Bush Bureaucrats at Dept. of Health and Human Services Redefine Contraception as Abortion

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ALERT
by Meg White

We're all familiar with the popular chant among conservatives that "life begins at conception."  But does that mean our government can say that life ends at contraception?

Apparently, yes, if a proposal from the Department of Health and Human Services that carefully redefines contraception as abortion is adopted. 

The religious fervor is carefully hidden in the minutia.  The leaked proposal initially reads as a defense of healthcare providers who fear being discriminated against for refusing to provide services that are contrary to their religious beliefs.  Basically, just because a clinic or insurance plan receives federal funding "does not authorize any court or any public official or other public authority to require" the entity to provide or pay for services such as sterilization or abortion. 

Which seems somewhat harmless, until you change the meaning of abortion to include contraceptive medicines that 40 percent of women in the U.S. use regularly.

Some conservatives argue that contraceptives could cause a woman to unwittingly release a fertilized egg during menstruation.  But most doctors do not consider pregnancy to have begun at such a point.

While U.S. law is often informed by the American Medical Association (AMA), which defines pregnancy as occurring after implantation of a fertilized egg in the lining of the uterus, the proposal rejects the medical group's advice. 

Instead of using this well-established idea of the beginning of pregnancy, the proposal cites popular opinion from seven years ago to bolster its claim of conception as the beginning of life:

"A 2001 Zogby International American Values poll revealed that 49% of Americans believe that human life begins at conception. Presumably many who hold this belief think that any action that destroys human life after conception is the termination of a pregnancy, and so would be included in their definition of the term ‘abortion.'"

The proposal does cite a few dictionary definitions to bolster its case, but when defining medical and scientific terms, it becomes necessary to use "operational definitions" of things that can actually be measured.  The main reason most medical groups use implantation as a marker is that there is no way to prove conception has occurred before that point.

Although there's no proof that contraception causes abortion, many anti-abortion activists insist that it does.  At a 2001 AMA meeting, voted against informing women that using contraception could cause a fertilized (but not implanted) egg to be expelled from the body.  The reason for the vote was explained in an article at the time by Dr. John C. Nelson, described as a conservative member of the group's executive committee:

"Many people from the American Society of Reproductive Medicine ... decided that they would testify, and their testimony was that there is not sufficient scientific evidence to suggest" that birth control substances can induce abortions.  "One of the foremost infertility doctors in the country [said] that's not the way it works ... I have no reason to doubt him."

Even doctors opposed to abortion shy away from establishing contraception as abortion.  Cristina Page, in her article for The Huffington Post on this matter noted the following:

In 1999, the physicians -- who, like the movement at large, define pregnancy as beginning at fertilization -- released an open letter to community stating:

"Recently, some special interest groups have claimed, without providing any scientific rationale, that some methods of contraception may have an abortifacient effect ... The 'hormonal contraception is abortifacient' theory is not established fact.  It is speculation, and the discussion presented here suggests it is error ... if a family, weighing all the factors affecting their own circumstances, decides to use this modality, we are confident that they are not using an abortifacient."

Another worrying element is the individual protections provided by the proposal.  It would protect staff members from being forced to do anything contrary to their religious beliefs, which would ostensibly allow a pharmacy tech to refuse to hand over a prescription issued by a doctor without any fear of losing their job.  Also, no applicant could be turned down employment based on their refusal to engage in certain activities, opening up healthcare providers to possible hiring discrimination lawsuits.  The provision extends to internship programs and even research, with more implications that can be considered here.

The effects could be far-reaching.  According to NARAL Pro-Choice America, a rape-victim who goes to a health clinic for treatment could be denied emergency contraceptives, women who rely on Title X-funded programs could be denied prescribed contraceptives, and some could even be denied a referral to a clinic which supports reproductive care.

The legal basis for the proposal, the Church and Weldon Amendments, are described as "religiously influenced interference in medicine" by Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health.  

A respect for life is one thing all established religions have in common, but drawing scientific and political conclusions based on one religious philosophy over all others runs counter to the idea of separation of church and state.

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ALERT

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This disturbs me on many levels.

There are many reasons that I am greatly worried about this. One being a woman who is on a contraceptive for other reasons than to prevent pregnancy. There are many of us who take birth control merely to help regulate hormonal imbalances and for things like acne. The thought that someone could refuse to give me my meds just because they don't agree with what it was made for pisses me off. That would impede my right to get medication that helps me just because of what they THINK is right. It shouldn't matter the reason I am taking it, all they need to know is that My Doctor prescribed it and their job it to fill the prescription, not to pass judgment on people. Another reason that I dislike this is my stance as pro-choice, a position that encompasses much more then just abortion. This could severely harm women's health care and not just on the abortion issue. Women have just as much right to seek whatever medical care they wish and this would greatly impede on that right. What will these people want to take away from women next, their right to vote? Also keep this in mind because once they are done with us women they may be out for your rights next. I like that some one else has pointed out that pregnancy is much riskier than anything else and that there have already been abortions taking place long before such contraception came into place, There are natural abortions that we have termed miscarriages. Ultimately they are not much different in that they inflict much mental and physical stress and emotions on the women involved. I truly hope that people become aware of the underhandedness of this administration and do everything in their power to fight against such things and let them know that we will not blindly follow them into darkness.

reproductive rights

of course life begins at "conception." The issue is the meaning of the latter term. As far as I'm concerned, conception begins when a guy gets a hardon for a chick.........or even thinks of of having sex (a la Jimmy Carter). If truth be told, every guy, straight or gay who's coontempleted sex with the likes of Marilyn M, or for my generation Elizebeth T, and failed to follow through is guilty of murder. I suppose that the chicks that turned us down are equally guilty. Lord save us all.

Make up your mind.

What next? Life begins with dinner and a movie? They should follow their own bible, life doesn't begin until the blood is flowing, or when first breath is taken. Pick one.

Two dictionaries have same weight as two Medical Associations

I suppose that Bernie Goetz and Phil Specter equal Colin Powell and Wesley Clark.

Well, one thing you can say

Well, one thing you can say for these people, they are tenacious and consistent.

Can we put them back on the lunatic fringe where they belong now please?

reality

As it has been for thousands of years abortion is still safer than full term pregnancy. Conception as the start of human life is a foolish concept. There are more spontaneous abortions than medical abortions and and full term pregnancies combined. If you believe life begins at conception and do not give these humans their rights as dictated by your religion then you are a hypocrite.