Offences Against the Person Act 1861 makes a woman’s decision to terminate her own pregnancy punishable by life in prison

Diana Johnson
The ten-minute rule bill was introduced by the Labour MP for Hull North, Diana Johnson. Photograph: Josh Kearns/Rex

MPs have won the right to introduce a bill to parliament which would decriminalise abortion for the first time by repealing a law that dates back to Victorian times.

A ten-minute rule bill introduced by Diana Johnson, the Labour MP for Hull North, sought permission of the House to change two sections of a law passed in 1861, before women had the vote. It succeeded by 170 votes to 142, a margin of 32.

As the law stands, doing so is technically punishable by life imprisonment under sections 58 and 59 of the 1861 Offences Against the Person Act – both for the woman and for anyone, including a doctor, who helps her.

“This is the harshest criminal penalty of any country in Europe, underpinned by a Victorian criminal law passed before women had the right to vote, let alone sit in this place,” Johnson told MPs.

Poland, a traditional Catholic country, does not criminalise women for having an abortion, she said. In the United States, when the current president suggested women should be criminalised, he was forced to backtrack, she added.

Abortion is legal in England and Wales in restricted circumstances, which were laid down in the 1967 Abortion Act introduced by the then Liberal MP David Steel to stop women dying in large numbers as a result of backstreet abortions.

The 1967 legislation allows a termination before 12 weeks with the approval of two doctors and in the interests of the woman’s health. In rare circumstances, including foetal abnormality, later abortions are permitted.

The new bill will be brought forward by a cross-party group of MPs.

Johnson said in the debate that abolishing criminality need not change the current restrictions, which can be enshrined in regulations. The change in the law would not increase the number of late abortions. “It will not lead to a free for all,” she said.

The pills that bring about early abortion, before 12 weeks, are prescription only, so their use is governed by the Human Medicines Regulations 2012. It would not be any easier for couples to seek abortion for sex-selection purposes. And, she added, the current law did nothing about people who tried to coerce women into having a termination.

Abortion is widely available under the law, she argued, and the wider availability of the abortion pills online “should motivate greater concern for women’s health and make us wary of greater liberalisation of the law”. Removing the criminal sanction “would embolden men to pressure women into abortions they do not wish to have”. Ensuring that the woman must have the consent of two doctors meant that she would have the chance to speak to somebody who could help her, Caulfield said.

She said the bill was being proposed “at a time when the UK abortion industry is knee-deep in allegations of unsafe and unethical practices”, citing alleged failures including the Care Quality Commission investigation into the Marie Stopes clinics.

Source: The Guardian

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/mar/13/mps-win-right-to-challenge-victorian-law-criminalising-abortion

Watching my new colleagues calm patients disturbed by protesters, I knew this work was more important than any other job I have ever had.

On an afternoon walk with my best friend, we saw a group of people protesting near her workplace. When I asked her what was going on, she said, “That’s the Hope Clinic for Women.” I knew it was an abortion clinic; I had brought a friend there once. But I had never heard the protesters telling men and women entering the clinic they would burn in hell.

There was even a sign showing a woman lying naked on an examining table, bruised from head to toe. It hurt me to look at it. I thought, “Come on now, really! How disrespectful”—especially if you claim to be concerned about women.

So that’s when my life changed. That day, I had been out dropping off résumés and looking for a new job. I had worked as a certified nursing or medical assistant in many different settings. I knew what I wanted to do: helping and caring for people. But I was lost and unfulfilled, and hated to go to work.

I walked right through those anti-choice protesters and gave them my résumé.

Today, I am a proud abortion provider. My first day at the clinic, I knew it was where I wanted to be. All the employees introduced themselves, smiled, and asked about my family. I felt truly welcomed.

I observed and watched patients coming in. Some were physically shaking and crying, angry, or agitated from all that judgmental nonsense being screamed at them. My new co-workers calmed those same patients down with kindness and reason. I knew this was different and more important than any other job I have ever had.

Though anti-choice activists try to say that abortion providers don’t care about women, babies, or families, I consider my co-workers an extended family. When so many Americans dislike their jobs, I love coming to work every day, even on Saturdays. Seeing the most helpful, fun, and loving people every day doesn’t seem like work. We work together—not just in the same place, but collaboratively and with the greater purpose of helping women in need.

I am lucky to have been empowered by so many people in this movement, especially my colleagues in the Abortion Care Network. I was chosen for a program called Uniting Our Voices, which helps train advocates to communicate with media. This group gave me the tools and courage to step out of my box, though it didn’t feel like that at first. I knew no one at the meeting, and I was very much out of my comfort zone.

I remember telling two other people in the program that “I am just a medical assistant, I think they chose the wrong person.” I didn’t realize they were board members. They stopped me right there and said, “No, we chose you because you are a medical assistant.”

This group helped me realize I am not just a medical assistant. I am an advocate for all women. I can help our patients with my voice, but also others who have not had to make the choice to have an abortion and those who have made that choice before.

Our patients endure a tremendous amount of stress just to walk in our door. They are targeted by awful, mean anti-choice protesters. When they come into our clinic, we know something of what they are going through—and respect the choice they’ve made with family, friends, genetic counselors, physicians, or just by themselves.

I share words of support, love, and laughter with our clients. Yes, that’s possible in an abortion clinic. Actually, I think it’s essential. We try to make this long process of paperwork, counseling, and lab tests a more enjoyable experience. I can honestly say these women support me just as I support them.

