Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Komen gives to Planned Parenthood: Outrage and Misinformation Ensues

Komen’s Race against Publicity

By Christina Martin on 04/19/2011 – 10:42 am PDT -- Health Care
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A few weeks ago I wrote about the conflict of the Susan G. Komen Foundation, sponsors of Race for the Cure and other breast cancer awareness campaigns, funding Planned parenthood despite the fact that Planned Parenthood doesn’t do mammograms, the leading medical screen for breast cancer. Now Komen is having to respond to its public who wants to know where its cash is being funneled. It turns out, funnel is a good word because what begins in the wide top of Planned Parenthood runs down into community health clinics and other places that actually serve women with breast cancer by providing mammograms. This begs the obvious question: Why not just give the one directly to the programs that actually do the service?
LifeNews reports:
Last year, Komen spokesman John Hammarley confirmed 20 of Komen’s 122 affiliates have made donations to Planned Parenthood and, in 2009, those contributions totaled $731,303. He also confirmed Komen affiliates contributed about $3.3 million to the abortion business from 2004-2009.
While Komen tries to downplay the donations by noting only 19 affiliates give money to Planned Parenthood, the fact remains that it’s $730,303 dollars that those 19 affiliates are giving. That’s a lot of race entries to funnel money elsewhere, but that’s what Komen is finally admitting it’s doing. Life News quotes an email Komen is sending to people:
When a mammogram is indicated, a patient is often referred to a local program, such as the state’s breast and cervical cancer program. In other cases, the Komen Affiliate’s grant to Planned Parenthood may include funds to pay for mammograms outright. When this happens, a local provider performs the mammogram, and is then reimbursed by Planned Parenthood using the Komen grant funds.
This means that if you give money to Komen, or even do something as simple like participate in Race for the Cure where your money might go to Planned Parenthood, then you aren’t really helping poor women get breast cancer services anyway. Planned Parenthood will do the same basic check a doctor will do in any clinic, the free clinics, the sliding scale clinics of the upscale clinics—a basic breast cancer screen. If that very common screen indicates a woman needs a mammogram, they are sent elsewhere anyway.
 
Live Action makes a couple of points in its report on this twisted connection, asking:
Planned Parenthood doesn’t do mammograms themselves. Why then is Komen giving grants to Planned Parenthood to then in turn pay non-Planned Parenthood health centers to provide mammograms? Why not grant funds directly to the centers performing mammograms?
Why is Komen’s giving to the largest abortion provider in the United States. Millions of pro-life women do not feel comfortable going to an abortion clinic to get non-abortion services. Why not give the funds to a non-controversial community health center that all women in the community feel comfortable visiting.
Why exactly? Even if people choose not to believe the science that abortion increases risk of breast cancer, many women would not go to a Planned Parenthood clinic, the number one abortion provider, to get a breast cancer screening anyway. And while the evidence is only anecdotal, the fact remains that many women, my personal friends among them, report being treated less than compassionately at Planned Parenthood facilities when they are not there for abortions. You can dispute this but it’s been reported so much that I wouldn’t step foot in there if I considered myself pro-choice unless I wanted and abortion, simply from the stories.
Komen is supposed to be all about positives. Its bold pink and classy races, its uplifting encouragement of survivor so breast cancer, honored at Race for the Cure and other events—everything Komen puts out there has a message of hope and help for women—except the Planned Parenthood tie. It’s just bad PR to mix these together from a business standpoint. People from both side of the abortion battle will give money to help fight cancer, but only one side is going to give money to an organization that funds abortion. It’s bad business, as well as moral, sense to fund Planned Parenthood.
You can contact Komen here. Tell them what you think. Let them see that it’s time for them to pull away from the death industry and not mix its message for life for women.
 

Sunday, May 8, 2011

RU 486 to be LIMITED?

