ok didn't want to threadjack the pro-choice christians thread:
However these stats from the religious coalition for reproductive rights kinda jumped out at me:
49% of the 6.3 million pregnancies that occur each year are unplanned; 47% of these occur among the 7% of women at risk of unintended pregnancy who do not practice contraception.
Low income and uninsured women need affordable contraception. A woman with low income is four times as likely to have an unintended pregnancy, five times as likely to have an unintended birth, and four times as likely to have an abortion than a woman with higher income (and the resources to pay for or access contraception.)
I know that "the pill" is the most widely used and most effective(when correctly used) form of "short-term" contraception-and it's been around for 50 years or so.
So can someone explain to me why it still costs $30-$50 per month?
(while my tylenol 3's for migraines cost around $12 without insurance)
and why some insurance carriers won't pay for it but will pay for childbirth?
And people wonder why abortion rates are high-simple hint, not enough education on birth control options, and not enough access to it.
Damn you religious right<shakes fist>, you claim you want to lower abortion rates but refuse to help with the options that would lower it-auuuugh!*
I think the money wasted by religious groups to try and restrict abortion would be better spent on improving education about contraception methods and increasing access for lower-income families-but as long as I'm wishing for things that will never happen.....I'd like a unicorn pony......
*and before anyone brings it up the rates for abortion due to rape/incest are pretty much statistically insignificant
Up to 32,000 women become pregnant each year as a result of rape or incest. 10,000-15,000 women have abortions each year following rape or incest.
Worldwide, an estimated 46 million abortions occur each year.
10,000 vs 46 million is statistically insignificant-heck even if all 32,000 aborted it would still be statistically insignificant.
However these stats from the religious coalition for reproductive rights kinda jumped out at me:
49% of the 6.3 million pregnancies that occur each year are unplanned; 47% of these occur among the 7% of women at risk of unintended pregnancy who do not practice contraception.
Low income and uninsured women need affordable contraception. A woman with low income is four times as likely to have an unintended pregnancy, five times as likely to have an unintended birth, and four times as likely to have an abortion than a woman with higher income (and the resources to pay for or access contraception.)
I know that "the pill" is the most widely used and most effective(when correctly used) form of "short-term" contraception-and it's been around for 50 years or so.
So can someone explain to me why it still costs $30-$50 per month?
(while my tylenol 3's for migraines cost around $12 without insurance)
and why some insurance carriers won't pay for it but will pay for childbirth?
And people wonder why abortion rates are high-simple hint, not enough education on birth control options, and not enough access to it.
Damn you religious right<shakes fist>, you claim you want to lower abortion rates but refuse to help with the options that would lower it-auuuugh!*
I think the money wasted by religious groups to try and restrict abortion would be better spent on improving education about contraception methods and increasing access for lower-income families-but as long as I'm wishing for things that will never happen.....I'd like a unicorn pony......
*and before anyone brings it up the rates for abortion due to rape/incest are pretty much statistically insignificant
Up to 32,000 women become pregnant each year as a result of rape or incest. 10,000-15,000 women have abortions each year following rape or incest.
Worldwide, an estimated 46 million abortions occur each year.
10,000 vs 46 million is statistically insignificant-heck even if all 32,000 aborted it would still be statistically insignificant.
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