I come to work knowing that abortion providers do amazing work. We don’t just perform medical services. We help many people achieve goals, follow dreams, and stay true to self. I can’t imagine doing anything else.

Source: Rewire

https://rewire.news/article/2017/03/10/found-fulfillment-family-abortion-provider/

A new study shows that widely available contraception lowers abortion rates.(Photo: Getty Images)
A new study shows that widely available contraception lowers abortion rates. (Photo: Getty Images)
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A just-released study commissioned by the Planned Parenthood Action Fund and conducted by researchers at Child Trends, an independent nonprofit research organization that specializes in child health and development, found that if the full range of contraception options available to women through Planned Parenthood health centers were used by all U.S. women ages 15 to 39 who were not seeking pregnancy, the unintended-pregnancy rate would be reduced by 64 percent, the unintended-birth rate would decrease by 63 percent, and the abortion rate would drop by a staggering 67 percent.

All of this, researchers found, would translate into $12 billion in public health care cost savings annually, reducing the public costs of unintended pregnancy by half.

The findings are all the more staggering on the heels of this weeks news that the Trump administration made an informal proposal to Planned Parenthood that their place as a provider of Medicaid and Title X — the federal family planning program — services could remain intact if the reproductive and sexual health care provider would stop providing abortion care. Further complicating the issue is the Affordable Care Act (ACA) replacement bill finally introduced by House Republicans last night, which would both roll back Medicaid expansion and also cut off all funding to Planned Parenthood for a year, a one-two punch to those who rely on Planned Parenthood as a safety-net provider for their reproductive health care and family planning.

Jamila Taylor, a senior fellow with the Center for American Progress (CAP) who is an expert on women’s health care policy, tells Yahoo Beauty, “If you take into account the fact that Planned Parenthood serves about 2.5 million people each year with essential health services and that many of those folks are on Medicaid or accessing services through Title X, that’s extremely problematic.”

According to Planned Parenthood, close to 60 percent of their patients participate in Medicaid or Title X.

Taylor continues, “When you consider the fact that for these same patients, Planned Parenthood often serves as the single access point for their health care, a restriction like this is only going to further disservice disadvantaged communities.”

Taylor also notes that given the fact that 70 percent of the American public believes that Roe v. Wade should be maintained and that abortion should remain safe and legal in the United States, “asking Planned Parenthood or any other provider that may be receiving federal funding to not provide this service is just placing barriers on important health care.”

She continues, “Based on the profile of what we know about the folks Planned Parenthood serves, slashing their funding from the Medicaid program in particular is going to have a harmful effect on low-income people, people of color, and LGBT young people. These are communities that disproportionately rely on essential health care through Planned Parenthood. So, when we talk about stripping their funding, this isn’t about Planned Parenthood per se, but about taking away essential health coverage to these people.

“Politically, I know everyone is honing in on Planned Parenthood, but at the end of the day, this is just going to harm the patients who need health care the most — patients who rely on Planned Parenthood,” Taylor says. “These are groups that also experience health disparities and health inequities, and any efforts to restrict their health coverage will only exacerbate their health and well-being disparities.”

Rep. Judy Chu, D-Calif. tells Yahoo Beauty, “While claiming to try to improve access to health care, Republicans couldn’t resist another opportunity to attack women by doing the complete opposite. Far from helping more people make their own health care choices, this bill defunds Planned Parenthood, denying millions of women access to preventative care, cancer screenings, and affordable contraception. Although abortion care is constitutionally protected, Republicans are using their opposition to it as an excuse to deny comprehensive health care to women. But this cannot just be about ideologies when lives are at stake, and we know the dangers facing women when these safe options are taken away.”

Audrey Sandusky, director of advocacy and communications for the National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association, agrees.

Source: Yahoo

https://www.yahoo.com/beauty/a-new-study-shows-planned-parenthood-could-drop-the-abortion-rate-by-67-percent-211658292.html

On October 4, 2016, tens of thousands of women in Poland took to the streets to protest against new legislation introduced by their far-right government that would put a total ban on abortion. Poland’s abortion laws are already incredibly restrictive: Abortion is only permitted in cases of rape and sexual abuse, if there is a threat to the mother’s life, or if there’s evidence of severe fetal anomalies. Two days following the momentous protests, the legislation was voted down 352 to 58. Women had won some of their rights back.

In the U.S., though abortion is (currently) a protected right, even more restrictions on access and threats to funding at Planned Parenthood are attempts by the new administration to roll back to a pre–Roe v. Wade era. Ahead of Wednesday’s International Women’s Strike, Polish women who participated in the Black Monday protests wrote to the Cut with their advice for how to fight for the essential reproductive rights that the government is so keen on taking away.

Aleksandra Knapik, 33, Lodz, Poland
“It is important to stick together in solidarity — with other American women, as well as with women worldwide. It’s important to show that you are ready to fight for your rights, the rights that could be taken away, on all levels. To take part in street protests, online campaigns, education, political lobbying, worldwide networking. I hope that this protest will show the strength and unification of American women, and that the Trump administration won’t try to proceed bills that are reducing your laws.”

Katarzyna Pierzchala, 50, Warsaw, Poland
“I was in New York for a few days once and that’s all. But I think that you are in much better situation than we are. Although your new president also has dangerous ideas, your democracy is much stronger, your law system does not allow any fanatics to deprive your rights. Or at least I hope so. I believe it’s important for you to protest. It’s necessary to show your power, to warn your government: ‘Do not even think about it.’”

