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Thursday, Jan 26 2017

Full Issue

Trump's 'Mexico City' Abortion Order Could Affect 15 Times The Funding Of Previous Ones

Because of the broad language used in the executive order, the ban on federal funds could apply to all global health assistance programs instead of just family planning programs funded by the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development. Meanwhile, Democratic senators are trying to block the order.

Opponents of the so-called Mexico City policy that prevents foreign aid organizations from receiving U.S. funds if they provide or offer information about abortions say the directive President Donald Trump issued this week could affect 15 times more funding than the policy did under previous Republican presidents. Previous versions of the rule applied to family planning programs funded by the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development, which comprise聽roughly $600 million in spending. (Schwartz, 1/25)

The clinic, tucked discreetly inside the student health center on the University of Dakar campus, prescribes birth control pills, hands out condoms and answers questions about sex that young women are nervous about asking in this conservative Muslim country. The clinic performs no abortions, nor does it discuss the procedure or give advice on where to get one. Senegal, by and large, outlaws abortion. But for other health services like getting contraceptives, said Anne Lancelot, the Sahel director at the organization that runs the clinic, 鈥渢here is a very high demand.鈥 (Searcey, Onishi and Sengupta, 1/26)

This week President Trump revived a ban on providing foreign aid to health providers abroad that offer abortion counseling as part of their family planning services. Caitlin Parks, a family planning fellow at Washington University in St. Louis, provides reproductive health services to women at clinics and a teaching hospital in western Kenya. Her clinics receive American funding, and she says that the ban, called by critics the global gag rule, could have a major impact on poor women and communities like the ones she serves. (Ingber, 1/26)

Democratic senators are moving to聽permanently repeal the so-called Mexico City policy after President Trump reinstated the ban on U.S. funding for international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) that provide abortions.聽Forty-seven senators 鈥 led by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) 鈥 introduced legislation to聽prohibit the Trump administration from using "certain聽restrictive eligibility requirements" to keep nongovernmental organizations from getting funding. (Carney, 1/25)

The Washington Post fact checks the messaging surrounding the decision 鈥

On Jan. 23, 2017, President Trump signed a memo reinstating a Reagan-era policy that bans U.S. aid to international health groups that promote abortions. Supporters of the policy call it the Mexico City policy, named after the city in which the law was first announced. Opponents call it the 鈥済lobal gag rule,鈥 for reasons we will explore in this fact check. (Lee, 1/26)

And in other news聽鈥

The U.S. abortion rate has hit its lowest point since the landmark Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court ruling made the procedure legal nationwide in 1973, according to a new study. ... Activists on both sides of the contentious abortion policy debate welcomed the findings but did not agree on what is causing the decline. (Agrawal, 1/25)

Leaders of Planned Parenthood Southeastern Pennsylvania quickly realized that they had vastly underestimated their supporters鈥 desire to gather in solidarity and a show of strength. More than 400 women and men packed a West Philadelphia church on Wednesday evening, eager to fight back against the Trump administration鈥檚 anti-abortion policies and GOP efforts to end federal funding of Planned Parenthood鈥檚 health services for low-income patients. (McCullough, 1/25)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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