Texas Bill Against RU 486 Drug Gets Abby Johnson’s Testimony
by Steven Ertelt | Austin, TX | LifeNews.com | 4/26/11 11:15 AM
The former director of a Planned Parenthood abortion business who is now pro-life is in Austin, Texas at the state capital today to testify in favor of pro-life legislation that would limit the RU 486 abortion drug.
The mifepristone abortion pill has already killed more than 13 women worldwide, including several women in the United States, and has injured 1,100 women in the U.S. alone as of 2006 FDA figures. Johnson will testify today before the Texas Senate on behalf of legislation that would further regulate the dangerous drug and protect women’s health.
The measure, HB 3408 and SB 1780, was inspired by model legislation developed by Americans United for Life and sponsored by Rep. Jodie Laubenberg and Sen. Dan Patrick.
Charmaine Yoest, the AUL president, noted that abortion practitioners are increasingly expanding their market share of abortions through prescription drugs.
“Women and girls are vulnerable to dangerous drugs cavalierly distributed in ways that the drug manufacturers do not advise. This kind of off-label drug use can have deadly consequences,” she told LifeNews.com.
The bill before the Senate would regulate the dispensing of abortion inducing drugs and would require that they can only be dispensed in accordance with the FDA drug label. The bill would further require that a licensed physician must do a physical examination of the woman before prescribing the sometimes-deadly drugs.
Now a pro-life heroine, Abby Johnson will address the legislation both from her professional experience as a clinic operator in Bryan, Texas, and from her personal life story, having gone through an RU 486 abortion herself.
“It is a real privilege for us at AUL to partner with Abby Johnson and to have someone of her first-hand experience testify on behalf of this important legislation that will protect women and save lives in Texas,” said AUL Vice President for Government Affairs Dan McConchie. “Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers routinely dispense RU 486 off-label in a manner that expands their profits while undermining women’s health. It is important for the legislature to take action now to rein in these dangerous practices.”
Austin Pro-life OB-GYN Dr. Mikael Love will also be testifying regarding the medical standard of care and dangerous side effects of RU-486.
The bill has the support of Texas Alliance for Life, one of the statewide pro-life groups in Texas and the group says the measure would help stop “Planned Parenthood’s off-label use of this dangerous drug.”
Planned Parenthood previously told women using it to use the drug vaginally instead of orally, as recommended by the FDA. That causes the introduction of bacteria that resulted in lethal infections causing their deaths.
Although Planned Parenthood eventually changed its protocol to follow the FDA suggestion to take the drug orally, it still dispenses improper doses of the drug that could still place women at risk.
Rather than backing down from dispensing the abortion drug, Planned Parenthood is increasingly giving it to women, and a 2010survey of Planned Parenthood abortion centers finds a higher number are giving women the dangerous RU 486 abortion drug.
The number of locations dispensing the dangerous abortion drug has risen 130 percent since its last national survey, even though the overall number of Planned Parenthood centers is on the decline.
In January 2008, RU 486 maker Danco Laboratories announced approximately 13 percent of all abortions in the United States involve mifepristone — a number that may seem low but it is double the number of women who used the abortion drug in 2001.
The report also showed 57 percent of places that do abortions now have the abortion drug, compared with just 33 percent in 2001. Ultimately, Danco indicated that 840,000 women in the United States have had abortions with its dangerous drug – a number that is very likely over one million in the two and a half years that have passed.
According to FDA reports as of December 2006, there have now been eight known deaths associated with mifepristone in the U.S., nine life-threatening incidents, 116 blood transfusions, and 232 hospitalizations. In total, more than 1,100 women have had medical problems after using the drug as of that date. The Obama administration has not published new totals, which could have well over 1,500 women in the United States alone facing significant problems after using the mifepristone abortion drug.
ACTION: Contact your Texas legislators here and urge support for the legislation.

I LOVE THIS!! Yes!! Get the parents involved-sex ed MUST start at home!

Parent Education




Planned Parenthood is excited to announce that our new parent education program, Talk F!rst / Hable Pr!mero.

Parents are the first and primary sexuality educators of their children. As a parent, you have a unique opportunity to talk with children early and often about sexuality before they get their information from other sources that may be inaccurate and lacking your own personal values and moral principles.
“I am embarrassed!”, “I don’t know what to say!”, “My child is too young!”, “Talking about sexuality will be like giving my child permission to have sex!” If these worries sound familiar, you are not alone. Since most of us weren’t taught about sexuality, many parents are uncomfortable talking about it.
  • Teens consistently report that they would prefer to get information about sex from their parents rather than any other source.
  • Texas teens have the highest birth rates and highest repeat birth rates in the US. One in four sexually active teens has a sexually transmitted infection.
  • You don’t have to be an expert to talk with your child openly and honestly.
  • Sexuality is more than just sexual activity. Children start receiving messages about sexuality at very young ages.
  • The sooner that parents start talking to children about sexuality, the more likely children will be to ask questions and seek advice about sex later on in life.
  • Understanding sexuality helps kids cope with their feelings and with peer pressure. It helps them take charge of their lives and have loving relationships, and helps protect them from sexual abuse.
  • Young people who talk with their parents about sexuality are more likely to postpone having sex and make healthier decisions about sexual behavior.
Your child’s heath is too important to let fear and embarrassment get in your way! We can help by providing you with information and strategies to have discussions about sexuality.
Start talking. Keep talking. Learn how with Planned Parenthood.
The Talk F!rst program consists of 1- to 2-hour workshops to provide parents with the tools and resources needed to start the conversation today. Workshops can be hosted in homes, schools, churches, synagogues, PTA meetings, moms' night out, brown bag lunches at the office, or anywhere else that eight or more parents are gathered. Workshops are free and provided as a community service by Planned Parenthood of the Texas Capital Region with generous support from several foundations.
Contact: Kristin McDuffie at 512.485.0130 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 512.485.0130 end_of_the_skype_highlighting ext. 417 or e-mail parents@ppaustin.org
En Español: Janet Punch at 512.485.0130 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 512.485.0130 end_of_the_skype_highlighting ext.416 or e-mail janet.punch@ppaustin.org

Without Medicaid 90,000 Texan Women will LOSE their healthcare!

LATEST ATTACK ON PLANNED PARENTHOOD SHREDS MEDICAID PROGRAM

by Planned Parenthood of the Texas Capital Region on Tuesday, May 3, 2011 at 3:31pm




LATEST ATTACK ON PLANNED PARENTHOOD SHREDS MEDICAID PROGRAM

Reckless new bill would eliminate health care for 90,000 Texas women



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 03, 2011


AUSTIN, TX -- Today, the Senate Health and Human Services Committee considers a bill to block access to birth control, cervical cancer screenings, and other basic reproductive health care for more than 90,000 Texas women by banning Planned Parenthood from continued participation in the Medicaid Women's Health Program (WHP). SB 1854 by Senator Robert Deuell eliminates the critically necessary Medicaid Women's Health Program completely if Planned Parenthood successfully litigates against the ban on its health centers' participation.

The Senate bill bans Planned Parenthood from providing basic health care including breast and cervical cancer screenings and birth control to low-income women who qualify for the Medicaid program. Almost half of the participants in the program receive their primary health services, in addition to family planning, from a Planned Parenthood health center. In many instances, Planned Parenthood is a health care safety net, providing the only health care services patients receive annually.

