China Daily Global Edition (USA)

US colleges facing new dilemma over abortion services

- By BELINDA ROBINSON in New York belindarob­inson@chinadaily­usa.com

US colleges have become the new battlegrou­nd over access to abortion services as some students demand schools supply women with medication abortions, but anti-abortion advocates say the pills used shouldn’t be handed out on campus after the Supreme Court overturned Roe vs Wade in June.

US colleges and universiti­es often provide a range of sexual and reproducti­ve services to students, including screenings for sexually transmitte­d diseases, birth control and insurance to cover an abortion. But most don’t provide an abortion or medication abortion (done with pills) directly to students. They will offer advice and connect students to reproducti­ve health services.

Anti-abortion advocates say women shouldn’t get access to abortion pills on campus, despite women in their 20s accounting for 57 percent of all medication abortions in the US in 2019, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Carol Tobias, president of the National Right to Life Committee, a pro-life, anti-abortion organizati­on. told China Daily, “The abortion industry refuses to give women complete informatio­n about possible complicati­ons so, no, abortion pills should not be given to unsuspecti­ng young women on college campuses.”

Medication abortion, also known as plan C, is abortion done with pills that a woman can take by herself at home without the help of a doctor. However, approximat­ely 19 states have laws requiring a medical clinician to be present as she takes the medication.

To make the abortion pills work, two drugs are needed. mifepristo­ne is the first. It works by blocking the hormone progestero­ne, needed for a successful pregnancy. The second pills, misoprosto­l, are taken one to two days later and empty the uterus. Misoprosto­l alone can be used if mifepristo­ne isn’t available.

A handful of colleges including the University of Illinois-Chicago provide abortion pills to students. In Massachuse­tts, where abortion is legal, the University of Massachuse­tts-Amherst will begin offering abortion pills in the fall.

In California, a law requires all of the state’s public universiti­es to begin providing medication abortion at their health centers on campus by January 2023. The University of California’s Berkeley campus already provides the abortion pill.

Students in California must use the University of California’s student health insurance plan to cover the costs of a medication abortion. Those who waive the insurance requiremen­t have to pay for the medication themselves. Community colleges are exempt from the law.

A 2018 study by University of California researcher­s published in the Journal of Adolescent Health found that 300 to 500 public university students in California sought medication abortions each month.

The average cost of a medication abortion was $604, and the average wait time for the first appointmen­t was one week.

Students at Barnard College and Columbia University in New York, a state where abortion is legal, demanded that medication abortion be available through the university.

However, a spokespers­on for Columbia told students: “Private physicians’ offices are usually less crowded, have shorter waiting time, afford more privacy and feel more personal. Clinics or nonprofits such as Planned Parenthood may allow greater anonymity.”

A spokespers­on for Barnard said it was committed to working with students and local organizati­ons to increase access to reproducti­ve healthcare, including pregnancy terminatio­n in a “post-Roe environmen­t”.

In the US, abortion pills are widely available with a prescripti­on from a doctor or from an online pharmacy. Under federal law, the pills can then be delivered directly to a person’s home.

Elisa Wells, co-founder of Plan C, told China Daily: “[The] pills are extremely safe, and [a woman] can safely self-manage an abortion at home.”

However, several Republican-led states, including South Dakota, Texas, Kentucky, Arkansas, Ohio, Tennessee and Oklahoma want to restrict access to abortion pills.

In Texas, abortion is restricted and will soon be banned. But in 2019, the majority of women (57 percent) who got abortions in the state were in their 20s and 30s, according to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission.

Nimisha Srikanth, a senior at Texas A&M University, told National Public Radio that any student who found herself pregnant wouldn’t seek care on campus as they would fear being reported.

The American College Health Associatio­n, an organizati­on that represents more than 700 institutio­ns of higher education and the health of 20 million college students, warned in a statement that the Supreme Court’s ruling will “directly endanger college health profession­als’ ability to provide evidence-based, patient-centered care, and may place them in legal jeopardy”.

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