Letter to Jana White (1/6/2005)
* Since the original letter with 277 signatories was sent to the Department of Justice on January 6, 2005, many more groups have signed on to challenge the exclusion of emergency contraception from the protocols. (The letter, with the additional signatures, was re-sent on February 2, 2005 to the Department of Justice.) The full list appears below. Jana S. White Office on Violence Against Women Department of Justice 810 Seventh Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20531 by email to Jana.S.White@usdoj.gov Re: Written testimony to be submitted to the Advisory Committee for the Violence Against Women Act Dear Ms. White: We write to strongly urge you to amend the National Protocol for Sexual Assault Medical Forensic Examination (""Protocol"") to include the routine offering of pregnancy prophylaxis (or ""emergency contraception"") to sexual assault victims who are at risk of pregnancy from rape. 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 the trauma of unintended pregnancies, avoid abortions, and safeguard their reproductive and mental health. The establishment of a national protocol is an important step toward ensuring that all sexual assault victims receive high quality medical and forensic services. The 130-page Protocol provides step-by-step medical treatment guidelines for sexual assault patients. Yet 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: ""[D]iscuss treatment options with patients, including reproductive health services."" For any further information, medical professionals are referred, in a footnote, to the National Sexual Violence Resource Center's website. While the NSVRC is an excellent source of information, it is not a substitute for a clear explanation of the issues surrounding pregnancy risk and a woman's options for treatment. Nowhere does the Protocol mention emergency contraception or recommend that it be offered to sexual assault victims. Nor does the Protocol make clear that sexual assault victims have a right to be offered this basic care. Emergency contraception must be taken within days after unprotected intercourse, but experts agree that it is more effective the sooner it is taken. 1 Because this narrow window of effectiveness makes timely access to emergency contraception critical, the Protocol should explicitly state that treatment of sexual assault victims must include routine counseling about and offering of emergency contraception. The marked failure to include details about specific pregnancy prevention options is at odds with the Protocol's expansive treatment of other grave medical concerns a victim faces. For instance, the Protocol's section on sexually transmitted infection evaluation and care is more than eight times as long as the pregnancy section, with detailed instructions about counseling patients, providing referrals for treatment, dosage requirements, and factors to consider in deciding which patients should receive certain STI tests. The rights and health of sexual assault survivors will be unnecessarily endangered if they are not provided with similarly detailed information about pregnancy prevention options. Major medical groups - including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American Medical Association, the American College of Emergency Physicians, and the American Public Health Association - support making emergency contraception more readily accessible to women who need it. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends that emergency contraception be offered to all sexual assault victims at risk of pregnancy. 2 Despite the clear need for sexual assault victims to have access to emergency contraception, hospitals often do not provide this vital service. Surveys have shown that only 6 percent of hospitals in Louisiana, 8 percent of hospitals in Idaho, and 20 percent of hospitals in Montana provide emergency contraception on-site to sexual assault patients. A recent overview of state surveys performed reveals that in eight of the 11 states studied, fewer than 40 percent of facilities dispense emergency contraception on-site to sexual assault patients. 3 Frequently, hospitals do not have clear protocols on the treatment of sexual assault patients and many of the protocols that do exist fail to include emergency contraception. Further, surveys have shown that many emergency department personnel lack even basic information about emergency contraception, often confusing it with mifepristone, the early abortion pill, even though emergency contraception prevents pregnancy and does not disrupt an existing pregnancy. The Protocol published by the Department of Justice has the potential to fill this 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. The undersigned urge the Department of Justice to make this critical change. Sincerely, National Organizations Advocates for Youth African-American Women Evolving, Inc. American Association of University Women American Civil Liberties Union American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists American Humanist Association American Jewish Committee American Medical Women's Association American Public Health Association Association of Reproductive