Zofia Marcinek, 23, Warsaw, Poland
“The United States claims to be a crib of modern democracy. Just make these white (or occasionally orange) guys in suits realize that this democracy is yours, too, and that the only people to decide about women are women themselves. Without them, there is no country and there is no freedom. Realize that — willing or not — America sets standards for more than just itself. Women and girls all over the world are fed your movies, your celebrities, your powerful women. Make brave women. And make this country great again for every girl who ever lives in it. Get angry. Get proud. Basically, do everything the conservative farts would call ‘unladylike.’”

Zuzanna Zwierzchowska, 22, Gdynia, Poland
“I’m not sure I’m qualified to answer this, but the reason I’m protesting on March 8 is to not blame myself when everything crumbles. It is very important to not be idle, to fight for each other even if there is no hope, to be proud and try as hard as you can. Even if you can’t win now, you can remain a decent human being for yourself and the people close to you.”

Agnieszka Maciuszek, 20, Stary Sącz, Poland
“The main motivation for this strike is to show solidarity, to show that there are many of you. Show them that you are the force that cannot be stopped so easily.”

Agnieszka Sarna, 43, Olsztyn, Poland
“I couldn’t help but think after Black Monday I, women, we, women, need to be more active if the change is to happen. There are some great, well-educated, strong, brave, intelligent and successful women in the world. But as long as we do not connect with each other, this potential will be wasted. If I want future generations to [live] in peace on this planet, there is no other way, but to wake up and make women rise and unify with other women against destruction, violence, hatred, avidity, and wild competition.

I do not plan to [go] into politics, but together with my female friends we form a circle and work on a very basic level, on our own. We open up and take inspiration from global sisterhood offering what we have to those in need. Inspiring one another. Learning from each other. Supporting each other without judgment. Letting our female wisdom unfold and benefit others.

I want you to know how important for us all it is to see Americans, women of the country which was for decades an inspiration, and which is such a big country, to unify, gather, and express dissent against this expired world order. To know that the movement goes global really makes a difference. We should all continue this way and be ready for change. Nobody will labor and push change through instead of us, so let’s do it, so that the dark womb of the today’s world gives life to new better civilization, just as your filmmaker and lawyer Valarie Kaur said in one of her speeches.”

Magdalena Walczak, 26, Leszno, Poland
“I feel like the only thing we can do is to let us be seen and heard. We need to be loud and united. That is the [attainable] goal, letting the authority know that we are not happy about current situation and we are ready to fight to change it.”

Source: NYMag

http://nymag.com/thecut/2017/03/black-monday-day-without-women-abortion-strike.html

The money will also provide support to other health initiatives.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced yesterday that his government will spend $650 million on sexual and reproductive initiatives worldwide. That money will go in part to fighting global anti-abortion laws.

“For far too many women and girls, unsafe abortions and a lack of choices in reproductive health mean that they either are at risk of death, or simply cannot contribute and cannot achieve their potential,” Trudeau said Wednesday at an International Women’s Day event, reports Canada’s Globe and Mail. “The right of women to choose when, how [and] with whom to start a family is one that we all must fight for and defend.”

The initiative would try to reduce the estimated 22 million unsafe abortions that happen annually in countries where there’s no access to legal abortion, the paper reports. The pledge is a continuation of Trudeau’s conservative predecessor’s foreign-aid program for maternal and child health—but that plan specifically prohibited the funds from going towards abortion-relation services and less than 2 percent of its budget was allocated for contraception services.

This news comes on the heels of President Donald Trump’s executive order to reinstate a federal ban known as the global gag rule on U.S. funding for international health organizations which counsel women on family planning options that include abortion. That gap in services could be filled in part by the Canadian initiative.

Trudeau was busy on International Women’s Day—when he wasn’t signing major, multi-million-dollar pledges, the self-proclaimed feminist was delivering video messages. Here, you know you want to take another watch:

And a group of experts wants you to know that federal regulatory policy is partly responsible.

New year, same as the old year: Republicans in statehouses across the country followed January 2016’s 147 anti-choice bills with a record-breaking 167 anti-choice bills introduced in the first month of 2017. Among those bills is a spate of proposals aiming to limit access to medication abortion. While nearly every aspect of abortion care is threatened, the multifaceted attack on medication abortion is particularly troubling in light of last year’s Food and Drug Administration (FDA) update to the label of the medication abortion drug Mifeprex, and a recent New England Journal of Medicine commentarythat explains how the update barely scratched the surface of needed changes.

The ten authors—a multidisciplinary group of clinicians, public health and legal experts, and researchers—of “Sixteen Years of Overregulation: Time to Unburden Mifeprex” detailed the ways in which the ongoing over-regulation of Mifeprex is not just unnecessary, but harmful to patients considering or seeking medication abortion.

The new label introduced a host of changes for Mifeprex use, including new dosages and an important revision that allows it to be administered later into pregnancy. These changes are expected to “reduce confusion among women, providers, and policymakers about the appropriate use of the drug,” according to the authors, who also anticipate abortion becoming “less expensive, more convenient, and more widely available.” When used with the drug misoprostol, mifepristone is a very effective and safe way to end an early pregnancy.

