COMMENTS: 5
NY Times Botches Abortion Conversation
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Several prominent women's health advocates are dismayed by a recent New York Times article about do-it-yourself abortions using the drug misoprostol. The Times piece, published January 4, mischaracterized a study about the drug, and researchers say the piece is sensationalist, implying that lots of New York City Latinas are seriously endangering their health and breaking the law. Some activists now worry that the Times article could muffle a more nuanced discussion about access to reproductive health care for immigrant women that transcends the phenomenon of DIY misprostol abortions.
In the US, misoprostol -- also known by its brand name Cytotec -- is a prescription drug approved by the FDA as one of two medications employed in tandem to induce non-surgical, "RU-486"-style abortions. The FDA has never approved misoprostol for solo use for abortions. But in many countries where abortion is banned, the drug is sold without prescription, and millions of women have taken it to end their pregnancies. Simultaneously, many women from these countries have immigrated to the US. During the past decade, speculation has spread about whether they are commonly using misoprostol here to self-induce abortions. Anecdotes abound, including many in New York City, but public health data has been non-existent.
Two reproductive health advocacy groups, Cambridge, Mass.-based Ibis Reproductive Health and New York City-based Gynuity Health Projects decided recently to do some research. These groups and others for years have been teaching how to improve the use of misoprostol in areas where safe, effective abortion is inaccessible. None of the organizations recommend misoprostol abortions when better ones are available. But where they aren't, said Gynuity's president, Dr. Beverly Winikoff, misoprostol is an excellent alternative. Several medical studies show that when taken during the first two months of pregnancy, the drug is safe and effective in 85 to 90 percent of cases. Dr. Daniel Grossman, an OBGYN and senior associate at Ibis, noted that in Brazil and some other Latin American countries, underground misoprostol use is credited with helping to dramatically decrease the abortion injury and death rate among women. In the 10 to 15 percent of cases when misoprostol is taken according to protocol and provokes a miscarriage but doesn't finish it, the woman must immediately seek medical help to complete it. Most problems arise when women take the drug much later in pregnancy, in inappropriate doses, or without quickly seeking medical follow-up for complications.
But many such problems could be prevented by doing "harm reduction" education about misoprostol in communities who are already using it, Grossman and Winikoff argue. Such efforts often go on under the public radar, because of fears about anti-abortion political backlash. To explore whether education programs could be appropriate in the US, Gynuity and Ibis in 2007 quietly started surveying hundreds of low-income Latinas visiting reproductive health clinics in New York, Boston, and San Francisco. The women were asked if they had ever tried to abort themselves in this country.
So what did the study find? Far less misoprostol use than expected, it turns out. Data analysis isn't finished yet and the study won't be published until March. But Grossman said that 1,200 women were surveyed, and at most, only 17 reported using misoprostol at all, let alone in the US. "You absolutely cannot use this study to generalize beyond the groups we studied," he warned. "But the vast majority of the women we talked to went to medical facilities, like Planned Parenthood, to get their abortions. Misoprostol use was not common."
But the Times tells a different story. It says the study finds that in Latina immigrant enclaves like Upper Manhattan, misoprostol is "frequently employed ...despite the widespread availability of safe, legal and inexpensive abortions in clinics and hospitals."
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: vasumurti on Jan 19, 2009 3:27 PM
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The only frustration I have with the Left, therefore, is its failure to see abortion as a secular human rights issue--especially those who claim to espouse nonviolence, e.g., are antinuclear or antiwar, or support nonviolent civil disobedience.
During the spring of 1989, for example, a huge pro-choice rally in Washington, DC was endorsed by the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Studies in Atlanta. I found this incredibly Orwellian! It's like many on the Left have trouble seeing abortion as a human rights issue; seeing it as an act of violence against the unborn.
Similarly, in the mid-'90s, a group of various recording artists released an album benefiting the abortion rights movement, entitled Born to Choose. The title also struck me as Orwellian: We are "born" to choose whether or not someone else may be "born to choose."
And recently I saw a car with two bumper stickers: one of them read "Create Peace" and the other read "Pro-Choice." The owner of the car apparently saw no contradiction between the two slogans.
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» RE: let's keep the debate balanced
Posted by: EKSwitaj
» A debate, folks? It's a hate campaign against 'other' women
Posted by: luzmejor
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Posted by: Plexius2 on Jan 19, 2009 5:03 PM
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Posted by: Red State Gal on Jan 21, 2009 9:36 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That means that men cause abortions. Why do we never talk about this? Why is abortion seen as a women's issue when it is most profoundly and in the first place a men's issue?
Red State Gal
RedStateFeminists
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: vasumurti on Jan 19, 2009 3:27 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The only frustration I have with the Left, therefore, is its failure to see abortion as a secular human rights issue--especially those who claim to espouse nonviolence, e.g., are antinuclear or antiwar, or support nonviolent civil disobedience.
During the spring of 1989, for example, a huge pro-choice rally in Washington, DC was endorsed by the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Studies in Atlanta. I found this incredibly Orwellian! It's like many on the Left have trouble seeing abortion as a human rights issue; seeing it as an act of violence against the unborn.
Similarly, in the mid-'90s, a group of various recording artists released an album benefiting the abortion rights movement, entitled Born to Choose. The title also struck me as Orwellian: We are "born" to choose whether or not someone else may be "born to choose."
And recently I saw a car with two bumper stickers: one of them read "Create Peace" and the other read "Pro-Choice." The owner of the car apparently saw no contradiction between the two slogans.
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: let's keep the debate balanced
Posted by: EKSwitaj
» A debate, folks? It's a hate campaign against 'other' women
Posted by: luzmejor
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Plexius2 on Jan 19, 2009 5:03 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: Red State Gal on Jan 21, 2009 9:36 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That means that men cause abortions. Why do we never talk about this? Why is abortion seen as a women's issue when it is most profoundly and in the first place a men's issue?
Red State Gal
RedStateFeminists
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