Latest News

Obituary: Doris Carson was a city pioneer in women's reproductive health

The physician was an avid promoter of family planning.

August 9, 2008
By Jessie-Lynne Kerr, The Times-Union

"My greatest concern is to see that every child is a wanted child," she said in a 1992 interview with the Times-Union. She fervently promoted family planning and said she was uncomfortable with abortion.


There will be a memorial service at 2 p.m. Friday at Riverside Presbyterian Church, 849 Park St., where she had been an elder and Sunday school teacher.

Our view: Rights at risk

Orlando Sentinel
August 3, 2008

Shelve arrogant White House push to redefine birth control as abortion

Countless Space Coast women every day make private decisions about bearing children, including choosing to use contraception.


The vast majority of American women use a contraceptive method at some point in their lives.

And 62 percent of the 62 million women nationwide of childbearing age are currently using one, according to the Guttmacher Institute.

Abortion Proposal Sets Condition on Aid

New York Times
By ROBERT PEAR
July 15, 2008

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration wants to require all recipients of aid under federal health programs to certify that they will not refuse to hire nurses and other providers who object to abortion and even certain types of birth control.

Under the draft of a proposed rule, hospitals, clinics, researchers and medical schools would have to sign “written certifications” as a prerequisite to getting money under any program run by the Department of Health and Human Services.

95 groups unite to push health care agenda

By Lisa Greene, St. Petersburg Times 
Wednesday, July 9, 2008 

 
TAMPA — Making health care more affordable is so important to 95 local and national advocacy groups that they have formed a coalition to push health care reform.

The coalition, Health Care for America Now, launched a national media campaign Tuesday with news conferences in Tampa and 52 other cities, including six more in Florida.

"We will either have a guarantee of quality, affordable health care," said Bill Newton, executive director of the Florida Consumer Action Network, one of the groups participating. "Or we will continue to be at the mercy of the private insurance industry … putting company profits before our health."

Participating groups include the National Education Association, the Campaign for America's Future, the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, the Service Employees International Union and MoveOn.

States turn down US abstinence education grants

Associated Press

June 24, 2008

By KEVIN FREKING 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Skeptical states are shoving aside millions of federal dollars for abstinence education, walking away from the program the Bush administration touts for slowing teen sexual activity. Barely half the states are still in, and two more say they are leaving.

Syndicate content