Women's Health

Letter: Abortion in Congress

January 27, 2010, Naples Daily News

Editor, Daily News:

The current national debate about health care and health insurance is being used as a weapon to assail and undercut women’s reproductive health care.

As the debate continues, it is essential that women’s access to the full range of reproductive health services not be compromised. Under present law, some insurance plans cover abortion services. Under the reforms being considered in Congress, the coverage of abortion services will be either severely restricted or nonexistent.

Opposing sides mark 37 years of Roe v. Wade

January 23, 2010, Bradenton Herald

SARASOTA — The 37th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade ruling on abortion brought activists on both sides of the issue to the streets Friday.

Letter: Congress still threatening a woman's right to choose

January 22, 2010, Tallahassee Democrat

In January, 1973, the Supreme Court ruled that the right to privacy in the U.S. Constitution protects the right of a woman to choose whether to continue a pregnancy to term or to have an abortion.

Yet, 37 years later we face the remarkable possibility that the United States Congress will enact health care reform legislation that singles out abortion from all other medical procedures, with unprecedented and unnecessary restrictions.

Indeed, these restrictions threaten not only to prevent women who will gain access to health insurance from obtaining abortion coverage, but could also result in women losing coverage they currently have. In effect these restrictions chip away at the rights that women and men have fought for and essentially move women backward rather than forward.

Blog: Standing Up for the World's Women

by Cecile Richards, President of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America
and Timothy E. Wirth the President of the United Nations Foundation
Posted January 8, 2010 on Huffington Post

Over the past year, the United States has done much to reestablish its standing in the world. Today Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton made another monumental stride forward by announcing our nation's renewed commitment to ensuring that women worldwide have access to safe and effective reproductive health care.

We agree with Secretary Clinton: The status quo is unacceptable.

Secretary of State Clinton to Deliver Major Speech Today

Secretary of State Clinton to Deliver Major Speech Renewing U.S. Support
For Universal Access to Reproductive Health Worldwide

 

What's the latest on Health Care Reform?

As you know, we have been working tirelessly to ensure that women are not worse off after health care reform than they are today. Need proof? Check out the inspiring video above of our Florida supporters who joined over 1,300 others from across the nation in Washington DC for the Day of Action and delivered over 385,000 petitions!  We know you have questions on the abortion language in the Senate version of the bill. Here are some answers:

Letter: Equal treatment for women

December 29, 2009, St. Petersburg Times

The Senate passed health care reform at the expense of women. Senators who supported reform were forced to accept an unworkable abortion provision.

The provision pushed by Nebraska's Sen. Ben Nelson imposes significant new obstacles to women seeking health care coverage, requiring tens of millions of Americans to write two checks to pay for private health insurance instead of just one.

Editorial: Health care hostage

December 30, 2009, Gainesville Sun

When Congress does return to finish the great health care debate, ideology, not finances may turn out to be the deal killer.

The House version includes a ban on federal funding for insurance plans that provide abortion coverage. The Senate's more “liberal” version would allow federal subsidies for such plans, but only if the plans collect separate premiums for abortion coverage and keep the premium dollars separate from federal funds.

Blog: A Day of Action!


by Cecile Richards, President of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America
Posted December 2, 2009, 7:13pm on Huffington Post

 

We called for a day of action to stop the Stupak abortion ban and that's exactly what we got! Like me, hundreds of activists from across the country flooded the U.S. Capitol today with one mission in mind -- to pass health care reform and to ensure that the anti-choice abortion ban, known as the Stupak amendment, is not part of the health care reform bill.

Analysis Examines Industry-Wide Implications of the Stupak/Pitts Amendment

November 17, 2009, George Washington University School of Public Health

WASHINGTON - The Stupak/Pitts Amendment was added to the Affordable Health Care for America Act (H.R. 3962), which passed the House on November 7th. The amendment bans federal funding for abortions and bars payment of federal subsidies to health insurance products sold in exchanges that cover most medically indicated abortions.

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