Thursday, July 24, 2008
Bush Administration's Proposed Regs Threaten Access to Birth Control
US News & World Report: A Government Threat to Birth Control, by Deborah Kotz:
A new set of health laws that could be proposed by the government sometime in the next few weeks has women's health activists steaming. If the laws are implemented, they claim, women will have a harder time getting access to contraception.
The legislation, a draft of which was leaked last week to the New York Times, stokes the debate over when human life begins by taking the position that birth control that prevents the implantation of a fertilized egg actually results in abortion. It would prohibit federally funded medical facilities—including teaching hospitals and Planned Parenthood clinics—from refusing to hire doctors who don't want to dispense birth control pills and other types of contraception that may cause the expulsion of a fertilized egg. (It's already illegal to discriminate against doctors who refuse to perform abortions.) The new laws would also override state laws that require hospitals to offer emergency contraception to rape victims and those that require employers to provide contraceptives along with other prescriptions.
See also: The Seattle Times: An Anti-Abortion Ploy.
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/reproductive_rights/2008/07/bush-administ-1.html