During the inaugural Health Workforce Equity Summit, Leana Wen said that it is a critical time to be part of the reproductive health workforce.
More than 300 bills seeking to restrict access to abortion care have been filed in 47 states in 2019, putting reproductive healthcare in crisis, Leana Wen, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said Wednesday.
Dr. Wen, who is also an adjunct associate professor of emergency medicine at the George Washington University School of Medicine, said Planned Parenthood declared a state of emergency for women’s health on May 30 in response to controversial laws that ban abortion in Georgia and Alabama. The laws criminalize doctors who provide abortions, she said, and is part of a larger effort to challenge Roe v. Wade in the U.S. Supreme Court.
Dr. Wen delivered the keynote address at the inaugural Health Workforce Equity Summit, sponsored by the Fitzhugh Mullan Institute for Health Workforce Equity at GW’s Milken Institute School of Public Health. The theme for this year’s summit was “Reproductive Health in Crisis: What Workforce Strategies are Needed?” and sought to address workforce pipeline and distribution issues as well as challenges with recruitment and retention in the reproductive healthcare sector.
Challenges to abortion access have been especially restrictive in Missouri, Dr. Wen added. The Planned Parenthood center there is the only abortion care provider remaining in the state. The state imposed a series of barriers to access, such as a 72-hour waiting period between a consultation and the procedure, she said, and “trap” regulations that forced the center to meet the standards of surgical centers even though abortion is an outpatient procedure.
She added that the state took “intimidation of physicians to a whole new level” by trying to require for the center’s license renewal that center doctors and trainees to be subject to interrogation that could result in the loss of medical licenses. A state court protected abortion access for the center, she said, but the legal battle is ongoing in Missouri as it is in states across the country.
“We are here, proudly, defiantly, because we need to be, because our patients depend on us,” Dr. Wen said.
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