Vancouver Sun

It’s chilling that abortion battle still isn’t over

Genesa Greening examines fight for reproducti­ve rights.

- Genesa Greening is the president and CEO of B.C. Women’s Hospital and Health Centre Foundation.

I exhaled mightily when the Conservati­ves pledged not to reopen the federal abortion debate.

I suspect many Canadian women did. However, this relief has no permanency. It’s an uneasy reprieve that has since given way to a bone-chilling concern that I can’t shake.

That an abortion debate was even being considered should infuriate the 77 per cent of Canadians who believe in a woman’s right to choose.

Today, I find myself wondering when the next threat to women will come and when we will have to defend again things like our reproducti­ve rights, access to contracept­ion and the need for a modern sex-ed curriculum.

It’s also related to why I believe in investing in free universal access to contracept­ion and supporting women and girls in receiving the medical services we deserve: to ensure agency of self is always at the forefront.

Equality is predicated on a platform of choice, and when it starts to be taken away, equality is impossible.

When a girl is denied the education she requires to make conscious choices about her reproducti­ve health, which can lead to STIs and unwanted pregnancie­s, it can stifle her ability to fully achieve all that she set out to accomplish in this lifetime.

If we genuinely believe that women are equal, this also means she gets the ability to choose when to become a mother.

To understand how women are at risk, simply look to the flame-thrower that has been taken to American health policy in limiting access to birth control, abortion, and bolstering abstinence-only sex education.

In the year leading up to our federal election, I’d caution Canadians not to be dismissive of the lunacy of U.S. health policy as something that couldn’t take root here.

If we genuinely believe that women are equal, this also means she gets the ability to choose when to become a mother.

Just look east.

Ontario seems to have found the American playbook, and the same myopic and dangerous public health policies were dangled as rewards to the base who stepped up to propel Premier Doug Ford to victory.

Be it allowing backbenche­rs to table legislatio­n on restrictin­g abortions or scrapping Ontario’s 2015 sex-ed curriculum, including education on informed consent, the potential for regression is alive and real here in Canada.

Women and girls need to have access to all of the informatio­n required to make mindful decisions about their health and their futures. We must ensure there are no taboos when talking about sexual health, contracept­ion, and reproducti­ve choice and rights.

We must foster a society where related questions can be asked, where science-based answers are received, and which leads into a health system that responds to these choices accordingl­y — free from stigma and the imposed morality of others.

This all swirls around a day that I reflected on this week: World Contracept­ion Day.

At a time when the World Health Organizati­on is seeking to draw awareness of all contracept­ive methods that enable people to make informed choices on their sexual and reproducti­ve health — essentiall­y where all of these conversati­ons, disagreeme­nts, and challenges stem from — I feel like we’re still looking over our shoulders, wondering where the next threat is going to come from.

To think we are debating the benefits of ageappropr­iate sex education, the life-changing impacts of universall­y available free contracept­ion and legal access to safe abortion shows we still have a long way to go.

Until these become non-negotiable­s, our commitment to women’s equality is only lip service.

The degradatio­n of reproducti­ve rights happens slowly, in the open, and they can most assuredly be taken from us.

As a nation, we have a federal election coming up in just over a year.

To my sisters and our allies, be vigilant.

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