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For immediate release:
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
For more information:
Tony Lauinger, Oklahomans For Life
(918) 760-7114,
tonylauinger@okforlife.org
Derrick Jones, (202)
626-8825
mediarelations@nrlc.org
New Oklahoma Abortion-Reporting Law
Designed to help Women
Abortion
advocates, news accounts misrepresent law
TULSA – Abortion advocates, aided by
several recent news accounts, continue to misrepresent a
new Oklahoma law strengthening abortion reporting in the
state. The Statistical Reporting of
Abortions Act, set to go into effect on November 1,
2009, was passed by large majorities in the Oklahoma
House and Senate and signed into law by
Governor Brad Henry in May. It is
being challenged in a lawsuit filed by the Center for
Reproductive Rights.
“Abortion advocates either don’t
understand – or else are intentionally misrepresenting –
Oklahoma’s new abortion-reporting law,”
said Tony Lauinger, state chairman of
Oklahomans For Life.
“It is not true, as alleged,
that reports about individual women’s abortions will be
posted online, nor will reports about individual
abortions contain personal identifying information: no
name, no address, no hometown, no county of residence,
no patient ID number. To say
otherwise is clearly false and misleads the public.”
The Center for Reproductive Rights has
persistently misrepresented the Oklahoma law, claiming
that it requires doctors to provide information about
where women live. These assertions
are absolutely false.
As written, the new law requires that a
report for each abortion be sent to the Oklahoma State
Department of Health. The
questionnaire gathers demographic information including
age, race, marital status and educational level and
gathers information on the method of abortion used.
Numerous states have similar reporting requirements, and
the abortion industry collects and publishes similar
information through annual surveys by the Guttmacher
Institute (formerly the research arm of the Planned
Parenthood Federation of America).
The new reporting form also asks for the
reason the abortion is being sought. The
reasons for the abortion listed on the questionnaire are
adapted from the September 2005 report, “Reasons
U.S. Women Have Abortions: Quantitative and Qualitative
Perspectives” published in
Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health
by the Guttmacher Institute.
Contrary to claims of abortion activists,
the new law actually protects a woman’s privacy more
extensively than current Oklahoma law.
The current reporting form asks for the woman’s
county of residence. The new law,
however, repeals the existing law and any identifying
residential information has been eliminated in the new
reporting form.
Reports gathered in Oklahoma’s three
abortion facilities would be submitted on a monthly
basis to the Department of Health which will “ensure the
security” of the reports. Further,
reports may be “accessed only by specially authorized
departmental personnel” who will not be able to identify
the woman or know in which of Oklahoma’s 77 counties she
lives. The Department of Health will then produce an
annual statistical analysis of the demographic
information. Individual abortion
reports will not be published.
“It is hoped that the
information gathered will make it possible in the future
to address some of the underlying societal problems,
such as absence of child support or lack of childcare,
which lead some women to seek abortions.”
Lauinger noted.
Abortion complications will also be
reported under the new law. Abortion
advocates frequently refer to abortion as being “safe,
legal, and rare.” However, very
little data exist regarding abortion complications.
When a lawsuit is filed over a botched abortion,
there is typically an out-of-court settlement, so there
is very little statistical data about the extent of the
damage that abortion inflicts on women.
"Abortion is the most
under-regulated, under-investigated, and
under-researched procedure done on American women today,
yet it is the most common and most potentially dangerous
to their health and well-being,"
noted National Right to Life Director of State
Legislation Mary Spaulding Balch, J.D., in a
September 29 release.
"If a state can get
a handle on the reasons women have abortions, it can
lead to better programs that will make it easier for
women to have their children rather than resort to
abortion."
“Reducing the number of
abortions is a goal that even abortion advocates claim
to support. This legislation could
help achieve that objective by identifying the problems
that lead Oklahoma women to seek abortions.
Important public-health benefits will be achieved
by Oklahoma’s Statistical Reporting of Abortions Act,”
Lauinger added.
The text of the law is available here:
http://webserver1.lsb.state.ok.us/2009-10bills/HB/HB1595_ENR.RTF.
The case is
Davis v. W.A. Drew Edmondson.
Oklahomans For Life is the state
affiliate of the National Right to Life Committee.
The National Right to Life Committee,
the nation’s largest pro-life group, is a federation of
affiliates in all 50 states and 3,000 local chapters
nationwide.
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