Health Professionals Break the Cycle Catholics for a Free Choice Center for Health and Gender Equity Center for Reproductive Rights Center for Women Policy Studies Choice USA Christians for Justice Action (United Church of Christ) Coalition of Labor Union Women Compton Foundation, Inc. Concerned Clergy for Choice Disciples for Choice Disciples Justice Action Network Episcopal Church USA Episcopal Women's Caucus Equal Partners in Faith Feminist Majority & Feminist Majority Foundation General Board of Church and Society, United Methodist Church Gynuity Health Projects Hadassah Healthy Teen Network Ibis Reproductive Health Institute of Women and Ethnic Studies Ipas Law Students for Choice Legal Momentum Medical Students for Choice MergerWatch Ms. Foundation for Women NARAL Pro-Choice America National Abortion Federation National Advocates for Pregnant Women National Asian Pacific American Women's Forum National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women's Health National Coalition Against Domestic Violence National Council of Jewish Women National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association National Health Law Program National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health National Network of Abortion Funds National Organization for Women National Partnership for Women & Families National Research Center for Women & Families National Women's Health Network National Women's Law Center People For the American Way Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health Planned Parenthood Federation of America Population Connection Presbyterian Church (USA) Washington Office Pro-Choice Public Education Project The Rabbinical Assembly of Conservative Judaism to the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice Religious Institute on Sexual Morality, Justice and Healing Reproductive Health Technologies Project Republican Majority for Choice Robert Sterling Clark Foundation Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States Stop Family Violence The Alan Guttmacher Institute Union for Reform Judaism United Church of Christ-Justice and Witness Ministries Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations The WISH List Women's Health Task Force
State and Local Organizations ACCESS/Women's Health Rights Coalition, CA Adolescent Health Center of The Door, NY Alaska Emergency Contraception Project Allegheny Reproductive Health Center, PA Allentown Women's Center, PA American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado American Civil Liberties Union of Idaho American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky Reproductive Freedom Project American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico Aradia Women's Health Center, WA Atlanta ProChoice Action Committee, GA Berkshire Religious Resource Center, MA Blue Mountain Clinic, MT Boulder Valley Women's Health Center, CO Break the Cycle, San Francisco, CA Break the Cycle, Washington, DC Brooklyn-Queens NOW, NY Broward Women's Emergency Fund, FL California Family Health Council, Inc. Campaign for Access to Emergency Contraception, IL Carbon County Domestic and Sexual Violence Services, MT Cedar River Clinics, WA Centre County Women's Resource Center, PA Champaign County Health Care Consumers, IL Christian Association, University of Pennsylvania Citizen Action/Illinois Clara Bell Duvall Reproductive Freedom Project, ACLU of Pennsylvania Clinical Forensic Examiner Program at Abington Memorial Hospital, PA Clinton County Women's Center, PA Colorado Organization for Latina Opportunity and Reproductive Rights (COLOR) Columbia Public Health Students for Reproductive Freedom, NY Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project, NY Connecticut Coalition for Choice Eastern Massachusetts Abortion Fund Edloe's Professional Pharmacy, VA El Centro por los Trabajadores, IL Empire State Pride, NY Family Health Council of Central Pennsylvania, Inc. Family Planning Advocates of New York State Family Planning Council, PA Feminist Majority at the University of Illinois Freedom Fund of Denver, CO Freedom Fund, Inc., WI Friendship Center of Helena, MT Georgia Rural Urban Summit Georgians for Choice Health Access and Privacy Alliance, IL Health and Medicine Policy Research Group, IL Health Partners, PA Health Strategies and Solutions, Inc., PA Helping all Victims in Need (HAVIN), Armstrong County, PA Idaho Coalition Against Sexual and Domestic Violence Idaho Women's Network Illinois Disciples Foundation Illinois Planned Parenthood Council Institute for Reproductive Health Access, NY Interfaith Impact of New York State Iowa Medical Aid Fund Jane Doe Fund, MI Jane Doe Inc., MA Jane's Due Process, TX Juneau Pro-Choice Coalition, AK Lansing Area Advocates for Choice, MI Lansing Area NOW, MI Massachusetts Coalition Against Sexual Assault and Domestic Violence Massachusetts Emergency Contraception Network Massachusetts Family Planning Association Massachusetts Office of Victim Assistance Maternal & Child Health Consortium of Chester County, PA McKinley Presbyterian Foundation, IL Medical and Health Research Association of New York City, NY Memphis Regional Planned Parenthood, TN Montana Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence Mt. Baker Planned Parenthood, WA My Sisters' Place, Inc., NY NARAL Pro-Choice California NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado NARAL Pro-Choice Connecticut NARAL Pro-Choice Massachusetts NARAL Pro-Choice New Mexico NARAL Pro-Choice New York NARAL Pro-Choice Pennsylvania NARAL Pro-Choice South Dakota NARAL Pro-Choice Texas NARAL Pro-Choice Washington NARAL Pro-Choice Wisconsin NARAL Pro-Choice Wyoming National Women's Political Caucus of Pennsylvania Nebraska National Organization for Women New Jersey Coalition Against Sexual Assault New York City Alliance Against Sexual Assault New York Civil Liberties Union Northern Adirondack Planned Parenthood, NY Northwest Women's Law Center, WA NW Chicago Choice, IL Panhandle Community Services Reproductive Health Care Program, NE PathWays, PA Pennsylvania Coalition to Prevent Teen Pregnancy Pennsylvania Section of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Pharmacy Access Partnership, CA Philadelphia Coalition of Labor Union Women, PA Philadelphia NOW, PA Planned Parenthood Advocates of Indiana Planned Parenthood of Arkansas and Eastern Oklahoma Planned Parenthood Association of Bucks County, PA Planned Parenthood of Central Pennsylvania Planned Parenthood of Chester County, PA Planned Parenthood/Chicago Area, IL Planned Parenthood of the Columbia/Willamette, OR Planned Parenthood of Connecticut Planned Parenthood of East Central Illinois Planned Parenthood Golden Gate, CA Planned Parenthood of Greater Iowa Planned Parenthood of Greater Miami and the Florida Keys, Inc., FL Planned Parenthood of Hudson Peconic, NY Planned Parenthood of Indiana Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts Planned Parenthood Mohawk Hudson, NY Planned Parenthood of Nassau County, NY Planned Parenthood of Nebraska and Council Bluffs Planned Parenthood of New York City, NY Planned Parenthood of North Central Florida Planned Parenthood of North East Pennsylvania Planned Parenthood of Northern New England Planned Parenthood of Palm Beach and the Treasure Coast Area, Inc., FL Planned Parenthood Pennsylvania Advocates Planned Parenthood of the Rochester/Syracuse Region, NY Planned Parenthood of San Diego and Riverside Counties, CA Planned Parenthood of South Central New York, Inc. Planned Parenthood of South Palm Beach and Broward Counties, Inc., FL Planned Parenthood Southeastern Pennsylvania Planned Parenthood of Southwest and Central Florida Planned Parenthood of Stark County, OH Planned Parenthood of the Susquehanna Valley, PA Planned Parenthood of the Texas Capital Region Planned Parenthood of Western Pennsylvania Pro-Choice Coalition of Nebraska Pro-Choice Resources, MN Progressive Resource/Action Cooperative, IL Rape Crisis Center of Dane County, WI Rape Crisis Services, IL Rape Recovery Center, UT Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice of Connecticut Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice of Illinois Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice of Indiana Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice of Missouri Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice of Nebraska Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice of Ohio Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice of Pensacola Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice of Southern California Reproductive Health Access Project, NY Richmond Reproductive Freedom Project, VA S.A.F.E. Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Mississippi Sexual Assault Resource and Counseling Center of Lebanon County, PA Students for Access to Emergency Contraception, IL Texas Association Against Sexual Assault Tri-County Network Against Domestic and Sexual Violence, MT University of Illinois National Organization for Women University of Illinois Office of Women's Programs Washington State Religious Coalition For Reproductive Choice West Virginia Free Coalition for Reproductive Freedom Western Pennsylvania Fund for Choice A Woman's Fund, IL Women's City Club of New York Women's Crisis Support, Defensa de Mujeres Women's Direct Action Collective, IL Women's Emergency Network, FL Women's Health and Family Planning Association of Texas Women's Law Project, PA Women's Medical Fund, Inc., WI Women's Reproductive Rights Assistance Project, CA WOMENS WAY, PA Individuals Rev. Stephanie Ahlschwede, Dietz United Methodist Church, Omaha, NE Elaine J. Alpert, MD, MPH, School of Public Health, Boston University, MA Betty Anderson, Registered Pharmacist, NE Heather Arnet, Executive Director, Women and Girls Foundation of Southwest, PA Pam Baker, Planned Parenthood supporter, NE Dana L. Barron, Executive Director, Alice Paul Center for Research on Women and Gender, PA Margee Bartle, Sexuality Educator, NE Wanda Bauer, RNC, WHNP Margaret W. Beal, PhD, CNM, Associate Professor, Yale University School of Nursing, CT Eva M. Beals, Planned Parenthood volunteer Ann L. Begler, The Begler Group, PA Joanne Belknap, PhD, Sociology and Women's Studies, University of Colorado Wendy Bennett, MD, MPH, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center John Bordwell, MD, MN Michelle Bowdler, Director, Tufts Health Service, MA Blondell