paging Margaret Atwood...
Feb. 23rd, 2006 06:43 pmHandmaid's Tale isn't here yet, but it's in the post (link courtesy
betnoir) >:(
No provision for the health of the mother. If you're dying that second, your doc might be able to do something, but otherwise all bets are off. To wit: (via Feministe):
For the benefit of socially liberal sorts in SD (and I know there are at least two), pass around: Princeton's emergency birth control site, including how to use regular prescription BC as morning after pills, if need be.
No provision for the health of the mother. If you're dying that second, your doc might be able to do something, but otherwise all bets are off. To wit: (via Feministe):
if giving birth is going to cause massive kidney damage which will likely kill her after childbirth, no exception. If giving birth is going to force doctors to perform a hysterectomy, no exception. If the fetus has such a severe birth defect that it will die before, during or immediately after birth, no exception — the woman will be forced by the state to bring a doomed pregnancy to term, and to go through the dangers of childbirth for a fetus that will never live when she could have had a safer procedure.
For the benefit of socially liberal sorts in SD (and I know there are at least two), pass around: Princeton's emergency birth control site, including how to use regular prescription BC as morning after pills, if need be.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-24 01:08 pm (UTC)I fully agree with you that more/better/more educated use of birth control IS out there and highly, highly more preferable, but try Googling for "abstinence education" - I don't know about sex ed in the UK but in many parts of the US it's woefully inadequate. We're raising entire generations of people who would love to have birth control but aren't being taught about it - or worse, are being taught that it doesn't work :(