Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Hyde Amendment a barrier to reproducti­ve health care

- By Camila Rojas Camila Rojas is a Poderosa, a reproducti­ve justice activist with the Latina Institute Florida, who lives in Deerfield Beach.

I came to this country with my parents to escape the violence that continues to consume our native Venezuela. My family hasworked hard to make Broward home, and as a young Latina, I am determined to advocate for equality formyself andmy community.

Itwas during a trip to Tallahasse­e that I realized howmany barriers people of color and immigrants face when it comes to reproducti­ve health, particular­ly abortion care. Financial barriers, baseless hurdles like waiting periods, and restrictio­ns due to immigratio­n status have forced many to forego reproducti­ve care altogether.

Let’s be clear, abortion is a vital part of reproducti­ve health care. When individual­s can determine if and when to have children, it benefits not just their families and communitie­s, but society as a whole. All of us, regardless of age, race, gender, economic or documentat­ion status, deserve access to affordable reproducti­ve health care so thatwe can take care of ourselves with dignity and self-determinat­ion.

Several years ago, Iwas in Tallahasse­e with activists from the National Latina Institute for Reproducti­ve Justice to urge lawmakers to vote against several bills that would further restrict abortion access. Although I felt a great sense of community surrounded by people whowere passionate about these issues, Iwas shocked to see how little our legislator­s cared about our reproducti­ve health.

I told my legislator­s thatwe needed solutions that support the health, safety and dignity of our youth, including comprehens­ive sex education, contracept­ion and funding for youth health care, not laws that strip them of their autonomy. But they didn’t listen.

Years later, when I needed abortion care myself, I faced a different barrier. At 21, Iwas not ready to become a parent, and I certainly could not afford to have children.

Now, 44 years since Congress passed the Hyde Amendment, which bars people fromusing Medicaid to pay for abortion services and has encouraged many states like Florida to place similar restrictio­ns on private health plans bought on the Affordable Care ActMarketp­lace, I am here to share my story.

When I called my insurance company, I was shamed by the person on the line, who told me in pointedly ugly terms that my plan, purchased through the Affordable Care Act, did not cover the costs of any abortion-related services.

I came to find out that Florida is one of 26 states that has prohibited the private health insurance plans bought through the Affordable Care ActMarketp­lace from paying for abortion care, thanks to the Hyde Amendment.

These financial barriers and unnecessar­y hurdles are not incidental. They are part of a larger narrative that seeks to control the bodies ofwomen of color and strip them of their reproducti­ve agency. Our communitie­s have experience­d countless atrocities as a result of this country’s efforts to control our bodies. These atrocities continue, as we watch babies torn fromtheir mothers’ breasts and read accounts of forced sterilizat­ions ofwomen in ICE detention.

Restrictio­ns on health care force people likeme to struggle to raise funds for medical care despite having insurance. The cost of ending a pregnancy can mean having to choose between paying for rent or paying for health care.

Having to raise funds for an abortion delays access to a basic medical service, which then becomes more expensive, invasive and difficult to obtain.

Meanwhile, the same lawmakers in Tallahasse­e who have pushed for abortion restrictio­ns have failed to provide any support or safety net for mothers: no help with childcare, no help with health care, only laws to take away reproducti­ve freedoms.

Iwas fortunate. I had my network of activists at the National Latina Institute for Reproducti­ve Justice for support, and through them, I learned about a local abortion fund that provides financial help to people who cannot afford to cover their own care because of these restrictio­ns.

It is so hard to face these obstacles and struggle to raise the money needed for care when you have so much on your mind and so much at stake. I feel very privileged that Iwas able to find help to pay formy abortion care and extremely grateful for the amazing, compassion­ate care I received from the provider, but it shouldn’t be a privilege.

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