Reynolds Brown, Councilwoman, Philadelphia City Council, PA Tanya Cambell, MCJ, Criminal Victim Advocate, Intimate Partner Violence, Sexual Assault Advocacy, MT Karen Carroll-Coleman, RN, Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner-A, Coordinator, Westchester Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program Rabbi Howard A. Cohen, VT Maura Costea BSW, Civil Advocate, Intimate Partner Violence, Sexual Assault Advocacy, MT Rabbi Meryl Crean, PA Mitchell Creinin, MD, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Pittsburgh, PA Jenny Daniel, BSW, Civil Advocate, Intimate Partner Violence, Sexual Assault Advocacy, MT Brenda DeFeo, Vice President of Administration, Bryn Mawr Hospital, PA Anna L. Doering, Board Member, Women and Girls Foundation of Southwestern PA Susan Donovan, MS, RN, NJ Reverend Elizabeth Morris Downie, President, Episcopal Women's Caucus Marsha Epstein, MD, MPH, CA Marilyn Erickson, Nurse Practitioner, Planned Parenthood, NE Gail Fidjeland, LCSW, UT Rabbi Michelle H. Fisher, Congregation Har Shalom, MD Jonathan Fogel, MD, RPh, Emergency Medicine Physician and Pharmacists, Kent County Hospital, RI Emily M. Godfrey, MD, MPH Department of Family Medicine, University of Illinois-Chicago Melanie A. Gold, DO, Associate Professor of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh, PA Susan E. Gove, PhD, Women and Girls Foundation, PA Michael A. Grodin, MD, Professor of Health Law, Bioethics, and Human Rights, Boston University School of Public Health Rabbi Shoshana Hantman, NY Claire Harwell, JD, Attorney Trainer, Former Prosecutor, MA Candy Hasdall, RN, SARS Nurse, MN Gerise Herndon, Chair, Women's Studies, Nebraska Wesleyan University Lois Herr, Women's Rights Author and Advocate Nancy Hesse, RN, BSN, Director, Emergency Trauma Center, Abington Memorial Hospital, PA Betty-Ann Soiefer Izenman, former Department of Justice Employee Leigh Jensen, PhD, LCSW, Coordinator, Sexual Assault Services, Mississippi State University Carole Joffe, PhD, Department of Sociology, University of California, Davis Lauren Kehr, Licensed Clinical Social Worker, Louisville, KY Kendel G. Kidwell, MD, FACEP, Chairman, Department of Emergency Medicine, Abington Memorial Hospital, PA Mardi Kildebeck, Trustee, Mary Wohlford Foundation, CA Jeff Kirkpatrick, JD, VP, Planned Parenthood Voters of Nebraska Rev. Rick Klimowicz, CT Beth Kochka, RN, BSN, Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner-A, WV Alison Kris, RN, PhD, Associate Research Scientist, Yale University, School of Nursing Kim Lavender, Victim/Witness Coordinator and MCADSV Sexual Violence Task Force Chairperson, MT Annie Lewis-O'Connor, Pediatric and Obstetrics and Gynecology Nurse Practitioner, Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner, Boston Medical Center Emergency Services, MA Rabbi Mordechai Liebling, The Shefa Fund, NY Sandy Liljestrand, RN, NE Rabbi Marc J. Margolius, PA Aubrey Marron, Former Ingham County Commissioner, MI Elizabeth McElrath, RN Margaret McGoldrick, Executive Vice President, Abington Memorial Hospital, PA Cindy McKenzie, MSW, Superintendent, Riverside Youth Correctional Facility, MT The Rev. Dr. Judith E. Michaels, Washington, DC Peter Morris, Associate Professor Emeritus, Penn State University Patricia Aikins Murphy, CNM, DrPH, FACNM, endowed chair, College of Nursing, University of Utah Wendy Murphy, New England School of Law, MA Kerry O'Donnell, Maurice Falk Fund, PA Rev. Charles Blustein Ortman, NJ Judy Patrick, V.P. of Programs, The Women's Foundation of California, CA Rev. Dr. Katherine Hancock Ragsdale, Vicar, St. David's Church, MA Carol Ramos, Lincoln County Victim Witness Program, MT Maria G. Ramos, M.S.W., Assistant Coordinator, Temple University Center for Social Policy and Community Development, PA Lisa Rarick, MD, Consultant, Reproductive Health and Regulatory Affairs, Formerly with the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, US FDA Elyse Reznick, Former Criminal Investigator, Sex Crimes Unit, NJ Prosecutor's Office Ralph Riviello, MD, FACEP, Thomas Jefferson University, PA Rabbi H. David Rose, Congregation Har Shalom, MD Babbette Rose-Faison, Medical Advocate, PA Shallotta Sharp, RN, ADN, Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner, Rush Foundation Hospital, MS Linda Simkin, Action Research Associates, NY Rebecca Simons, MD, MPH, Clinical Instructor in Family Medicine, Brown University, RI Abbigail Swatworth, BSW Pat Tetreault, PhD, Coordinator, Sexuality Education Exchange, Nebraska Rabbi David Teutsch Carolyn Torre, RN, MA, APN, C, Director of Practice, New Jersey State Nurses Association and Nurse Practitioner, Princeton University Health Services Joanne L. Tosti-Vasey, PhD, Treasurer, Pennsylvania NOW, Inc. David Toub, MD, MBA, PA James Trussell, PhD, Director, Office of Population Research, Princeton University, NJ Elise J. Turner, CNM, Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner-A, Education Coordinator, Mississippi Coalition Against Sexual Assault Erin S. Wieand, Administrative & Financial Officer, University of Pennsylvania Department of Medical Ethics/Center for Bioethics Beverly Winikoff, MD, MPH
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