At OBOS: Abortion Access as a Health Disparity, the Reel Grrls Take on Comcast, Vermont’s New Law, and More

June 11th, 2011 by admin

I haven’t been very good recently about linking from here to my posts at Our Bodies Our Blog, where I write about twice a week. Here are some recent posts there:

Access to Abortion as a Health Disparities Issue – Highlighting a recent commentary in the Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, in which the authors call for not just expanded access to prevention of unwanted pregnancies, but the treatment of them – and access to that treatment through reducing barriers to abortion access.


“Reel Grrls” Empowers Young Women to Create Videos, Take on Corporate Giants
– a bit about what happens when Comcast picks on a bunch of girls learning media skills

Vermont Passes Law Providing for Insurance Coverage of Home Births and Midwives, Birth Certificate Changes for Transgender Individuals – information on a new law in Vermont that reduces certain barriers, as you could already tell from the post title.


Judge Set to Hear Arguments in Indiana Planned Parenthood Funding Case
– Indiana passed a law to deny Medicaid funds for non-abortion care at Planned Parenthood, which the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services responded to by sending a letter explaining that states are not allowed to pick and choose which qualified providers can be paid for services through Medicaid. Let’s be clear – this is not forbidding federal funds for abortions, which is already forbidden in several different ways. It’s prohibiting women who get care – such as cancer screenings and birth control – through Medicaid from choosing Planned Parenthood as the place they want to get that care, and prevents Planned Parenthood from getting paid through Medicaid for providing that care to poor women.

On the day of the post, a hearing was set to happen to consider halting enforcement of the law; the judge has since said she will decide by July 1. Several Senate Republicans, led by Orrin Hatch, have sent a letter to HHS saying that the law should be able to stand, and calling it “an important model for every state.”


New Guttmacher Video Tackles Misconceptions About Women Who Choose Abortion
– exactly what it sounds like, with the video embedded. I don’t *think* there’s a transcript.

Health Literacy Resources for Providers – several useful resources I learned about at a recent health literacy conference.

Filed under: Uncategorized

Posted in Abortion, health disparities, health literacy, Indiana, Medicaid, midwives, OBOS, Our Bodies Ourselves, Republicans, transgender, Vermont | Comments Off

Sunday News Round-Up, If This is May Edition

June 5th, 2011 by admin

The local newspaper is covering genetic tests for breast cancer, privacy, gene tests patents, cost, and the fears some people have about getting tested.

Iris Carmen at Jezebel has a piece, “The Fight For Abortion Access For Military Women,” that is really about barriers in the military that prevent women from reporting sexual assault, the institutional difficulties faced by women servicemembers who become pregnant, and their lack of access to abortion coverage and providers.

Via the CDC’s National Prevention Intervention Network (@cdcnpin)


CDC NPIN

#30years ago today, @ reported on 1st cases of what became known as #AIDS. http://ow.ly/59vq3

The link in the tweet goes to the actual June 5, 1981 MMWR reporting 5 cases of Pneumocystis Pneumonia in Los Angeles. It’s sort of a punch in the gut to read the opening passage of the editorial note – where the MMWR tries to explain what might be going on – knowing what was coming, what these 5 cases were the canary for. Warning for reference to a “homosexual lifestyle.”

Editorial Note: Pneumocystis pneumonia in the United States is almost exclusively limited to severely immunosuppressed patients. The occurrence of pneumocystosis in these 5 previously healthy individuals without a clinically apparent underlying immunodeficiency is unusual. The fact that these patients were all homosexuals suggests an association between some aspect of a homosexual lifestyle or disease acquired through sexual contact and Pneumocystis pneumonia in this population.

Via a librarian attending the Biomedical Informatics course at Woods Hole (#bmispring2011), I learned about the Office of Research Integrity’s page of summaries of closed research misconduct investigations. The cases seem to consist primarily of researchers making up or faking data or figures.

Thought Catalog (with which I’m unfamiliar) has “Tale of an Abortion,” one woman’s story of her choice to have an abortion.

Some Indiana politicians voted to defund Planned Parenthood, which received federal Medicaid/Title X funding for non-abortion health care, like cancer screenings and contraception. In response, HHS sent the state a letter explaining that they could not “exclude qualified health care providers from providing services that are funded under the program because of a provider’s scope of practice.” In other words, you can’t keep somebody from providing Medicaid-funded care just because they also provide non-Medicaid-funded abortions. Apparently it’s going to court.

The Feminist Majority Foundation reports in their feminist daily news that Yale Faces Possible Fines for Failure to Report Sex Crimes.

People.com associate editor Janet Mock writes for Marie Claire about her life as a transgender woman. She also was interviewed for NPR’s Tell Me More; a couple of the commenters note the inappropriate headline given the piece, which used “transgender” as a noun.

Notes from Libraryland:
The Wall Street Journal has a commentary that shouts “you kids get offa my lawn” at current YA fiction, which is apparently too dystopian, depressing, dark, and dangerous for young folks. There’s been a pretty awesome outpouring in defense of (YA) books on Twitter, using the #yasaves hashtag, with many reporting how alone, uninformed, afraid, sheltered, isolated, etc. they would have been if not for YA fiction, which can particularly be a lifeline for people who find that they are different in some way.

Also? It’s pretty hilarious that alongside an article decrying dystopia, darkness, and destruction in current YA fiction, and looks approvingly at efforts to keep those bad, bad YA books out of the hands of kids, a recommended, apparently-officially-okay title is Fahrenheit 451. Excuse me while I step away for a giggle break.

Here’s a 1971 letter from Isaac Asimov to future patrons of a new library. The Troy, MI library in question is in danger of closing if local folks don’t vote this August to fund it.

Apparently there will soon be swag for the National Library of Medicine’s 175th anniversary. This appeals to a special type of library geek. :)

Via searching on the #yasaves topic, I found this list of YA book recommendations, and have added several of these to my to-read list. Worth checking out.

The title: It has been 95 degrees here for the last week. I’m still walking 2.5 miles outside every day and have a broken a/c at home. If this is May, I might have to move to Antarctica in August.

Filed under: Abortion, Abuse, Rape, & Safety, Access, Rights, & Choice, Adolescent Health, Cancer, Funny, Government, HIV/AIDS, Libraryland, Miscellaneous, News Round-Ups, Pregnancy

Posted in #YAsaves, Abortion, Abuse, Rape, & Safety, Access, Rights, & Choice, Adolescent Health, AIDS, breast cancer, Cancer, CDC, Funny, genetics, Government, HIV, HIV/AIDS, Indiana, libraries, Libraryland, Medicaid, military, Miscellaneous, News Round-Ups, Planned Parenthood, Pregnancy, sexual assault, trans women, Wall Street Journal, YA fiction, Yale | Comments Off