “half of all pregnancies in the United States each year are unintended.”

oops!

Further: “In any given year, the two-thirds of women in the United States at risk of unintended pregnancy who use contraceptives consistently throughout the year account for only 5% of all unintended pregnancies; fully 95% of unintended pregnancies are attributable to the one-third of women who do not use contraceptives or who use them inconsistently.”

How primitive. Is this the best America can do?

As seen in headlines for well over a generation now, this secular society is perfectly willing to discuss and dramatize in exhaustive detail the options after an unwanted pregnancy exists. Why are we then so reluctant to fill those same headlines with the term CONTRACEPTION?

What do you think? Where do you stand?

Moving Beyond “Pro-Choice” and “Pro-Life”

The Public Religion Research Institute reported in its article:
“Pro-Choice” and “Pro-Life” Overlapping Identities
that 43% of Americans identified themselves as being in both camps.

Is the time right to move beyond Pro-Choice and Pro-Life?
Is it time to go “Pro-Plan”?
What do you think?

Overlapping identities GotW-Pro-Life-Choice-1-22-13-final1 small