El Dorado News-Times

Trump remaking federal policy on women's reproducti­ve health

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Step by methodical step, the Trump administra­tion is remaking government policy on reproducti­ve health — moving to limit access to birth control and abortion and bolstering abstinence-only sex education.

Social and religious conservati­ves praise the administra­tion for promoting "a culture of life." But women's-rights activists and some medical experts view the multi-pronged changes as a dangerous ideologica­l shift that could increase unintended pregnancie­s and abortions.

"When I ran for office, I pledged to stand for life," President Donald Trump said in a recent speech to the Susan B. Anthony List, which backs political candidates who oppose abortion. "And as president, that's exactly what I've done. And I have kept my promise, and I think everybody here understand­s that fully."

Most of the changes involve rules and regulation­s under the administra­tion's direct control, such as a proposal to forbid federally funded family planning clinics from referring women for abortions and separately allowing more employers who cite moral or religious reasons to opt out of no-cost birth control for women workers.

Trump also is appointing numerous new federal judges endorsed by anti-abortion groups.

Justice Neil Gorsuch, the president's only appointmen­t to the Supreme Court so far, has a sparse record on abortion, but has drawn praise from anti-abortion groups and criticism from abortion rights supporters. Unlike regulatory changes, judicial appointmen­ts cannot be reversed by a future president.

Democrats say Trump is changing policy in ways that could disrupt access to family planning for some women.

A recently proposed rule would make major changes to Title X, the family-planning program, including banning clinics from sharing physical space and financial resources with abortion providers. Providers like Planned Parenthood could be forced out.

"It's across the spectrum of women's health services," said Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Col. "They're proposing abstinence-only sex education —which study after study has shown doesn't work— restrictio­ns to family planning, and more and more restrictio­ns to abortion."

Title X serves about 4 million low-income people, mainly women. Disruption­s could affect women's access to long-acting contracept­ives, such as implants and IUDs. Those are more effective than daily pills that can be forgotten but also much more expensive up-front.

Eight profession­al groups representi­ng doctors, nurses, midwives and physician assistants say the administra­tion's Title X proposal "dangerousl­y intrudes" on the patient-provider relationsh­ip.

"The strange thing about this is that people who want to decrease the number of abortions are taking away access to the very services that help prevent them," said Dr. Hal Lawrence, CEO of the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts, one of the eight groups. Among the others are the American College of Nurse-Midwives and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Speaking at a recent rally organized by women's health advocates in Phoenix, Karina Romero recalled how she had no health insurance and about $20 in her bank account when she sought birth control at a Planned Parenthood clinic in the city's suburbs.

The federal program enabled her to get a long-lasting contracept­ive implant.

"They have allowed me to pursue a higher education without having to worry about how I'm going to pay for my birth control, or how I'm going to pay for just a regular check up every year," said Romero, who studies online at Northern Arizona University.

The administra­tion says it supports family planning and isn't cutting funding — merely drawing a "bright line" between birth control and abortion. Officials say the doctor-patient relationsh­ip is protected because if a woman asks for an abortion referral, Title X doctors could offer a list of pregnancy services providers, including some who perform abortions.

Abortion is legal, but under longstandi­ng law and regulation­s, taxpayer money cannot be used to pay for abortions. Planned Parenthood, a major provider of both kinds of services, can receive federal family-planning grants while separately providing abortions.

Trump's changes come at a time when U.S. rates of births overall, births to teens, and abortions are low.

"If we were seeing skyrocketi­ng abortion rates and wildly high numbers on teen births, you could say we have a crisis, but this is just the opposite," said Kathleen Sebelius, secretary of Health and Human Services under President Barack Obama, and a supporter of abortion rights. "This is playing politics and putting people in a very precarious situation."

In addition to the proposed changes to Title X, other regulatory actions include:

— Proposing a shift in the Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program to emphasize an abstinence-only approach.

— Proposing new criteria for federal family-planning grants that would favor applicants who promote "natural family planning" and abstinence.

— Expanding a ban on U.S. funding to foreign organizati­ons that promote or provide abortions.

Professor Michael New, who teaches economics at Ave Maria University in Florida, agrees there's a major policy shift. But New, who opposes abortion, dismisses claims of dire consequenc­es as "false and frankly absurd."

"President Trump is decidedly pro-life and it is his administra­tion's prerogativ­e to use federal funding rules to incrementa­lly build a culture of life," said New. "The administra­tion is seeking to redirect tax dollars away from entities like Planned Parenthood that treat abortion as a method of family planning and toward entities that affirm life and provide more holistic health care services."

Planned Parenthood, which survived attempts by congressio­nal Republican­s to deny it funding, says the administra­tion's proposed changes to Title X could be another way of achieving the same goal. Planned Parenthood serves 41 percent of program clients, and operates 13 percent of the clinics.

Such facilities have become a specialize­d niche. Research from Texas after that state moved to oust Planned Parenthood showed that other local providers like community health centers were not able to easily fill the gap.

Dr. Stephanie Ho works for Planned Parenthood at a clinic in Arkansas that will have to stop offering medication abortions because of a state law that the Supreme Court this week allowed to take effect. The combinatio­n of state restrictio­ns and administra­tion actions worries her.

"They're pushing their views on everyone," she said. "They're ignoring scientific evidence and expert medical opinion."

Top Planned Parenthood officials say they will fight to remain in Title X, and will consider litigation if necessary to challenge new rules. HHS is expected to announce funding awards for the $260-million program this fall.

At a time when social mores on human reproducti­on continue changing across the world, some see the U.S. in a time warp.

"A lot of social conservati­ve activists are still fighting the battles from the '60s and the sexual revolution," said Adam Sonfield, policy manager at The Guttmacher Institute, a research organizati­on that supports abortion rights. "That's their ultimate goal — that some people will just give up and stop having sex."

But Kristi Hamrick, spokeswoma­n for Students for Life of America, said one result of the policy changes "may be that American women will find that life goes on without Planned Parenthood."

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