Sex, lies, and government health literature for young women

April 13, 2006 RSS Feed Print
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Can young women trust government reports on women's health? This month's issue of Glamour magazine says "No." In an article entitled "The New Lies About Women's Health," the magazine reports that the federal government has posted inaccurate information on federal government websites used widely by young women and that states are now passing laws requiring doctors to give inaccurate information to young women seeking birth control and abortions.

Four states, according to Glamour, have passed so-called "Women's Right to Know" laws: Texas, Kansas, Montana, and Mississippi. Doctors counseling women seeking abortions in those states must give them government-sponsored pamphlets that say the risk of breast cancer is increased by abortion. The magazine says that is a supposedly "scientific" claim made by a researcher funded by the antiabortion movement and thoroughly discredited by the medical establishment. Glamour quotes a Texas doctor who says, "The conversation I have is that, 'This is what is written in the pamphlet. I disagree with it ethically and scientifically, but this is what the legislation has forced upon me. That's all I can say.... If I want to be consistent with the law, I have to lie.' " Twenty-four-hour waiting periods for women seeking abortions are widespread and well-known. But this is the first mention I've seen of state laws requiring doctors to give out inaccurate information.

There's more. Glamour also reminds us about inaccurate information widely disseminated in federally funded abstinence-only sex education classes. It cites a report released last year by Rep. Henry Waxman, a California Democrat, which found that "nearly 70 percent [of those classes] include 'serious medical or scientific errors' such as claims that 'up to 10 percent of women become sterile after an abortion' and that 'premature birth, a major cause of mental retardation, is increased following the abortion of a first pregnancy.' "

In my next entry, the strange world of stillbirth certificates.

Tags:
abortion,
sexual health

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Ms Erbe,

I read your collom today and do not agree with any of your statements.

I was a pregnant 17 year old in 1975 who had sex education. I firmly believe that abstinence and support go a lot further than teaching young people about birth control. I also do not understand why this is a government issue to begin with. This is and should be a family issue.

Also, Gov. Palin was a very smart choice regardless to what most liberals may think. You can leave religion out of it all you want, but for those of us who are Christian people, not as you say religious people, know the power of God. With God's power nothing is impossible. There is a difference in religion and Christianty. There are many religions in this world.

Everything is always about funding programs and what can we give free next to the people. Nothing is ever free, someone is paying for it and it is your tax paying people. My family is one of those small business owners and we are tired of paying as much as we do right now in taxes. Taxes take what little profit we have each year. There is no way we can afford to pay more. Obama will put us out of businees if elected. He will put many people out of jobs, because your big industries will just move more work out of the country, thus laying off the American worker. The economy will be worse than ever. I can not believe educated people like you are that blind.

McCain-Palin sound better than anything I've heard in a long time!

JoEllen LaVoice of AR 2:54PM September 08, 2008

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.

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