But the drug is still restricted through what’s called the Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS). These are additional rules implemented through the federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) when the Food and Drug Administration suspects a drug has serious adverse effects. Mifeprex’s REMS regulations determine where, how, and by whom the medication can be prescribed and administered—despite its proven efficacy and safety. The drug cannot be sold at pharmacies and must be dispensed by a certified prescriber in a clinic, medical office, or hospital. To become “certified,” a physician must submit a form to the drug’s maker declaring that he or she can date a pregnancy, diagnose ectopic pregnancy, and provide surgical intervention if needed, either personally or by referral. All of this, of course, adds additional hurdles for the patient and provider.

“The REMS places medically unnecessary burdens on patients and providers, and keeps mifepristone [the generic name of Mifeprex] from being prescribed by clinicians and then obtained in retail or mail-order pharmacies, alongside hundreds of other medications,” said Dr. Beverly Winikoff, president of Gynuity Health Projects. “The negative impact from over-regulation of medical abortion with the REMS, like other abortion restrictions, can fall hardest on poor women, rural women, women of color, undocumented women, and young women.”

Winikoff told Rewire that the growing percentage of patients who choose Mifeprex as their preferred abortion method—from 6 percent of all abortions in 2001 to 31 percent in 2014 and nearly half of those before nine weeks’ gestation—means that the REMS restrictions affect a significant number of people.

Thirty-seven states currently have medication abortion restrictions on the books. Six, like Oklahoma’s outright ban on medication abortion, are temporarily or permanently enjoined by court order. Oklahoma’s legislature is doubling down by introducing new legislation to make a violation a felony with a possible $100,000 fine and attempting to reduce the window patients have to access abortion altogether to six short weeks. Oklahoma’s fixation on medication abortion isn’t an outlier; a full 15 percent of the 288 abortion-restricting laws passed from 2011 to 2015 concerned medication abortion.

Having official federal restrictions like REMS lends credibility to these legislative efforts.

“It’s unconscionable that the REMS restrictions remain after 16 years of data showing mifepristone is an exceedingly safe and effective abortion method,” said Winikoff. “The restrictions on mifepristone are a shameful example of regulation run amok—and they’re harming women’s health. Women and their health providers shouldn’t have to jump through hoops to get a medication that’s been safely and effectively used in this country for a decade and a half.”

The commentary’s authors also point out the contradictions between the purpose of REMS (public safety) and unnecessary regulations. For example, there’s no risk of overdose when each patient only receives a single dose of Mifeprex. Also, even if there was a high rate of complication (mifepristone is less risky than over-the-counter pain relievers like Tylenol), requiring the medication to be taken in a doctor’s office wouldn’t prevent infection or bleeding.

They wrote:

“[T]he pharmacologic effects do not begin for hours after ingestion. If a serious complication were to occur, the location where the woman had obtained the tablets would be entirely irrelevant to her clinical outcome. In fact, recent research has shown that allowing each woman who has a medical abortion to take the mifepristone in the place of her choosing is safe and is preferred by many women.”

They also outlined other potential harm caused by requiring dispensing providers to have special certification. Being certified means creating a public record as an official abortion provider; the risk of harassment and threat can understandably discourage Mifeprex provision.

The hoops created by REMS are especially burdensome in rural America. For physicians outside urban settings, there is a greater risk of not being able to treat an unexpected patient because they are not certified and therefore are unable to stock the medication ahead of time—and being unable to refer a patient to another health-care provider. Where clinics have closed en masse, distances to the nearest provider can be hundreds of miles, and the availability and legality of telemedicine can’t be guaranteed due to legislative attacks. For example, the Utah Telehealth Amendments (HB 154) bill that just passed the state house would make medication abortion by telemedicine illegal except in cases of rape, incest, or threat to the life of the patient.

Cristina Aguilar, executive director of the Colorado Organization for Latina Opportunity and Reproductive Rights (COLOR), told Rewire about the importance of medication abortion in her state.

“In a rural state like Colorado, health care can be difficult for people to obtain,” she said. “Medication abortion is an option that many providers offer to expand access, including in smaller clinics outside of urban areas.”

In addition to attempting to put it literally out of reach, legislators are still advancing bills requiring doctors to tell their patients that medication abortion can be reversed—which is scientifically incorrect. Lawmakers in Colorado, Georgia, Indiana, North Carolina, and Utah have introduced  “abortion reversal” bills like the ones in place in Arkansas and South Dakota (and successfully challenged in Arizona last year).

Aguilar connected “abortion reversal” with the history of medical experiments performed on marginalized communities.

“Looking at the so-called research on the idea of reversing medication abortion shows that this is a refuted theory based on the anecdotal experiences of physicians who were willing to do experimental treatment on pregnant women, without the usual research safeguards to protect their health and safety. Women of color have seen this before,” she said. “There is a long history of women of color being coerced and abused within the scientific and medical profession.”

SisterSong Executive Director Monica Simpson told Rewire that requiring doctors to lie to patients is bad medicine and a violation of trust.

“When women make a decision to have an abortion, they are clear about their decision and it should be respected. It’s cruel to tell women something that undermines their decision and isn’t even backed up by science.”

Simpson also echoed Winikoff’s concerns about who is most affected by these restrictions.

“When medication abortion is restricted, the most marginalized communities are most affected, those who are oppressed by systemic and historical barriers, including low-income folks, people of color, Black women, undocumented folks, young people,” said Simpson, stressing that abortion is an important part of reproductive health care in her community.