Per federal and state law, no Medicaid funds are used for abortion services. Regular, mandated audits by the Health and Human Services Commission confirm that no federal or state funds are used for abortion services—directly or indirectly. Banning Planned Parenthood's continued participation vastly reduces the fiscal savings of the program—savings of more than $40 million in 2008 and generating $9 in federal funding for every $1 spent by Texas.

Planned Parenthood issued a letter to Senator Deuell today clarifying that Planned Parenthood will pursue litigation if necessary to ensure that they can continue to serve the low-income Texans who rely on Planned Parenthood health centers for their health care.

"This bill dictates where women can go for their reproductive health care and engages in reckless politics by dismantling a successful program that saves over $40 million in taxpayer funds every year," said Jeffrey Hons, President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Trust of South Texas.

"All health centers serving Medicaid clients are already stretched to the max, serving the thousands of Texans who depend on their services. By banning Planned Parenthood from providing health care to more than 40,000 Texas women through the Medicaid Women’s Health Program, this Senate bill shreds the health care safety net that saves lives and dollars. Planned Parenthood is prepared to move forward with a lawsuit if that’s what it take to continue to provide cervical cancer screenings and other health care to the women who depend on our health centers," stated Peter J. Durkin, President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast.

“Many areas in Texas have only one provider where women can access the services through the Medicaid Women’s Health Program. That provider, generally a Planned Parenthood health center, is the only place where women can receive these life saving programs,” said Tony R. Thornton, President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Association of Lubbock.





Contact: Sarah J. Wheat, cell 512-657-3311 or Rochelle Tafolla, cell 713-775-8099

###




For more than 75 years, Planned Parenthood has been the most trusted source of nonprofit reproductive health care in Texas. Planned Parenthood's health centers provide health care to more than 263,000 Texans each year including 121,526 screenings for cervical cancer; 123,122 screenings for breast cancer screenings; and 383,240 tests/treatments for sexually transmitted infections.








Friday, May 6, 2011

Sometime I can't believe I work here...

House reiterates drive to re-direct money away from family planning services

Rep. Sid Miller, R-Stephenville, instructed House conferees who will work with senators to hammer out the state’s budget bill not to put money back into family planning services that the House diverted to other programs, such as one for autism.
The House voted 86-39 to adopt Miller’s non-binding recommendations.
Miller said he’s trying to keep state money from Planned Parenthood, an organization that many Republicans — nationally and in Texas — have targeted.
Miller admitted that the services won’t go to pay for abortions, but he said that it would have gone to organizations — such as Planned Parenthood — that perform abortions.
Rep. Mark Strama, D-Austin, objected to Miller’s suggestion. He asked members not to direct funds away from family planning.
Pleading to Republicans and pro-life lawmakers, Strama said family planning services should be supported. They are the most effective way to reduce the number of abortions, he said.
He also said that Planned Parenthood isn’t the only organization that would benefit from state money to pay for planning family services.

It's Margaret Sangers battle...all over again!

news

Point Austin: Making Women Suffer

The self-appointed defenders of life and family values are neither

By Michael King, Fri., April 22, 2011

Opponents of Planned Parenthood insist that giving the organization federal dollars allows it to spend other money in its budget to provide abortions. That is not possible; there is no other money.
– Clare Coleman, National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association
I rarely use this space to call attention to another Chronicle News story – I presume readers who've gotten this far know how to turn the page – but I'm making an exception this week for "The War on Women's Health," Jordan Smith's excoriating report on the Texas Legislature's determination to use the current fiscal crisis as an excuse to attack public services for health care, most visibly symbolized by Planned Parenthood, the nonprofit organization that for decades has delivered below-cost health services for millions of women in Texas and nationwide. From our cover image and headline – "Toxic Shock" – you can tell the Chronicle editors consider this an important story. Creative Director Jason Stout designed an image to catch readers' attention and to drive home the underlying thrust of Smith's story: that the coordinated, hysterically dishonest political assault on Planned Parenthood is also an attack on women and the family, and beyond that, on the very notion of public health care of any kind. As Planned Parenthood's Cecile Richards put it succinctly, "They are going after women's health."
Make no mistake, it's a nationally coordinated assault, as Republican (and some Democratic) politicians in Congress and in legislatures across the country file hundreds of "anti-abortion" bills that are in actual fact anti-woman bills, designed to make certain that women do not have independent, adult control over their own bodies or medical decisions. No matter how many times it is demonstrated that restricting access to health care and contraception in fact increases abortions, the anti-woman bills keep coming. "I sometimes wonder if the anti-choice plan is not actually to prevent abortion," Katha Pollitt wrote last week in The Guardian, "but simply to make it as awful as possible for the woman. Many of the 370-plus anti-abortion bills now wending their way through state legislatures are simply about creating misery, anxiety and fear – forcing women to view ultrasounds, see anti-choice counsellors, listen to scripts claiming falsely that abortions cause breast cancer and infertility, and wait, wait, wait for their procedures."
Such malicious laws are not "pro-life" – they're anti-life, anti-sex, anti-women.

