When
WW compares Oregon and Texas, Cecile Richards
gets a little defensive. “Why does everybody always pick on Texas? I’m
from Texas,” she declares with a slight drawl.
Richards isn’t just
from Texas, she’s the daughter of late Texas Gov. Ann Richards, giving
her just the political pedigree she needs in her position as national
president of Planned Parenthood.
Her perpetually
newsmaking organization runs more than 800 clinics, providing family
planning and sexual health services to more than 3 million people a
year.
Richards, 53, worked
for House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) as deputy chief of
staff, and she founded and ran America Votes, a coalition of voter
registration groups.
Richards,
who became president in 2006, is currently touring Planned Parenthood
centers in the Pacific Northwest. We talked to her about the recent
fight in Congress over birth control, her hefty salary, and why Planned
Parenthood does more for men’s health than most people know.
WW: Every Planned Parenthood location in Oregon
offers men’s health services. What services are offered, not just here
but nationwide?
Cecile Richards: Ten percent of our patients now are young
men, and that’s increasing every year. They’re the fastest-growing
population now coming to us, and I’d say a lot of folks come to us now
for STD testing and treatment because we’re a confidential, affordable
provider. They do vasectomies in Bend, and a fair number of them.
Is it because more couples seek services together?
It’s that. Young men are not only our patients but our
educators. That translates into activism. Now so many of the next
generation of activists for Planned Parenthood and reproductive health
care in general are young men.
How is Planned Parenthood changing so that it’s inclusive for men and women?
With this Congress that’s so far to the right—it was
really going after ending basic access to birth control and access to
cancer screenings and STD testing and treatment—thousands of young men
got involved to stand for Planned Parenthood. Men have just as vested an
interest in birth control as women.
Do you believe laws requiring women to receive sonograms prior to abortions affect their decisions to have an abortion?
We always counsel women on all their options if they have
an unintended pregnancy. What we have found historically is that women
make incredibly responsible decisions. The thing that is really
disturbing about most of these laws is that they basically assume women
are incapable of making their own personal, responsible decisions about
their health care.
But these laws push women to get more information before making a decision.
Legislators, most of whom will never be pregnant, [are]
writing their own ideas about what doctors should be telling their
patients. It assumes doctors aren’t responsible, that they have to be
led by the legislature to tell women what to think. Most legislation
being passed contains erroneous information. It’s not even medically
accurate. It assumes that women won’t have the wherewithal to actually
talk to their doctor about keeping a pregnancy or whatever alternatives
there are.
Bill Clinton spoke about keeping abortion legal and rare. Are we closer to his vision?
That’s actually the most disturbing thing
about what’s happened this year. What the House of Representatives
tried to do was essentially say that [women] could no longer go to
Planned Parenthood for basic birth control, cancer screenings, STD
testing and treatment. They were going after the kinds of services that
women depend on to not have an unintended pregnancy.
Planned Parenthood is at the center of the abortion
fight but has been pretty quiet when debate about the HPV vaccine came
up recently. Why is that?
We provide the HPV vaccine, and we have ever since it was
approved by the FDA. We’re very enthusiastic supporters of this vaccine.
It’s unbelievable how it’s
been politicized. As a mother of two daughters, for me it’s fantastic
that there’s a vaccination they could get to try to prevent HPV and
cervical cancer.
The whole point got
lost in that debate. My concern was that some of the statements that
Congresswoman [Michele] Bachmann made were just completely unmedically
founded. I’m worried that it has given people a total misimpression
about the importance of this vaccination for young people.
In the efforts to defund Planned Parenthood, a lot was
made of your salary—close to $400,000 per year. Planned Parenthood
declined to comment on it. Why?
It’s public record. It always has been. I work hard for my
salary, and I think that’s a red herring. Planned Parenthood is the
most cost-effective provider of family planning services in this
country. The far right has done everything they can to undermine us and
to create non-issues, which I think that is.
oh please...she is all about blaming the "right" for lack of medically accurate information on abortion. i bet my own salary that the majority of PP centers do not explain the physical(beyond 6 weeks) emotional and spiritual ramifications of ending a childs life. of course young men are rallying for pp, they are a majority reason why most women feel pressured into abortion.its a solution for them. id like for cecile to witness firsthand a 2nd trimester or even 1st trimester abortion and tell me she isnt convicted that its a form of murder and injustice.
Only I person with a conscience would be convicted that its a form of murder and injustice. Cecile Richards could probobly eat popcorn and count her money while watching an abortion.
Unfortunately, a report from CNN said that the largest STD dating site STDslove. com which is powered by plenty of fish now has more than 250,000 HPV members. Also, the new subscribers on the site have increased 50% over 2009.
Why so many guys and girls on the site are very sexy? Why so many sexy people are infected by HPV? I think we need SEX-ED to prevent HPV transmission during sex.
What a mud-head!
Killing a human being in the womb is not health care. It's murder. Ceclie- the salary that you "work hard for" is at the expense of children.
Get real! Women's health IS the issue -- all else is crap. Let's see the data and then make comments. Every NPO and Foudnation pays is staff. What is the president of Komen foundation receiving? What percentage of both organizations' budgets go to provideing services versus adminitration and salaries? Those should be the questions to focus on.