The experts cited social justice concerns like Simpson’s, agreeing that decisions on when and whether to parent should be left to the patient and the medical community’s best practices and that medication abortion restrictions impose harm. In their article, they said that the REMS requirements to “assure safe use plainly impede women’s access to the drug …. Considering the severe shortage of abortion providers in many parts of the United States and the long distances that many women must travel to obtain abortion services, we contend that any barrier to access that has no demonstrated benefit is excessive.”

Source: Rewire

https://rewire.news/article/2017/03/03/going-wrong-way-medication-abortion-access/

People encouraged to take day off to protest restrictive abortion laws or show solidarity by wearing black, posting on social media and staging walkouts

Women and pro-choice campaigners in Ireland are going on strike to protest the country’s strict anti-abortion laws.

Protesters will gather at O’Connell Bridge in central Dublin and in other cities across Ireland and worldwide to demand a referendum on abortion, which is a criminal offence under the Irish constitution.

Organiser Avril Corroon told The Independent the event was not a form of industrial action but a ‘social strike’, inspired by mass protests in Poland that led the government to reject proposals for a near-total ban on abortion.

She said people had been encouraged to take a day off to take part in demonstrations, but those unable to do so could show support for the cause by wearing black, posting on social media and staging coordinated walkouts at 12pm.

“Abortion is a workplace issue,” said Ms Corroon. “Not everyone is in a position to take a day off work, which is why we need new reproductive health laws.”

It is estimated that 12 women travel from Ireland to Great Britain every day to access a safe and legal termination.

Women who have abortions in the Republic of Ireland face up to 14 years in prison.

This is the case for all pregnancies, including those conceived as a result of rape or incest, or where the foetus cannot survive outside the womb due to a fatal abnormality.

Ms Corroon said protesters were calling for a referendum on whether Ireland should repeal the 8th amendment of its constitution, which recognises the right to life of an unborn child.

The Citizens’ Assembly, a group of 99 unelected representatives, are currently debating the future of the amendment. The results of a ballot next month will be given as a recommendation to parliament.

But Ms Corroon said this was not good enough: “Why would you ask 99 people when you could ask all of us?”

Student walkouts and demonstrations have also been planned at Irish universities including University College Dublin, where Kim Harte is a student.

Ms Harte, dressed in black for the protests, told The Independent she and her classmates planned to walk out of lectures at 12.30 to join a rally on campus, before travelling to the city centre for the march.

“Women should have access to free, safe and legal abortion. Bodily autonomy is a right,” she said. “The 8th has already caused women, such as Savita Halappanavar, to lose their lives and this is why it must be repealed.”

Ms Halappanavar died in October 2012 at a hospital in Galway after she was refused an abortion despite complications to her pregnancy.

Similar protests have also been planned at universities in the UK such as Royal Holloway, Oxford and Cambridge and in other cities across the world, including Melbourne, Berlin, Lyon and at the Irish embassy in London.

Around 100,000 women dressed in black staged an all-out strike and joined protests in more than 60 cities around Poland last October.

Women in the US are also taking part in a ‘day without women’ on International Women’s Day, following mass protests on 21 January, the day after Donald Trump’s inauguration as President.

Abortion has been a divisive issue for decades in Ireland where, after large street protests from both sides of the debate, a complete ban was only lifted in 2013 when terminations were allowed if a mother’s life was in danger.

However governments have been reluctant to tackle an issue they fear may alienate conservative voters, despite a waning of the influence of the catholic church.

In 2015, Ireland became the first country to adopt gay marriage by popular vote.

Icelandic women first staged a strike in 1975, with 90 per cent of the country’s female population refusing to work, do childcare or housework as they demanded equal rights with men.

Source: The Independent

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/irish-women-abortion-ban-strike-international-day-2017-republic-ireland-consitutional-amendment-a7617461.html

Dutch politician Lilianne Ploumen is taking on President Donald Trump’s ban on providing federal money to international organizations that perform or provide information about abortion.

In his first few days in office, President Trump reinstated the Mexico City Policy, which prohibits the United States from giving federal aid to any nongovernmental organization abroad that performs or informs peopleabout the procedure. Ploumen, the Dutch Minister for Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation, subsequently said she wanted to set up an international fund to help expand contraception and abortion access to women in developing countries.

“This is a time to really act. We hear a lot of talk about what President Trump does or doesn’t do and his decisions,” Ploumen told Refinery29 in an interview published this week. “But if we all just listen to that and not act, many women will suffer because of those decisions. I didn’t want to let that happen.”

Ploumen’s fund, called She Decides, has since raised over 200,000 euros in donations alone, according to Refinery29. She’s also gotten the support from Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Sweden, Belgium and Norway, which pledged to donate roughly $10 million to the initiative. Ploumen is now working to get more countries to sign on to support She Decides.

“To be able to decide if you want to have sex, with whom and have babies, these matters all define who you are as a person,” she said. “In many countries of the world, there’s a lack of services to help women make those decisions for themselves, which is why these health organizations are so crucial.”

Source: Motto

http://motto.time.com/4685806/dutch-abortion-fund-mexico-city-policy/

5-march-17

The abortion pill is safe and easy—and it could give American women unprecedented reproductive autonomy. Its political opponents have spent over a decade ensuring this doesn’t happen.

