Louisiana Emergency Healthcare Facilities
Put Women At Risk
For immediate release January 6, 2005
NEW ORLEANS –In a recently released briefing paper, Preventing Pregnancy after Rape: Emergency Care Facilities Put Women at Risk[1], the American Civil Liberties Union found that only 6 percent of emergency care facilities in Louisiana provide emergency contraception (EC) on-site to rape survivors, significantly increasing the risk of unintended pregnancies. Louisiana ranks the lowest of the eleven states included in the report. New York, with 85 percent of facilities providing EC, ranks first.
"Louisiana's
results are shameful," said Joe Cook, Executive Director of the ACLU of
Louisiana. "Women who have been raped have already suffered greatly.
When emergency facilities don't provide EC on-site they needlessly
compound women's trauma. Failing to protect sexual assault patients from
pregnancy is a health care crisis that could easily be avoided."
The ACLU of Louisiana, as part of a broad coalition of sexual assault groups, medical professionals, religious leaders, and advocates for women’s health and rights, sent a letter[2] today to the U.S. Department of Justice urging it to amend the first-ever national protocol for treating sexual assault survivors to include information about EC to prevent pregnancy.
“The failure to include a specific discussion of emergency contraception in the first national protocol for sexual assault treatment is a glaring omission in an otherwise thorough document. Including counseling about pregnancy prevention and the provision of emergency contraception would help rape victims prevent unintended pregnancies, avoid abortions, and safeguard their mental health,” today’s letter argues.
The Department of Justice released the
130-page national protocol for treating sexual assault patients at the end of
last year. As today’s letter
notes, “despite recognizing that pregnancy is ‘often an overwhelming and
genuine fear’ of sexual assault victims, the Protocol includes only a single,
vague sentence on pregnancy prevention. . . . [And] nowhere does [it] mention
emergency contraception or recommend that it be offered to sexual assault
victims.”
If emergency care facilities routinely provided emergency contraception, up to 22,000 pregnancies that result from rape each year could be prevented, according to researchers at Princeton University and University of California. Major medical groups, including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, recommend that EC be offered to all sexual assault victims at risk of pregnancy.
Today’s letter is signed by 206 national, state, and local organizations, as well as 71 individuals. These include the America College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, American Public Health Association, the American Medical Women’s Association, the Association of Reproductive Health Professionals, emergency department nurses and doctors, the Episcopal Church USA, the National Council of Jewish Women, the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health, and several state sexual assault coalitions.
The national protocol “has the potential to fill [an] information void at many hospitals and to ensure appropriate treatment for sexual assault patients. To do this effectively, however, the Protocol must be revised to include an explicit discussion of emergency contraception,” today’s letter concludes.
EC, often referred to as “the morning after pill,” reduces the risk of pregnancy by as much as 89 percent if the first dose is taken within days of unprotected intercourse, but it is more effective the sooner it is taken.
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[1] A copy of Preventing Pregnancy after Rape: Emergency Care Facilities Put Women as Risk is available online at: http://www.aclu.org/ReproductiveRights/ReproductiveRights.cfm?ID=17212&c=30
[2] A copy of today’s letter to the Department of Justice is available online at: http://www.aclu.org/ReproductiveRights/ReproductiveRights.cfm?ID=17275&c=30.