Up Yours

As malevolent as this reactionary crusade has been, it has not been without moments of mordant comedy. Arizona Sen. John Kyl was nationally mocked for his floor declaration that 90% of Planned Parenthood's work is abortions (the figure is actually 3%), and then for his spokesman's defense that Kyl's lie was "not intended to be a factual statement." At the Lege, the spectacle of perennial House GOP backbencher (champion calf-roper and scourge of feral hogs) Sid Miller carrying the mandatory ultrasound bill precisely reflected GOP disrespect for women's rights, and Houston Democratic Rep. Carol Alvarado's brandishing of the invasive ultrasound vaginal probe made visible the actual GOP contempt for limited government.
The women reps are to be commended, I suppose, for holding their tempers as their majority colleagues enacted legislation explicitly reminding them of their second-class status (or third-class, behind fetuses). When the conference committee returns this abomination matched with the equally ludicrous Sen. Dan Patrick's companion bill, I recommend an amendment mandating unsedated, narrated colonoscopies of the men involved in all these unplanned pregnancies – and of the male legislators sufficiently arrogant to vote for these bills.

The Larger Imbalance

As Smith reports at length, all this fulmination about the supposed "abortion industry" simply provides rhetorical cover for the larger Republican project, undermining all forms of publicly supported health care, and most specifically those programs designed for women and the family. "[T]he funds used for family planning," Smith writes, "provide low-income women with guaranteed access to very basic health services – including annual gynecological exams, counseling on pregnancy planning and access to birth control, screening for breast and cervical cancers, testing for hypertension and tuberculosis, and screening for sexually transmitted infections, including HIV." Moreover, she continues, "In the absence of access to reproductive health care in Texas, the Guttmacher Insti­tute reports, the level of abortion would be expected to rise 22%." What possible benefit (even financial) to Texas citizens can come from defunding preventative medicine; increasing the number of late-discovery hypertension and cancers; promoting infectious diseases and unwanted, emergency pregnancies; and yes, inevitably multiplying the number of preventable, late-stage abortions?
This is not "pro-life"; it is not even remotely rational public policy – it is male-hysterical, woman-spiting madness rooted in the reactionary conviction that "sex without consequences" (horrors!) is a secular heresy, to be stamped out by visiting those grim consequences on women (only) who dare to have sex without the personal permission of pomposities like John Kyl, Sid Miller, or the Pope himself. As a direct result of these illogical and misogynistic laws, more women will suffer and die, at greater expense to the state of Texas. Whatever else this legislation is, it is neither life-affirming nor conservative in any serious meaning of those terms.
Of course, during this session the Planned Parenthood episode can also stand for the entire legislative budget process, which purports to save health care by slashing funding for Medicaid and nursing homes, to save education by defunding public schools and firing teachers, to save universities by running them "like a business." In each instance, public services that have been built up over generations, paid for and shared by the entire community, are to be privatized and only available to those who can directly afford them, in the name of a political abstraction called a "balanced budget." But there's nothing balanced about it – it's a one-sided attack on the shared rewards and responsibilities of community, with the inevitable result that the rewards all go to the wealthy and powerful, and the weakest go to the wall.

Wow this is super interesting! Alterior motive in de-funding?? I think so...

Why Planned Parenthood funding is LGBT issue

Agency under attack by right wing is about more than abortions


Phyllis Guest
PHYLLIS GUEST | Contributing columnist

Bernard Baruch said it first in the 1940s; Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger shortened it in the 1970s, and Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan phrased it most succinctly in the 1980s: “Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.”
Apparently, many Americans have not heard — or have not agreed with — that simple statement.
Consider, for example, current efforts in Washington, D.C., and nationwide to defund Planned Parenthood.
The efforts made news when, on April 8, Arizona Republican Jon Kyle announced on the floor of the Senate that abortions comprise “well over 90 percent of what Planned Parenthood does.”
The organization countered that abortions are only 3 percent of the organization’s services. Kyle’s staff asserted that his remark “was not intended to be a factual statement” and then edited the Congressional Record to say that abortion is simply “what Planned Parenthood does.”
Back in Austin for Easter recess, Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas picked up Kyle’s theme. On April 20, Cornyn assured The Texas Tribune’s Emily Ramshaw that “he’s been told 98 percent of the services Planned Parenthood offers to pregnant women are abortion-related.” His staff added that the senator would not join “the nickel tour at any Planned Parenthood centers.”
Take that, you sinners.
In fact, the latest figures — from 2010 — show that Planned Parenthood of North Texas provided 6,000 abortions, 43,000 pap smears and many more thousands of low-cost screenings for cancer and other deadly ailments.
In addition, PPNT provides sexual and general health services for men and women for modest, fixed charges.
So why should any of this interest those of us in the local LGBTQA community? Think children’s well-being, sex education and tax rates. All are intertwined.
Start with the well-being of children. On April 7, State Attorney General Greg Abbott and former first lady Laura Bush announced an effort to recruit more volunteers for the Texas Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) program. Their plea is urgent — because Texas now has 42,000 children in its foster care system. Those 42,000 children were unwanted at birth or have been abused or abandoned since.
Many Texas politicians consider members of our community who might like to foster or adopt them unworthy. Yet few if any of our oh-so-righteous pols have stepped up to adopt or even advocate for these children.
Next, consider sex — sex education, that is.
In Texas, most notably in the public schools, sex ed is either all about abstinence or altogether absent. Thus, countless Texans lack basic information on contraceptive options. They cannot choose the best protection for themselves and their partners.
Small wonder Texas has so many teenage mothers and leads the nation in teens with two or more offspring. Rates of sexually transmitted diseases among young Texans also are startlingly high — and even higher among some minority groups.
Our state’s macho tradition may even encourage unprotected sex.
Finally, take the issue of how tax dollars are spent in Texas.
Unless conservatives come up with enlightened ways to lift “the least of these our brethren” out of poverty, which they seem disinclined to do, some tax dollars will go towards basic services for the poor.
An estimated 60 percent of Texas mothers are so impoverished that physicians and hospitals must compete for scarce Medicaid dollars to fund prenatal care and delivery. Many families rely on the state’s meager Temporary Assistance to Needy Families — about $260 a month — for basic foodstuffs. Texas public schools provide lunch and often breakfast so children will not spend the day hungry and go home ill.
Keep in mind that Planned Parenthood, now almost a century old:
• Is prohibited by law from using tax dollars to fund abortions. Of course, money is fungible, but Congress never provides more than one-third of the dollars needed to give all low-income and uninsured persons access to contraceptives and sexual health care. There is no tax money to free up for abortions. Support for Planned Parenthood Surgical Health Services, the separate entity that performs abortions in North Texas, comes entirely from patient fees and private donations.
• Provides services without discrimination to persons of all races and ethnicities, young and old, regardless of sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression. Here in North Texas, Planned Parenthood works with other nonprofits, including those most closely associated with the LGBT community, to assure the availability of confidential, low-cost testing and expert counseling for HIV/AIDS as well as all other STDs.
• Furnishes important support to LGBTs who are parents, parents of LGBT children, and LGBT children of all ages. For example, a recent workshop in Fort Worth was entitled “LGBT Issues — You’ve Got Questions, We’ve Got Answers.” Leading the workshop was a facilitator with an master’s degree in social work and years of experience spent teaching undergraduate and graduate courses on sexual health.
So an argument in support of Planned Parenthood is not an argument for abortion. It is simply an argument against ignorance.
Phyllis Guest lives in Dallas and is an activist on LGBT and other progressive issues