Over 16 years ago, the United States stood on the brink of a reproductive rights revolution. The FDA was in the final stretch of approving mifepristone, a drug already available in Europe in China, which was said to make ending a pregnancy within the first 10 weeks as easy as taking a pill. Reproductive health advocates stateside anticipated that this move would radically change the landscape of abortion access.

Even after the victory of Roe v. Wade, hospitals shied away from providing abortion services due to intense stigma and political maneuvering by anti-abortion activists. As a result, surgical abortion had been confined to some of the only spaces willing to help women: stand-alone reproductive health clinics, which were scarce, not to mention vulnerable targets for protesters. In the late 90s, the abortion pill was set to change that.

“If and when mifepristone does become available, it will remove many of the political and practical barriers that have made it difficult for US women to get abortions—and for many physicians to perform them,” a Mother Jones article claimed in 1999. A survey of doctors earlier that year, the article went on to note, “found that 54 percent of all obstetricians and gynecologists, including 45 percent of those who don’t currently perform abortions, said they would offer mifepristone if it were available.”

Later-term surgical abortions would still be necessary for a lot of women, but mifepristone (in combination with an existing drug called misoprostol, which increases uterine contractions) was poised to bring abortion into the mainstream by widening the pool of providers willing to provide abortion services at all: They would be able to simply write a prescription for a pill.

With RU-486 termination of early pregnancy will be done medically, not surgically, under conditions that will make it largely impossible to stop.

Mifepristone was supposed to give women more control over their bodies, their families, and their health by expanding their choices and privacy. It was seen as the holy grail that would thwart abortion foes, who, as always, had been working hard to overturn Roe v. Wade and complicate abortion access: “With RU-486,” as the pill was known at the time, “termination of early pregnancy will be done medically, not surgically, under conditions that will make it largely impossible to stop,” a Chicago Tribune article from 1992 professed. Some advocates had hoped the abortion pill would be available directly through pharmacies and eventually over-the-counter, like Plan.

Clearly, this hasn’t been the case. Over a decade later, abortion access has hardly expanded beyond the clinic setting, and in states across the country, those clinics are being forced to shut down. As of 2014, the abortion pill accounted for 43 percent of abortions in the US; however, it’s still not the easy-to-access alternative that reproductive health advocates thought would be possible over a decade ago. What happened?

The history of the abortion pill is fraught from the start. In 1980, a French pharmaceutical company, Roussel-Uclaf, developed the medication abortion drug, which works by blocking the effects of progesterone, a hormone essential to maintaining pregnancy. After a series of clinical trials in 1988, it was approved by the French Ministry of Solidarity, Health, and Social Welfare for distribution. The anti-abortion backlash within the country was swift. Anti-abortion protests and threats of boycotts for other products caused Roussel-Uclaf’s parent company to halt the production of mifepristone out of fear that it would hurt their bottom line. Thankfully, just two days later, the French government intervened and ordered the company to resume production of the drug in the interest of public health, calling it “the moral property of women.”

Here in the US, however, the intense anti-abortion political climate stopped Roussel-Uclaf from bringing the abortion pill to market, despite the efforts of feminist groups like the Feminist Majority Foundation. And under George Bush, the FDA banned importation of mifepristone—though that didn’t stop women from trying to smuggle it in.

In 1993, all that changed: Although the Hyde Amendment still passed in Congress that year and the “Freedom of Choice Act,” which would have codified abortion access into law, was defeated, the Clinton administration ushered in a new era of executive support for reproductive rights and requested that the FDA reconsider the importation ban. The following year, Roussel-Uclaf donated the rights to mifepristone to the Population Council, a New York-based nonprofit research institution, and they began US-based clinical trials on its safety and efficacy. By 1995, the Population Council had filed a FDA New Drug Application for mifepristone.

But the battle to get the abortion pill approved in the US would still take years. The anti-abortion lobby, along with Republican politicians, tried to delay it as long as possible; in 1996, the public hearings on the abortion bill got underway, and the proceedings essentially became a debate between women’s health providers and abortion foes. Documents from the advisory committee for the drug’s approval show a letter that discusses the purported “psychological effects” of the abortion pill and goes on to say that “the practice of birth control in any of its forms is an evil” was submitted for consideration alongside the preliminary results of the Population Council’s year-long clinical trial, which showed that the abortion pill was safe to use, and that women favored the method.

The committee also heard testimony about the link between abortion and breast cancer, a widely used anti-abortion misinformation tactic. “However safe this drug regimen may appear in short term testing, there is too much hard evidence that, in the long term, many thousands of women will get breast cancer because they took these drugs,” Dr. Joel Brind, one of the main religious advocates for the anti-abortion pseudoscience, told the committee. The National Cancer Institute, the American Cancer Society, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) have all conducted scientific reviews of the literature on the subject and concluded that there is no link between abortion and breast cancer.

…The political climate is really interfering in the science.

Simultaneously, congressional Republicans, who controlled the majority of both Houses, led by Speaker Newt Gingrich, attempted to stymie the process, though they were unsuccessful. Despite their opposition, the FDA advisory committee recommended mifepristone for approval and ultimately approved it in 2000, following the Population Council’s long search for a willing manufacturer. In the years in between the first hearing about mifepristone and its eventual approval, states across the US were busily passing parental consent laws and working to make late-term abortion illegal.

