THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Colorado Conservatives Push Against Publicly Funded IUDs

Colorado Conservatives Push Against Publicly Funded IUDs

Story by Alison Uralli Graphic by Julia Volzke

Author: Bodine, James/Wednesday, March 18, 2015/Categories: Home

Rate this article:
No rating

The Colorado Family Planning Initiative, an organization that helps lower the cost of contraception, is facing difficulty from state Republicans who argue that intrauterine devices are a form of abortion.  The state of Colorado does not have the jurisdiction to fund abortions.

 

IUDs like the Mirena and Skyla mainly work by causing the mucus in the female cervix to thicken so sperm cannot pass through it.  Furthermore the Progestin hormone keeps the lining of the uterus thin, Deborah Meyers, CNP, MS (Nurse Practitioner) and owner of Sage Healthcare, said.

 

A fertilized egg, which is very rare, has nothing to implant or connect to in the uterus. The Paragard copper  IUD is to kill the sperm and also affect implantation. Only one in 100 women in a given year will get pregnant with an IUD in place or a 99% effectiveness rate, she said.

 

“I have put in a lot of IUDs and if I have a patient with religious concerns, I have explained there's a small possibility of fertilization of an egg. There lies the rub,” she said.

 

If people feel pregnancy is defined as ‘at the time of fertilization’, rather than ‘at the time of implantation’, as most of the medical community defines pregnancy, it's understandable why they may think the IUD is an abortive.

 

“Is that the intentional termination of a pregnancy? At any rate, I certainly do not feel this is justification for this argument,” Meyers said.

 

The main purpose of an IUD is to prevent pregnancy.  However, there is the possibility of a fertilized egg that is prevented from implantation, thus ending pregnancy, she said.

 

“I think it is a health care provider's responsibility to explain how the IUD works, and the woman's responsibility to make their own choice if they don't want to risk that potential, unintentional end of a pregnancy,” Meyers said.

 

“I, of course, feel it's the woman's decision to choose what to do with her own body and it's the health provider's job to educate--not a legislator's power to control either the women or the provider,” Meyers said.

 

Not only do IUD’s kill newly conceived zygote, they endanger women and their bodies. Once an IUD is implanted, the woman is in danger of a number of dangerous and harmful side effects, said Emily Sandner, president of Life-Line, an organization at Fort Lewis College.

 

Life-Line is open to anyone, she said. Members do not need to belong to or believe in any specific religion, and are foremost a pro-life club.

 

If you take the position that life begins at fertilization, the next step is to make the argument that contraceptives like IUDs are in fact a form of abortion, said Richard Foster, professor of political science at FLC.

 

“For people that are reflexively opposed to most types of birth control, it is a strong argument and it mobilizes the base and gets people writing letters to the senators and to other congresspeople to do something about it,” he said.


The reasonable counter argument to the original is that contraceptives, funded by the government or any other way, help prevent unwanted pregnancies which tend to end up in abortion, Foster said.

Print

Number of views (5215)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Indigenous Peoples and the Dominant Culture: Q&A with James Anaya

By: Breana Talamante-Benavidez

James Anaya is the Dean of Law at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He spoke at Fort Lewis College on Thursday, Jan. 25 on the power behind discussing human rights.

 

James Anaya is the Dean of Law at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He spoke at Fort Lewis College on Thursday, Jan. 25 on the power behind discussing human rights.   Anaya’s writing and teaching focus on issues concerning human rights and land rights for indigenous peoples. Anaya also practiced law in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he represented Native Americans and...

Photo Essay: Early Season Skiing at Purgatory Resort

Photography by Carolyn Estes

Purgatory Resort opened for the season Nov. 18. 

The Entrance to the base of Purgtory Resort, which opened to skiers and snowboarders Nov. 18.   On opening day at Purgatory, lift one transported riders to the only section open on the upper mountain.    Two Fort Lewis College students ride up lift one.   FLC junior, Stefan Rozanski, slides a box at one of Purgatory's...

Behind the Scenes on the Polar Express

These students have the unique pleasure of being “chefs” on the Polar Express Train that runs every year.

  Many students on campus pick up an extra part-time job during the holiday season, often in a retail store or maybe in a restaurant, but a lucky few have a job that involves making some holiday magic happen for kids from all over the country.   These students have the unique pleasure of being “chefs” on the Polar Express Train that runs every year from Nov. 17...

Taking the Backcountry Out of the Back Seat

By Aidan Multhauf

At this place there are no chairlifts, lift tickets or crowds. This dream skiing location is called the backcountry.

There is local ski spot that is not Purgatory or Wolf Creek. In fact, at this place there are no chairlifts, lift tickets or crowds. This dream skiing location is called the backcountry.   One person who knows about the backcountry is Steven Meyers, an English professor at Fort Lewis College, and a man with an avid ski history. A major factor for Meyers’ love of skiing the...

FLC Police Remains Aware of the Possibility of a Mass Shooting

By CJ Calvert

The campus police is able to provide active shooter trainings to students, faculty and staff in a brief hour or two-hour class, he said.

 

On Nov. 5, in Sutherland Springs, Texas, a mass shooting occurred that left 27 dead and 20 wounded. Several other smaller mass shootings have occurred since the shooting in Sutherland Springs.   These shootings are starting to become more and more of a reality, Sgt. Brett Deming of the Fort Lewis College Police Department said.   The campus police department will do...

First6061626365676869Last