Monday, April 25, 2011

Senator falsely claims 90% of what PP does is abortions in order to de-fund

http://thinkprogress.org/2011/04/08/jon-kyl-90-percent-planned-parenthood-abortion/

Defending Riders, Sen. Kyl Falsely Claims 90 Percent Of Planned Parenthood’s Services Are For Abortion

With the government mere hours away from shutdown, the budget debate has centered around policy riders that GOP lawmakers insist must be included in any funding bill. The most controversial of those riders involves funding for Planned Parenthood, an organization that runs 800 community health centers across the nation.
Congressional Republicans are seeking to defund the organization because it provides abortions, although it exclusively uses private funds — not taxpayer dollars — to do so, as required by law. Several lawmakers have even highlighted their willingness to shut down the government if Democrats do not agree to defund Planned Parenthood.
This morning, Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) took to the Senate floor and insisted that any bill must cut Planned Parenthood’s funding. In the process, he made a blatantly false claim about the type of services the organization provides:
KYL: Everybody goes to clinics, to doctors, to hospitals, so on. Some people go to Planned Parenthood. But you don’t have to go to Planned Parenthood to get your cholesterol or your blood pressure checked. If you want an abortion, you go to Planned Parenthood, and that’s well over 90 percent of what Planned Parenthood does.
Watch it:


In fact, the exact opposite is true. According to Planned Parenthood officials, more than 90 percent of the health care services provided by the organization is preventive in nature. Each year, it provides more than one million cervical cancer screenings, 830,000 breast exams, and nearly four million exams, treatments, and tests involving sexually transmitted diseases. The federal funding received by the organization goes strictly toward these basic needs and others, such as birth control and annual exams. In fact, just three percent of its work is related to abortion.
Though some Republicans have attempted to move past the Planned Parenthood issue in order to reach a budget agreement, false information like that which Kyl is propagating has kept the debate from moving forward and made a budget deal almost impossible. If no deal is reached, Kyl and his Republican colleagues will be left defending their absurd decision to shutdown the government over a community health organization.
Update The Washington Post's Ezra Klein highlights this chart showing exactly what Planned Parenthood does:

Friday, April 8, 2011

(UPDATED) All Those Alternatives to Planned Parenthood? In Texas, At Least, They Don't Exist | RHRealityCheck.org

(UPDATED) All Those Alternatives to Planned Parenthood? In Texas, At Least, They Don't Exist | RHRealityCheck.org