But the abortion pill wasn’t out of the clear yet. In June, the New York Times reported the agency was considering additional regulations. These included “restricting prescribing privileges to doctors who perform surgical abortions,” which would largely defeat the hope of mifepristone expanding abortion access beyond dedicated clinics.

The medical affairs vice president for Planned Parenthood of America, Dr. Michael Burnhill, said at the time that the FDA was also proposing requirements that “prescribing doctors be trained in mifepristone’s use, be trained in reading ultrasound scans, and maintain admitting privileges at hospitals with emergency facilities no more than an hour from their offices, in case women experience complications.” The last of these requirements bears a striking similarity to some of the unnecessary, burdensome regulations passed in 2013 by the Texas government, which shut down the majority of abortion clinics in the state and were deemed unconstitutional last year.

”To encumber a drug like this is extremely unusual for the FDA,” Dr. Wendy Chavkin, a professor of public health at Columbia University, told the New York Times. ”We have Viagra [which was patented in 1996 and approved in 1998] that went out in widespread fashion even though there was some suggestion that it might cause serious cardiovascular events. In contrast, [mifepristone] is a highly studied drug where the safety and efficacy have been demonstrated. That indicates how the political climate is really interfering in the science.”

Indeed, anti-abortion activists insisted that mifepristone was dangerous, but the actual clinical trials suggested otherwise.

Negotiations between the FDA and the drug’s manufacturer, Danco, concluded with regulations that were not quite as extreme. Still, the abortion pill still ended up being highly restricted: The FDA mandated that mifepristone fall under a set of added regulations known as a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS), which are typically only required for drugs that cause severe adverse effects. Only 74 of the approximately 1750 prescription drugs and ingredients approved by the FDA have REMS protocols. For the abortion pill, those requirements include mandating that prescribers become certified to distribute mifepristone, that patients are made to review an agreement of the potential risks, and that the drug can only be dispensed in clinics or medical offices—meaning that the prescribing health care provider cannot simply write a prescription for their patient to pick up in a pharmacy.

Over the past 16 years, we’ve seen that these rules haven’t made the abortion pill safer for women—just harder to obtain. Some reproductive health advocates argue that these REMS protocols—like TRAP laws or “informed consent” brochures that require doctors to lie to their patients to discourage them from terminating their pregnancies—were based in politics, not research.

“When the mifepristone application was first submitted to the FDA, we had high hopes that this new form of abortion would greatly improve access for women, including taking it beyond the often controversial abortion clinic setting. Indeed, there were numerous family practice clinicians who were excited about expanding their services,” Elisa Wells, the co-director of the Plan C campaign, which promotes information about the abortion pill, wrote in an email. “So, it was a huge disappointment when the FDA approval process for mifepristone was driven by politics not science. This resulted in medically unnecessary restrictions that have greatly reduced access and diminished the potential of this very safe and effective form of abortion.”

To this day, the REMS protocols are in place, preventing true, unburdened access to the abortion pill. Coupled with harsh, anti-abortion state laws, this is devastating for women. The FDA recently modified the label for mifepristone to cut out the unnecessary additional clinic visit for the second dose of medication, allow it to be used longer into pregnancy, and to allow medical providers, like nurses, to administer the drug. But researchers and advocates say this doesn’t go far enough.

In a paper recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers under the banner of the Mifeprex REMS Study Group (Mifeprex is the brand-name for mifepristone) have called for the REMS protocol to be removed. Noting that the rate of deaths associated with medication abortion is 0.00063 percent—which is 14 times less than the rate of women who die due to childbirth in the US—and that its side effects are “minor and transient,” they write that the restrictions on the pill make no clinical sense.

“We now have huge amounts of clinical data [on mifepristone], and there’s nothing exceptionally dangerous about it. Many other drugs have far greater risks,” said Beverly Winikoff, one of the paper’s authors. “And, in any case, there’s also no specific way that the REMS mitigates these supposed risks.”

Lifting the REMS protocols would make it easier for both providers and women, though it’s uncertain if Danco, the pill’s manufacturing company, will file to do so. (The REMS protocol also happens to give the company a monopoly on the drug.)

We now have huge amounts of clinical data [on mifepristone], and there’s nothing exceptionally dangerous about it.

Currently, a provider must become certified to distribute the pill by completing and sending a form that says they can assess pregnancy duration, diagnose ectopic pregnancy, and provide surgical intervention if needed. Once they’ve done that, they have to make the decision to stock the pill in their office or clinic—and, if they decide not to, they have to order it on a case-by-case basis, meaning the patient has to wait for it to come in, delaying care.

Winikoff explained that she has spoken with individual providers, who have told her that this is a huge deterrent to offering the abortion pill in their practices. “There’s really no objective reason why this drug should not be in pharmacies like every other medication,” she said.

Even if some healthcare professionals refuse to write prescriptions for mifepristone, due to the stigma that still exists around abortion, removing the REMS protocols would allow for the drug to be prescribed by willing providers via telemedicine to a wide range of patients. This would greatly expand access to women who cannot get to a clinic or doctor’s office, or who don’t have any in their area. Widening access to the abortion pill would also reduce the rate of late-term abortions.

In the future, perhaps, if mifepristone goes the way of Plan B, women won’t need to be in contact a health care provider at all. “It is high time the REMS requirements are removed to allow women the access they deserve to these pills,” Wells told me. “In many other countries, women can buy these very same pills directly off a pharmacy shelf, which we hope will be the eventual level of access in the US.”

