Abortion, Reproductive Health: Not Just Rights to Me
Throughout a long election campaign, the future of abortion rights and the right to choose has remained a silent concern for many women and men as the higher-profile issues of the economy and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan dominated debate. But the question on Roe v. Wade put to the presidential candidates at the final debate on Wednesday moved the issue front and center once again. It is an intensely personal and relevant issue for women, and for most of us it is not an abstraction.
It became central to my life a couple of years back, when my primary physician refused my request to prescribe the morning-after-pill, citing medical reasons that made no sense to me. I was in a better position than most women in the United States. I was in a dual-income relationship and had a steady job that serendipitously afforded me all the information I needed to assess my situation.
I knew I had a number of options. I had the resources to seek out another health care provider, and I would be able to afford a safe abortion if it came to that. The only option I had ruled out was to carry a potential pregnancy to term: we simply would not be able to afford childcare and other expenses for a second child.
This, to me, is the real question of choice. As voters in California, Colorado, and South Dakota are asked to decide on proposals that would limit women's access to abortion and contraception, there is precious little public debate on whether actually having a child is necessarily a viable choice, financially and professionally.
For many, it is not. Federal law affords just 12 weeks of unpaid maternity or paternity leave, and only for those who are eligible, which excludes about 40 percent of American workers. There are no allowances for time off to breastfeed. There are few public child care options before primary school, and even private alternatives generally will not take children under 2.
Perhaps most disturbing in terms of lack of support, 8.7 million children in the United States currently have no health insurance. In the eyes of the law, it would seem, physically giving birth is the only consideration: you are afforded a short time to regain your strength after the delivery, but are otherwise on your own.
Some -- even advocates for choice -- would say that if you plan to depend on the government, you shouldn't have a child in the first place. But this argument also presumes that if there were public health care and childcare, and provisions for family support, birth rates would shoot through the roof, draining government coffers. Experience from countries with much better maternity and child protections shows otherwise. In my own country, Denmark, there are provisions that are generous by American standards - 52 weeks of paid parental leave, child care and public health care. But the birth rate also is quite low, 1.74 per woman in her lifetime, compared with 2.1 in the United States.
Support services are not the only factor in making a choice about parenthood, but clearly in the United States, from a purely economic point of view, fertility is not a matter of choice for everyone.
In the United States the lack of support for child care and parental benefits also coexists with serious legal or financial obstacles to accessing safe abortion services and even, at times, contraception. Since 1973, both state and federal legislators have limited access to legal abortion through burdensome regulation. Women with limited economic resources face additional obstacles because abortion services have been subject to a federal funding freeze since 1977 except in cases of rape, or incest or where the mother's life is in danger. Furthermore, the majority of states do not provide health care funding for abortion services that fall outside these exceptions.
In fact, fertility (and, by extension, choice) often comes down to a class issue. While the overall fertility rate has stayed the same, the number of children living in low-income families has steadily increased since 2000. The point is not that poor women shouldn't have children, but that all women should have a real choice - and that means access to information about contraception and abortion, and the support they need to raise children.
In my case, I ended up finding an alternative health care provider, who prescribed me the morning-after-pill.
For me, this is more than a personal issue. I have made a commitment to press for a real opportunity for choice for all women, including access to safe abortion services for poor, adolescent, or otherwise vulnerable women.
But choice also requires science-based sex education, contraception, maternity and paternity benefits, and access to child care and health care. The rationale behind polices such as Denmark's is that rearing a child is a service to all: reproduction, at its most basic, is the reproduction of society. Both the personal and the collective nature of that choice need to be protected by law and defended by the next president.
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5 Comments so far
Show AllO Rei de Reis makes a great point in saying that Pro-Life and Pro-Choice are not polar opposites.
I agree that a woman should have the right to choice, but it must have limits. By limits, I mean that abortion should only be allowed in the first Trimester, unless the health of the mother is at risk. If an abortion is your choice why can you not make that choice while the child you carry is still barely developed.
Late-term abortions and partial-birth abortions should never be allowed, just as if I murder a mother who bears child I may be charged with the murder of the child as well. That is what Late-Term abortions are, murder.
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts."
-- John Keats
Being anti-abortion is ultimately misanthropic imo.
The idea that certain people think they have the right to tell women what to do with their own bodies has always confused me since I was a child.