Before I met with Texas State Representative Dan Flynn last month during Texas’ pro-choice lobby day, I truly believed that even the most passionate anti-choice conservative couldn’t look me in the face and tell me they didn’t really care whether I got the reproductive health care I needed. Who would seriously tell me their religious beliefs are more important than making sure hundreds of thousands of women just like me—women with high-risk HPV--don’t develop cervical cancer?
But like I said, that was before I sat in front of Rep. Flynn, in his Austin office next to his model airplanes and elect-Dan-Flynn gum, and told him how I’d lost my job and my health insurance and needed regular, affordable pap smears to keep an eye on my pre-cancerous cervical dysplasia. I told him Planned Parenthood could provide low-cost paps, breast exams and contraceptives to keep me healthy despite my lack of insurance, and I believed they should continue to be funded by government family planning dollars. He scoffed, waving around a handful of papers—spreadsheets and maps, it looked like—and told me that Planned Parenthood was nothing but a tax-evading abortion machine (he knew because he used to be a bank examiner and had heard some things from some people) and there were so many other options besides Planned Parenthood in Texas. I should and could go to one of those, he told me, so we could spread some of the wealth around to these smaller providers. It would be very easy, he said.
I asked him if he could give me that list he had in his hand, the long list of places I could get low-cost reproductive health care without insurance near my home in Dallas. He glanced at the list and rattled off some names, something about Dallas Emergency Services and Dallas County Hospital District. He didn’t exactly wait for me to get out my pen and pad. I filed out of Flynn’s office with the rest of the women I’d teamed up with for lobby day feeling surprised and disappointed. But I still wanted (needed!) to know where those low-cost health centers were that Flynn had referenced, because I knew the Texas Legislature to be hell-bent on cutting the family planning funds that keep Planned Parenthood and clinics like it afloat.
Planned Parenthood or not, I’d still need well-woman exams, birth control pills and suchlike, and I wanted to know where I could get these things if I had to spend weeks or months scraping by on a freelancer’s salary without health insurance. So here’s what I did: I spent my own time, money and energy trying to find a health care clinic that anti-choice conservatives, legislators and organizations would approve of—namely, to find a Federally Qualified Health Center or “look-alike” center that, by virtue of federal grant funding, cannot provide abortion services except in cases of rape, incest or threat to a mother’s life, as dictated by the 36-year-old Hyde Amendment. (I know—that amendment also applies to Planned Parenthood, which only uses private, non-taxpayer funds for its abortion services at separate, privately-funded locations, but we’re talking about conservative ideology, not logic, so just go with me here.)
But I thought, I’ll play this game. If it turns out I was wrong—and I really thought maybe I could be, because how could it seriously happen that “pro-life” Texans didn’t want me to get cancer screenings?—I would be the first to admit that you can take Planned Parenthood out of the equation and still find easily accessible, low-cost reproductive health care in a sprawling metropolitan area like Dallas. But I wasn’t wrong. I was, maddeningly, right. Considering the rate at which conservatives are defunding family planning in my state, and for that matter, across the country, I’m very sorry about that. All of this is an ideological, not fiscally conservative, battle. After all, family planning saves taxpayers $4 for every $1 spent. But I was trying to work around family planning dollars, since conservatives seem to think they go straight to gleeful baby-killing cocktail hours, and stick with straight-up FQHC's. If they’re lucky, Dallas women will be told what I was told: an appointment at an anti-choicer-approved FQHC might be available in May if I called back in three weeks—at a location two cities away and five miles from the closest bus stop.
Or women can call Planned Parenthood, like I did, at lunch time on a Friday, and be told that an afternoon appointment including a full pelvic and breast exam is available that same day for about $100 at a location a few yards from a major public transportation hub that I could easily reach in a half-hour or so. But I’m getting ahead of myself. You see, I first had to do a little divination to figure out where exactly anti-choicers wanted me to get my health care (besides not Planned Parenthood), since I couldn’t actually get any of them to pass along that list of their approved providers to me. First thing in the morning, the day after I met with Rep. Dan Flynn, I called and e-mailed his office. After a day or so, they got back to me and advised I contact the anti-choice religious group Texas Alliance For Life for a list of alternatives to Planned Parenthood. I e-mailed the Alliance on March 10:
Hi, TX Alliance for Life - I was referred to you by the office of Rep. Dan Flynn. I’m looking for a comprehensive list of alternatives to Planned Parenthood–when I visited with Rep. Flynn this week he referenced a document that appeared to be just such a thing. Karah Carr, a legislative aide for Rep. Flynn, tells me the Alliance for Life provided it. I was wondering if I could get a copy of the same list? Thanks! Andrea
So, what’s today? April the something? I haven’t heard back from the Alliance yet. I’ve even been Tweeting at both the Alliance and Rep. Flynn asking for that list of providers that can they believe can give me the same or better care as Planned Parenthood.
But, nada.
I know Flynn and his conservative counterparts were very busy over the weekend deciding which Texans deserve health care (hint: it’s not women of reproductive age) but I hoped that at least in Flynn’s passion for defunding family planning, he’d develop a passion for helping women find health care providers he approved of. I was wrong about that one.
I posted about my travails on my personal blog, where I have a number of anti-choice trolls who are always more than happy to share their wealth of knowledge with me. There, someone from another anti-choice group eventually commented and told me they wouldn’t mind if I went to a Federally Qualified Health Center or “look-alike” center that offers sliding fee scales. And look, said the "pro-life" Texan, there are seven such centers in Dallas! So that’s what I did: Last Friday morning, I went out of my way to find a doctor based on the fact that some people have a personal dislike of Planned Parenthood for providing abortions--a safe, common and legal medical procedure.
It hardly felt like easy-access, low-cost health care. It felt more like coercion, and it was a hassle, and it forced me to make decisions about my own body and health care based on what other people—people who never met me, who are not medical professionals—think I should be doing based on their religious beliefs.
I found that list of FQHC’s—I am privileged to have a flexible work schedule, home phone and home internet access, so I didn’t have to take time off work to go to the public library and use a pay phone, and I didn’t have to sneak around on a conservative, religious or abusive family or partner--and started making calls. Most places I telephoned did not provide reproductive health care and instead focused on providing low-income housing, job training and addiction-recovery programs. A homeless shelter on the FQHC list did tell me I could get a free pap smear if I could prove I was homeless. I then got sidetracked looking into something called Project Access, a low-cost program that helps uninsured people who don’t qualify for Medicaid—but because I made more than about $20,000 last year as an unmarried woman without kids, I don’t qualify for that, either.
And the Texas Breast And Cervical Cancer Services, which is supposed to provide low-cost screenings for Texas women? It referred me to Planned Parenthood. So that was a no-go.
Back to the phones: a clinic close-ish to my home had no receptionist and a full voicemail. Another receptionist laughed at me because I’d been given the number for the county hospital front desk and told me to call a place called Los Barrios Unidos Community Clinic. When I called Los Barrios, I got an individual’s voice mail and had to take down another number to a switchboard, after which I was transferred to another voicemail that said the women’s health care folks would get back to me in 24 hours if I left my phone number. They’ve yet to call me. Later in the morning, I finally got through to the Los Barrios clinic in Grand Prairie, which is a western suburb of Dallas. They had appointments open in May, potentially, if I could call them back the morning of April 25th. There, a pap smear would cost me as little as $30, but maybe more depending on my income.
I made my last call to a Planned Parenthood clinic in central Dallas. The receptionist there told me they could schedule me that same afternoon for a full pelvic and breast exam. It’d be about $100, but there was a sliding scale. Without Planned Parenthood and family planning funding that funds actual medical centers—not crisis pregnancy centers or adoption agencies, as may happen in Texas after this year’s budget--poor, uninsured and under-insured women in my city do not generally have access to quality reproductive health care in any real way. They sit on waiting lists for weeks and months, and that’s if they can take time off work to do what I did: spend a morning surfing the internet, finding phone numbers and addresses of health clinics and hospitals, calling them only to be put on hold, laughed at or hung up on, and if they do find the a clinic, leaving a message in hopes of getting a return call to schedule appointment.
I’m not saying I tried my absolute hardest to find a reproductive health care provider that Texas anti-choice conservatives approve of. I could have called back the clinics I had to leave messages at, the ones that promised they’d get back to me in 24 hours. I could have spent another morning calling clinics in Fort Worth, Denton, Waco or Oklahoma City, to see if one of them could get me in for an appointment in the next two months. Of course, to visit those places, I’d be spending in gas what I’d be spending to go to a local Planned Parenthood here in Dallas. So there wouldn’t really be any money savings, there’d just be conscience-savings on the part of people who don’t really want to hear or care about my personal health unless I’m pregnant or might be pregnant.
Anti-choicers like Flynn and “pro-life” activists want me and women like me to jump through these hoops not because it's medically safer for us to go somewhere other than Planned Parenthood, but because they don't want women hanging out with anybody who provides a safe, legal and common medical procedure. And for what it's worth, I imagine the anti-choice folks who told me to seek out an FQHC should know this: FQHC's do provide referrals to abortion providers at their discretion, even though they don't provide the procedure on-site.
Of course, once you get to the next level, here--after anti-choicers have first told you they don't want to fund the abortion industry with taxpayer dollars--then it magically becomes about some pseudo- socialist ideal about spreading the health care access around, just like Rep. Dan Flynn told me in his office last month. Suddenly, all those things they told you about the abortionists and the dead babies goes out the window, because really, it's about making sure the little guys get their fair slice of the pie.
Nobody knows these two excuses—barring taxpayer funding for abortion and spreading the health care wealth around--are straight-up lies better than the anti-choice movement members themselves. There's a reason why anti-choice legislators and activists are so strong on these two talking points: they're simply, plainly, not true. Taxpayer funding for abortion does not exist. It hasn't existed for thirty-six years thanks to the Hyde Amendment. And we need only to look to Nebraska, where five babies have died so far this year because conservative lawmakers do not allow hospitals to care for undocumented immigrants, to know that spreading the health care wealth around to everyone is a total farce. Besides, wasn’t Jesus a capitalist, anyway?