Source: Broadly

https://broadly.vice.com/en_us/article/the-abortion-pill-was-supposed-to-revolutionize-abortion-access-what-happened

A political maternity shoot with an important message.

Reproductive rights are under attack. 

For some, the issues involved are abstract. But for women who are currently pregnant, constant rhetoric about legislating female bodies hits extremely close to home.

So we invited six pregnant women to participate in a special kind of maternity shoot ― one that shows their politics on their bodies. These moms-to-be say the experience of pregnancy has only made them more pro-choice. Because women who choose to carry a child to term are seen by pro-lifers as having made the “right” decision, but the point is that it was a choice. And the women in this shoot all fiercely defend the rights of other women to make their own right choice, whatever it may be.

The women who are pictured here have all chosen to have a child, so they know firsthand the dedication required to do so ― the toll taken on bodies, minds, hearts and wallets. They intimately understand what we’re asking of a woman when we ask her to give up her body for nine months.

Read on or click play to hear in participants’ own words why they support a woman’s right to choose. Then get involved by sharing your own reasons you are (or were) #pregnantandprochoice using the hashtag on Twitter.

***

“In order for women to be able to make informed choices in their lives, they need to have access to education.”

Laura Tiktin-Sharick, Teacher, 36 weeks pregnant

“In order for women to be able to make informed choices in their lives, they need to have access to education. So when I think about reproductive rights, it’s not just about the right to choose. It’s about having education as a young woman and a girl, and then being empowered to be able to make really important life decisions yourself.”

DAMON DAHLEN/HUFFINGTON POST ILLUSTRATION BY JI SUB JEONG

“If men could get pregnant, this wouldn’t be a conversation. There would be abortion clinics like there are Starbucks.”

Amanda Stephen, Actress, 30 weeks pregnant

 “Everybody should have control over their own body. It’s very simple… People aren’t jumping in lines to get abortions. Nobody wants one. People aren’t getting pregnant to get abortions. That doesn’t happen.

… Going through [pregnancy], especially for the first time makes me realize how absurd it is not to have a choice. If men could get pregnant, this wouldn’t be a conversation. There would be abortion clinics like there are Starbucks.”

DAMON DAHLEN/HUFFINGTON POST ILLUSTRATION BY JI SUB JEONG

“When I was growing up, I was a dancer, and was taught at a very young age that my body is my temple and that I own it and it’s mine to do with what I want.”

Emelyn Ocampo, Client Solutions, 36.5 weeks pregnant

“When I was growing up, I was a dancer, and was taught at a very young age that my body is my temple and that I own it and it’s mine to do with what I want … I hope to instill the same thing in my daughter ― that her body is her own and no one can tell her what to do with it.”

DAMON DAHLEN/HUFFINGTON POST ILLUSTRATION BY JI SUB JEONG

“[My mother-in-law] got arrested [for performing illegal abortions] right around the same time as Roe vs. Wade. She really went out there and did what she needed to do to fight for those beliefs which I find really inspiring.”

Mallory, Fundraising Professional, 35 weeks pregnant 

“…After getting married, I heard about all the things that [my husband’s] mom did to support a woman’s right to choose. She got arrested [for performing illegal abortions] right around the same time as Roe vs. Wade. She really went out there and did what she needed to do to fight for those beliefs which I find really inspiring.

I heard her tell the stories about the women who came to them, and what they needed, and how there was no other option … A lot of these were ladies who for one reason or another their husbands refused to allow them to have birth control. They already had six kids, they were sick, they were injured, something happened where if they had another kid they’d die. That she did that in that time period was really inspiring.”

DAMON DAHLEN/HUFFINGTON POST ILLUSTRATION BY JI SUB JEONG

“Even a good, healthy, normal pregnancy that carries to term a healthy baby is a very violent process. So to be forced to do that against your will? I kind of think it would be like being raped for 9 months.”

Priya, Writer, 22 weeks pregnant

“I think having had a baby made me even more pro-choice than I ever was before, because pregnancy is violent. Your whole body changes in such fundamental ways. Your pelvis pulls apart, your ribcage pulls apart, your breasts swell and ache, every part of you hurts. Your joints loosen, your hair changes, your feet change, your organs go crazy. It’s such a violent process ― even a good, healthy, normal pregnancy that carries to term a healthy baby is a very violent process. So to be forced to do that against your will? I kind of think it would be like being raped for 9 months. It’s horrifying to think about.”

DAMON DAHLEN/HUFFINGTON POST ILLUSTRATION BY JI SUB JEONG

“A woman has a right to choose whatever they want to do with their body, whenever they want to do it.”

Karmela Herrera Billones, Education Consultant, 31.5 weeks pregnant

“A woman has a right to choose whatever they want to do with their body, whenever they want to do it. …Until you’re in it, you don’t know the power of creating a human being in your body. And then the honor of raising that child in the world! It’s only underscored my belief that it’s your choice, and why would anyone in the world be able to tell you what you should do with your body?”

DAMON DAHLEN/HUFFINGTON POST ILLUSTRATION BY ISABELLA CARAPELLA

The belly paintings were done by Ji Sub Jeong and Isabella Carapella. All photography by Damon Dahlen. 

Source: Huffington Post

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/6-women-strip-down-to-declare-theyre-pregnant-and-pro-choice_us_5894b94ae4b0c1284f25ad09