I would like to see the reaction of men in America if a law was passed requiring them to give up one of their kidneys to someone else who needed it. We only need ONE kidney to live. Why not give the other one away? The government will pay for the surgery and you will be fine after a few weeks. If there are complications and you die....oh well....
That's what women face when they want but cannot get an abortion.
The U.S. maternal mortality rate rose to 13 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2004, according to statistics released this week by the National Center for Health Statistics. Of course this doesn't include all the medical complications during and after birth and later in a woman's life. Here is a small list of pregnancy complications.
* Bacterial Vaginosis
* Bleeding During Pregnancy
* Blighted Ovum
* Cervical Cerclage
* Chicken Pox
* Cholestasis of Pregnancy
* Concerns regarding Early Fetal Development
* Cytomegalovirus (CMV) Infection
* D&C procedure after a Miscarriage
* Ectopic Pregnancy
* Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD); Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) & Fetal Alcohol Effects (FAE)
* Fetal Growth Restriction
* Gestational Diabetes
* Group B Strep Infection
* High Amniotic Fluid Levels : Polyhydramnios
* HIV/AIDS during Pregnancy
* Hyperemesis Gravidarum
* Incompetent Cervix
* Intrauterine Growth Restriction (IUGR): Small for Gestational Age (SGA)
* Listeria
* Low Amniotic Fluid Levels : Oligohydramnios
* Miscarriage
* Molar Pregnancy
* Placenta Accreta
* Placenta Previa
* Placental Abruption
* Preeclampsia
* Pregnancy Induced Hypertension (PIH)
* RH Factor
* STD'S & STI'S During Pregnancy
* Tipped Uterus
* Toxoplasmosis
* Urinary Tract Infection
* Vanishing Twin Syndrome
* Yeast Infection
Death from kidney donation is very rare (about 3 in 10,000). The average wait time to receive a kidney is 5 years. 15% of the people who donate a kidney will develop kidney failure after donation with a significant portion resulting from diabetes and hypertension.
Roe vs. Wade doesn't only give women the choice of ending a pregnancy, it also gives women the choice to continue a pregnancy. So in theory, overturning Roe vs. Wade could also force women to end a pregnancy even when they want to carry the child full term and give birth. And the impact of this would ripple in many ways. Having a child could be something only wealthy women could do, or poor people could be forced to only have one child or no children at all. Or it could be made where only those deemed worthy could have children regardless of wealth or status. I digress.
Pro-Life and Pro-choice are not opposites. Therefor some, like myself can be both. I.E,
Pro-life meaning, for education reform, access to healthier foods, Foster care reform, adoption reform, a reform of our legal and correctional systems, paying a living wage, Universal Healthcare, equal pay for equal work for women, Longer maternaty leave, etc.
Pro-choice being that I should not have the ability to dictate the family structure of someone that lives 1000 miles away from me. Plain and simple. It's not my or anyone else business who someone loves, marries, or has sex with.
We need to refrain from being so involed with what goes on in the backyard of our neighbors. You wouldn't want someone walking into your kitchen and saying " No, No, you can't eat that. A person with a concious shouldn't eat meat" Then form a law where no one eat meat any more? It makes no sense when you think about it like that.
So then why should someone be able to walk into your bed room and dictate what goes on in there?
Want an end to abortion? Educate adolecense on controception and emotional awareness, increase the wages so people can afford to care for a child, or at least afford for one parent to stay home, at least people will have enough income to manage a childcare situation. And there are lots of other reasons which most of you already know.
My point is this is not a national issue. It is a personal issue. Life doesn't end when a baby is born.
O Rei de Reis
I've said it before and I'll say it again. There is NOTHING pro-life about these phoney rightwing motherfuckers who call themselves "pro-life". There are plenty of inequalities being levied against both men and women alike and the "conservatives" love it. Men who moderate themselves from the macho egotistical "conservative" ideology are PERSECUTED. Women who demonstrate independence from being a slave version of a housewife are persecuted.
Nonetheless, here's another problem. There are women who choose the abuser over the gentle man. In fact, not too long ago, a survey pointed out that when asked to choose between a rapist and a cross dresser for marriage, 5 out of 6 choose the rapist ! If you want to win against the phoney "pro-lifers", both men and women need to be brought into the picture. Otherwise, it's all a lose-lose.