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http://www.bostonglobe.com/lifestyl...control-use/R0ToOwrG60aiLyT6HSy6fK/story.html
Alexandra Mangione went to Catholic schools from kindergarten through high school and now attends Boston College. I go to church. I believe in God, says Mangione, a 20-year-old sophomore at the Catholic college. She also believes in birth control.
The reality is that young Catholic women are absolutely sexually active, and they are on contraceptives, says Mangione. Birth control should be covered by health insurance, she says, because women who are denied it are forced to have an abortion, or they raise a child that they cant support or they put a baby up for adoption.
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Ninety-nine percent of women have used birth control at some point, including 98 percent of Catholic women, according to a 2011 report by the Guttmacher Institute.
In real-life America, contraceptive use and strong religious beliefs are highly compatible, says Rachel K. Jones, the reports lead author.
Studies also indicate that the majority of Americans believe insurance should cover the costs of birth control - and that most sexually active Americans use contraception. According to a 2011 Thomson Reuters survey, 77 percent of respondents believe that both private and government-assisted medical insurance should cover all or some of the costs of birth-control pills. Among those 35 and younger, the number rose to 83 percent.
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Since the debate began, Planned Parenthood of Massachusetts has fielded calls from women of all ages - as well as men - complaining about the political football the issue has become.
Its very interesting that Ive been doing quite a few interviews with college newspapers, says Dianne Luby, president. Its completely outside their reality. They didnt ever think this would be a question, that you wouldnt have access to contraceptives.
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The debate over Catholic women and contraceptives spans generations. To Joan Moynagh, who has 10 siblings, the issue of birth control should be personal, not political. The whole debate is forcing a very private issue out into the open, and thats inappropriate, she says.
Moynagh says her parents had decided they wanted a large family, but she and her siblings, also raised Catholic, did not. The most children any of them have is three.
I feel it was my choice to use birth control and be pretty deliberate about having three kids, says Moynagh, 52, who is the development director for the Radcliffe Institute at Harvard University. I think its so extraordinary that anyone should tell any woman what to do with her body.
More at link...
Alexandra Mangione went to Catholic schools from kindergarten through high school and now attends Boston College. I go to church. I believe in God, says Mangione, a 20-year-old sophomore at the Catholic college. She also believes in birth control.
The reality is that young Catholic women are absolutely sexually active, and they are on contraceptives, says Mangione. Birth control should be covered by health insurance, she says, because women who are denied it are forced to have an abortion, or they raise a child that they cant support or they put a baby up for adoption.
------
Ninety-nine percent of women have used birth control at some point, including 98 percent of Catholic women, according to a 2011 report by the Guttmacher Institute.
In real-life America, contraceptive use and strong religious beliefs are highly compatible, says Rachel K. Jones, the reports lead author.
Studies also indicate that the majority of Americans believe insurance should cover the costs of birth control - and that most sexually active Americans use contraception. According to a 2011 Thomson Reuters survey, 77 percent of respondents believe that both private and government-assisted medical insurance should cover all or some of the costs of birth-control pills. Among those 35 and younger, the number rose to 83 percent.
------
Since the debate began, Planned Parenthood of Massachusetts has fielded calls from women of all ages - as well as men - complaining about the political football the issue has become.
Its very interesting that Ive been doing quite a few interviews with college newspapers, says Dianne Luby, president. Its completely outside their reality. They didnt ever think this would be a question, that you wouldnt have access to contraceptives.
-----
The debate over Catholic women and contraceptives spans generations. To Joan Moynagh, who has 10 siblings, the issue of birth control should be personal, not political. The whole debate is forcing a very private issue out into the open, and thats inappropriate, she says.
Moynagh says her parents had decided they wanted a large family, but she and her siblings, also raised Catholic, did not. The most children any of them have is three.
I feel it was my choice to use birth control and be pretty deliberate about having three kids, says Moynagh, 52, who is the development director for the Radcliffe Institute at Harvard University. I think its so extraordinary that anyone should tell any woman what to do with her body.
More at link...