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Texas Sends Family Planning Funds to Abortion Alternatives | LifeNews.com

Texas Sends Family Planning Funds to Abortion Alternatives | LifeNews.com

Texas Republicans voted for amendments to their budget bill today that send money meant for family planning efforts to better causes, including funding abortion alternatives.
The move follows on the heels of a vote in Congress to cut the federal family planning budget because money goes to the Planned Parenthood abortions business, and their own figures show they provide abortions almost exclusively to pregnant women as opposed to legitimate medical and other health care services for women carrying to term.
Texas lawmakers in the state House today approved, on a 100-44 vote, an amendment Rep. Randy Weber sponsored that takes $7 million in family planning funds and directs the money to abortion alternative agencies. Another $1 million from the budget would head tow programs that provide early childhood intervention.
Only Democrats voted against the amendment to help pregnant women but  state Reps. J.M. Lozano (D-Kingsville), Armando Martinez (D-Weslaco) and Sergio Muñoz Jr. (D-Palmview) also voted for diverting the money to women.
The House also approved an amendment from Republican Rep. Wayne Christian that cuts the family planning budget $6.6 million and sends those funds to pay for services for children with autism. A third amendment struck more money and the three amendments in total moved $27 million out of the family planning budget to what lawmakers say are better causes that will help save lives and protect children.
The debate leading up to the vote became person at times, with Rep. Mike Villarreal, a San Antonio Democrat, asking Weber whether or not he has personally used contraception. The pro-life lawmaker responded by telling Villarreal he didn’t know him well enough to share that information — which drew laughter from the chamber.
The cuts in Texas follow a national expose’ from Live Action, which called 30 Planned Parenthood centers across the country and learned that none of them have mammogram machines or actually do mammograms on site. All of them merely make referrals to legitimate medical centers that provide women with the breast cancer screening service.
After concerns earlier this year that Planned Parenthood president Cecile Richards made false claims in defending its taxpayer funding that it provides mammorams for women, Live Action released videotaped footage of calls to 30 Planned Parenthood centers nationwide in 27 different states where abortion facility staff were asked whether or not mammograms could be performed on site.
Every one of the Planned Parenthood centers admitted they could not do mammograms. Every Planned Parenthood, without exception, tells the women calling that they will have to go elsewhere for a mammogram, and many clinics admit that no Planned Parenthood clinics provide this breast cancer screening procedure.
“We don’t provide those services whatsoever,” admits a staffer at Planned Parenthood of Arizona while a staffer at Planned Parenthood’s Comprehensive Health Center clinic in Overland Park, Kansas tells a caller, “We actually don’t have a, um, mammogram machine, at our clinics.”

