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AAP Board President Traci Baird sits in for Executive Director Melanie Zurek, currently on maternity leave.
Bold and needed. At the end of
2007, AAP launched the Least Access States Initiative. From my perspective as
the President of the AAP’s Board of Directors, taking on the challenge of
abortion access in the most restricted states in the US is a natural crescendo
of AAP’s 10 years of work.
As a group of clinicians,
researchers, and advocates, the Board is very proud of this new project. AAP is an organization known for embracing
new challenges and strategies; venturing into those states where women currently
have the least access to abortion services is certainly within AAP’s assertive
reach.
AAP has a track record of attaining difficult goals. In its other projects, the organization has
diversified the way abortion is provided by reaching out to family medicine
doctors, nurse practitioners, and other advanced practice clinicians. In the
past year, AAP tackled the complicated issue of self-induced abortion,
convening partners to carefully address the immediate needs and the broader
unknowns. Additionally, projects are now in place in rural areas, expanding
abortion access in communities where general medical care is also scarce.
For the Least Access States
Initiative, AAP takes on new challenges using proven strategies from
existing
work and embracing a model new to AAP and the United States: the World
Health Organization’s Strategic Approach to Contraceptive
Introduction. This model provides a participatory way to
identify and meet a need; it is widely used with success in other
countries
around the world.
The expansion of abortion care can
be slow moving; the most meaningful gains are hard won. It is tempting to go for the “quick win”—for
example, establishing an additional provider in New York State. But AAP’s focus is on addressing the biggest
need, not simply increasing numbers.
There is unquestionably a need for
safe abortion care in ‘least access’ states.
Adding a provider in New York doesn’t make a difference to the women of
West Virginia or Arkansas. While women
remain resilient and resourceful even when faced with the most difficult
conditions, there are systematic barriers that block women in ‘least access’ states
from the care they need: waiting
periods, long distances to abortion providers, lack of state funds, financial
strain, tenuous employment, and lack of child care.
Women in ‘least access’ states will
continue to fall through the cracks unless we focus systematically on
identifying and implementing strategies to increase their access to abortion
care. It’s a certainty that the work of
AAP’s new project will be challenging.
But with proven strategies, strong financial support, and intensive
community involvement, I am confident that we will bring about significantly
improved access in these states. AAP
stands ready to accept this challenge.
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