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Women’s Health News

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Opinion: Don’t touch funding for Planned Parenthood

AS A FORMER governor, I understand that this country faces a growing deficit and we must exercise fiscal discipline. As a Republican, I also understand that women, no matter their party affiliation, are concerned about the health of their mothers, their daughters and their sisters.

That’s why I am concerned that social conservatives are trying to hijack the budget process to include proposals that would wipe out access to family planning, HIV testing and counseling and breast and cervical cancer screening for millions of American women.

The health of American women, preventing unintended pregnancies and supporting sound family planning are goals that all of us, irrespective of political persuasion, should support. Not surprisingly, it turns out that what is good for women’s health is also good for our pocketbooks.

The simple fact is that every public dollar invested in family planning saves taxpayers nearly $4. Yet, the House is proposing to eliminate the National Family Planning Program, also known as Title X. Eliminating Title X would mean in just one year, at least two million women would be denied access to Pap tests, 2.3 million would go without clinical breast exams and more than five million women and men wouldn’t benefit from contraceptive services.

The House leadership is also proposing to bar Planned Parenthood from receiving any federal funds. This is unacceptable.

Value of preventive care

I know firsthand the value of Planned Parenthood health centers in providing preventive care to women. In rural areas, Planned Parenthood is often the only place to turn for vital health care needs as well as sex education, and in dense urban areas, Planned Parenthood provides these same services to women in disproportionately low income and underserved communities.

Every year, Planned Parenthood’s doctors and nurses provide more than 3 million women with preventive health care, including nearly one million lifesaving screenings for cervical cancer, 830,000 breast exams, contraception to nearly 2.5 million patients and nearly four million tests and treatments for sexually transmitted infections, including HIV. Literally, they are a trusted health care provider to millions of women.

For those who oppose abortion, they should know that Planned Parenthood’s services prevent 973,000 unintended pregnancies and 406,000 abortions each year. Those are statistics that Republicans and Democrats should wholeheartedly embrace.

But the extreme proposals undermining both the National Family Planning Program and Planned Parenthood will have an adverse effect on those numbers. While defunding Planned Parenthood will do nothing to reduce the deficit or improve the economy, it will lead to an increase in unplanned pregnancies and abortions and result in escalating Medicaid costs.

Barring Planned Parenthood from critical federal public health funding would mean these women would face tremendous difficulties finding other health care providers to deliver high-quality reproductive health care. This would only increase these women’s risk of undetected cancer and unintended pregnancy.

In the heated, partisan environment in Washington, it is often forgotten that a Republican ushered the National Family Planning Program into existence. In 1970, President Richard Nixon signed Title X into law as a bipartisan approach to ensuring low-income Americans access to basic reproductive and preventive health care services.

No funding for abortion

A point often lost in this debate is this: Not a single cent of Title X funding may be used for abortion services. Not only is this fact stated in the Title X law, but it is also further supported by the Hyde amendment, banning the use of federal funds for abortions: the standard since its enactment in 1976.

More than 40 years later, as more women and families are facing difficulties in accessing health care due to increasing costs and a struggling economy, I urge the Congress to ensure women continue to have access to the health care they need and the trusted providers in their community by rejecting efforts to bar Planned Parenthood from receiving federal funds and eliminating the Title X family planning program.

Government plans women’s health campaign

The Indian government’s premier agency for science communication, Vigyan Prasar, is planning to launch a nation-wide programme to educate women on health related issues.

‘This is the first time when Vigyan Prasar is going to launch a programme for educating women about their health in different parts of the country,’ Anuj Sinha, director of Vigyan Prasar, told IANS on the sidelines of a media event here Monday.

He said the programme will be started in Delhi soon on a pilot basis.

Emphasising the need of communication, Sinha said, ‘Scientists generally believe that research is most important. But it is time to think that communication is as important as research.’

‘Vigyan Prasar will develop communication strategies and programme to reach out to the target women,’ said Kinkini Das Gupta Mishra, who will be heading the new programme.

‘By the end of six months from now, we plan to be ready with a proper line of action and communication materials to spread the programme at a bigger level,’ she added.

Vigyan Prasar in association with Sudinalay, an NGO, and the Institute of Gender Justice had begun a week-long consultative programme on the International Women’s Day (March 8) to educate women living in the slums in different parts of the capital about health related issues.

‘During the programme we found that increasing case of violence has made health a secondary issue for many women in the capital,’ said Sreerupa Mitra Chaudhary, founder of Sudinalay.

‘We found that most of the women have misconceptions about diseases such as depression, obesity and cervical cancer,’ she added.

To mark the end of week, a programme ‘celebrating the joy of empowerment’ will be organised Tuesday with President Pratibha Patil as the chief guest.

Thousands of grass root level women workers are expected to take part in the event.

Orrington Woman Pleads Guilty to Health Care Fraud

A woman from Orrington accused of over inflating insurance claims for a women’s clinic in Bangor pleaded guilty Monday to health care fraud.

37-year-old Dawn Zehrung, also known as Dawn Grover, worked at Bangor Women’s Health Care and was in charge of billing.

Federal prosecutors say in March of 2009, her bosses became suspicious about billing irregularities.

An audit found Zehrung repeatedly over billed for examinations, billed for procedures that were never performed and altered medical records.

The audit found more than $300,000 in over payments to the health care facility.

Zehrung faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, a $250,000 fine and restitution.

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