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Not a good picture painted by former Planned Parenthood Clinic Director...

Abby Johnson: Three Planned Parenthood Deceptions

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Planned Parenthood has been misleading Congress and American taxpayers for many years. I know — I was part of the deception. For eight years I worked at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Texas, and for two of those years I was the clinic’s director.
Here are the ways Planned Parenthood is deceiving the public — and taxpayers — about what it does.
Deception No. 1: Taxpayer funds don’t go to pay for abortions. This defies common sense and basic logic; of course taxpayer money helps to finance abortions at Planned Parenthood clinics.
Planned Parenthood gets one-third of its annual budget from taxpayer funding, and it performed a total of more than 650,000 abortions in just 2008 and 2009 (the last year for which figures are available).
Think for a moment how much it costs to pay for someone to perform the abortion, other medical staff for support, their health benefits packages and malpractice insurance to cover all of them, and then multiply it by more than 650,000.
As clinic director, I saw how money received by Planned Parenthood affiliate clinics all went into one pot at the end of the day — it isn’t divvied up and directed to specific services.
And while Planned Parenthood says abortions make up just 3 percent of its services, I found they used an sleight of hand, unbundling family planning services so each patient shows anywhere from five to 20 “visits” per appointment (12 packs of birth control would show up as 12 individual visits). It does the opposite for abortion visits, bundling them together so each appointment shows as one visit. This skews the numbers. You have an overwhelming number of “visits” for family planning compared to abortion, even though you may have seen the same number of patients.
Deception No. 2: Planned Parenthood wants to reduce the number of abortions in the United States. Nonsense. Its primary focus is abortion and it is big business. In 2009, Planned Parenthood had $1.1 billion, and $63 million left over after expenses (see page 29 of its annual report).
No wonder Planned Parenthood has established an organization called the Consortium of Abortion Providers, the primary goal of which is to turn every nonabortion Planned Parenthood clinic into an abortion-providing clinic. Planned Parenthood also recently issued a directive mandating that all of its affiliates provide abortions by 2013.
Deception No. 3: Planned Parenthood’s highest priority is women’s health and safety. As referenced several times during the congressional debate about whether or not to defund Planned Parenthood, Live Action has documented numerous occasions in which Planned Parenthood staff have shown willingness to aid and abet self-identified sex traffickers and their professed exploitation of underage girls.
Planned Parenthood of Central New Jersey was so embarrassed by office manager Amy Woodruff’s comments recorded by an undercover hidden camera that it had to fire her. She was clearly advising a self-professed sex trafficker on how and where to get abortions for his underage girls. New Jersey Attorney General Paula Dow has asked for an investigation.
The pattern of willingness was demonstrated in other instances, recorded undercover in Virginia, New York and Washington, D.C.
In addition, abortion consultations are often not even done with a doctor in person but over the Internet through what is known as telemedicine. Abortion is a traumatic and potentially dangerous procedure, and even as Planned Parenthood’s “employee of the year” in 2008, I thought the push toward more telemed abortions was unreasonably risky.
Further, Planned Parenthood has adamantly opposed laws in nearly two dozen states that require clinic staff to show a woman a sonogram before the abortion takes place. So much for supporting informed choice.
Congress cannot consider itself an effective steward of taxpayer money if it continues to steer hundreds of millions of federal dollars every year to an organization that deliberately deceives the public and breaks the law.
I don’t claim to be an expert on the government’s fiscal priorities, but I do know from lengthy experience that the last place any taxpayer money should be going is to Planned Parenthood.
Abby Johnson worked at Planned Parenthood’s Bryan, Texas, clinic for eight years and was clinic director for more than two years. She is author of “Unplanned: The Dramatic True Story of a Former Planned Parenthood Leader’s Eye-Opening Journey Across the Life Line.”

Planned Parenthood of Central Texas Closes Two Centers | LifeNews.com

Planned Parenthood of Central Texas Closes Two Centers LifeNews.com

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Rally on the Capitol steps--against HB 15

'AUSTIN- A rally in Austin on Tuesday was in support of Planned Parenthood. The group gathered on the south steps of the Capitol.
The rally is in response to a bill that made its way through the state legislature requiring a woman to get a sonogram before having an abortion.
On Monday, the Texas House approved an even stricter measure than the state Senate’s bill. The House bill would require even victims of sexual assault to undergo the screening.
The legislation will now go into committee.'--
Posted on March 8, 2011 at 12:00 PM
Updated today at 12:18 PM



http://www.wfaa.com/news/politics/Planned-Parenthood-rally-against-Texas-sonogram-bill-117591323.html
WFAA

Funding cut to Planned Parenthood

Video shot here in Austin--Rally for PP.

The Republicans have voted and it's not looking good for PP funding.


http://www.rawstory.com/rawreplay/2011/02/rally-for-planned-parenthood-in-austin-texas/

Friday, February 18, 2011

Anti-Abortion Group Hires ex-PP Clinic Director to Join Them

Shared by jess while visiting FoxNews.com:

Anti-Abortion Group Hires Planned Parenthood Whistleblower

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/02/16/anti-abortion-group-hires-planned-parenthood-whistleblower/

An anti-abortion group on a high-profile campaign against Planned Parenthood has just enlisted a prominent whistleblower who used to work for the abortion provider, claiming she brings insider knowledge of the group's "abuses."

Shuler votes in favor of amendment defunding Planned Parenthood

Shuler votes in favor of amendment defunding Planned Parenthood