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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Sep 27 2022

Full Issue

University Of Idaho Curbs Distribution Of Birth Control, Warns Staff

In guidance issued by the university's general counsel, employees were warned that abortion counseling could result in a felony prosecution. They were also advised to stop offering birth control for students. Reproductive health experts say this is an early example of how the Supreme Court's abortion decision will impact birth control access.

The University of Idaho鈥檚 general counsel issued new guidance on Friday about the state鈥檚 near-total abortion ban, alerting faculty and staff that the school should no longer offer birth control for students, a rare move for a state university. University employees were also advised not to speak in support of abortion at work. If an employee appears to promote abortion, counsel in favor of abortion, or refer a student for an abortion procedure, they could face a felony conviction and be permanently barred from all future state employment, according to an email obtained by The Washington Post. ... Condoms could be provided 鈥渇or the purpose of helping prevent the spread of STDs,鈥 according to the guidance 鈥 but not 鈥渇or purposes of birth control.鈥 (Kitchener and Svrluga, 9/26)

鈥淲e always knew extremists wouldn鈥檛 stop at banning abortion; they鈥檇 target birth control next. The University of Idaho鈥檚 announcement is the canary in the coal mine, an early sign of the larger, coordinated effort to attack birth control access,鈥 said Rebecca Gibron, CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, in a statement. 鈥淭hese attacks on birth control are not theoretical. They are already happening. And the University of Idaho鈥檚 new policy is just the latest example of extremists and draconian laws threatening to strip us of all control over their reproductive health care.鈥澛(Moseley-Morris, 9/26)

More on birth control and sex education 鈥

Sixteen-year-old Adismarys Abreu had been discussing a long-lasting birth control implant with her mother for about a year as a potential solution to increasing menstrual pain. Then Roe v. Wade was overturned, and Abreu joined the throng of teens rushing to their doctors as states began to ban or severely limit abortion. 鈥淚鈥檓 definitely not ready to be pregnant,鈥 said Abreu, who had Nexplanon 鈥 a reversible, matchstick-sized contraceptive 鈥 implanted in her arm in August. Her home state of Florida bans most abortions after 15 weeks, and not having that option is 鈥渟uch a scary thought,鈥 she said. (Hollingsworth and Rodgers, 9/27)

Some call it the rhythm method, others talk about natural family planning, fertility awareness or natural contraception. Whatever name you know it by, it鈥檚 having a major moment on TikTok. Videos about the 鈥渞hythm method鈥 have gained a staggering 905 million views on the platform, while videos about 鈥渘atural family planning鈥 have reached 61 million. (Moss, 9/26)

Monday marked 鈥淲orld Contraception Day.鈥 According to the聽World Health Organization, or WHO, the purpose of creating this day was to promote the rights of couples and individuals to make decisions about pregnancies. As of 2021, WHO found that using contraception may have reduced maternal mortality by 40%. However, students find that many of these methods, such as condoms, birth control and intrauterine devices (IUDs) are not taught in depth or at all in high school sexual education. (Woehrle, 9/26)

Northbrook resident Irene Sooah Park remembers educators and other adults treating sex education as something that should never be talked about outside the classroom. It was during middle school that she recalled a teacher standing in the back of the classroom when discussing the vagina and penis to avoid eye contact with students. And recently, during COVID, she said sex education was left out of her sophomore health class in favor of lessons about bones and muscles. (Rockett, 9/26)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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