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Virginia Department of Health
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State Board of Health
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Regulations for Licensure of Abortion Facilities [REPEALED] [12 VAC 5 ‑ 412]
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6/25/14  3:32 pm
Commenter: Sallee Ebbett

Repeal TRAP laws
 

 All health professions should be regulated, but these politically motivated restrictions aren't necessary for patients' safety. Instead, these restrictions endanger women's health. I all want women to be safe, but doctors and medical groups oppose these regulations because they aren't necessary for patients' safety. Abortion is an extremely safe and common procedure. These restrictions single out abortion providers even though other procedures, like colonoscopies, have a much higher rate of complication, and are commonly performed in similar outpatient clinics. Current regulations of Virginia women's health centers are about politics, not medicine. Three years ago six top medical experts from across the state recommended evidence-based regulations that protected women's health, but the Dept. of Health ignored their own doctors' recommendations and drafted regulations based in politics, not medicine. During the process of final decision-making by the Virginia Board of Health in 2012, then Attorney General Cuccinelli pressured the Board behind the scenes, bullying them into approving restrictions designed to shut down health centers. Doctors, health care professionals, and a majority of Virginians oppose these regulations. A 2013 statewide survey showed a majority of Virginians (58%) oppose the medically unnecessary and burdensome regulations of women's health care centers that provide critical and comprehensive health care, including abortion. In September 2012, a diverse group of 177 doctors and medical experts from across the state organized and independently funded a public letter and Richmond Times-Dispatch advertisement, writing that "We must not travel down a dangerous slippery slope where we allow political forces to dictate medical care." In October 2012, Dr. Karen Remley, the Virginia Health Commissioner, resigned her position due to the intrusion of politics into women's health care. If the regulations are not repealed and rewritten, tens of thousands of Virginia women and families will lose access to critical medical care. Five women's health centers in Virginia have already been forced to close due to these burdensome and medically-unnecessary regulations.  If the regulations remain unchanged additional health centers will close, cutting off women's access to preventative and critical health care. By forcing health centers to close, the current regulations restrict access to critical cancer screenings and annual care for thousands of Virginia women - particularly women in low-income areas, who rely heavily on these services and facilities for life-saving health care.  Thank you.

 

CommentID: 32462