(Sept. 18, 2008) Eureka physician Lee Leer about had a conniption recently when he heard through the grapevine that St. Joseph’s Health System was going to ban condoms. St. Joe’s, Leer heard, had phoned Six Rivers Planned Parenthood to tell it not to bring condoms and birth control educational materials to the hospital’s future community health fairs. (The next one is Oct. 4 in Fortuna).
Leer wrote a letter-to-the-editor. In it, he said that in the past, despite the Catholic Church’s long-time stance against birth control, “the local Health System leadership (professional administrators) and sponsorship (the Sisters of St. Joseph) were able to separate Church dogma from public health reality.”
He also noted that California law requires St. Joe’s to pay for birth control for its employees. And so, he said, it struck him “as odd and entirely wrong that suddenly St. Joseph’s is attempting to suppress a secular entity (SRPP) from even offering health education about birth control (condoms, pills, IUD’s, etc.).” He proposed a community response: Withhold from donating to the hospital’s new-construction fund.
St. Joseph’s is part of the health care ministry of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange. Leer wrote that since the passing of the system’s long-time local representatives Sisters Ann and Peggy, with whom his practice had enjoyed years of “invigorating and heartwarming” discussions about health care, there seems to be a “new generation of Health System leadership [that], unfortunately, does not appear to know how to focus its energies for the benefit of the community.”
But Six Rivers Planned Parenthood CEO Denise Vanden Bos seemed reluctant last week to criticize St. Joe’s.
“We’ve always had a really good relationship with St. Joseph’s,” said Vanden Bos. “And, we understand [the birth control-info ban] is not a local decision.”
SRPP’s director of education, Debbe Hartridge, likewise downplayed the decision — although, she did say that the last time she can remember someone specifically requesting that SRPP not bring condoms to a health fair was in the early 1990s at the Bayshore Mall. But she praised St. Joe’s health fair coordinator Brian Olson — he’s the one who called her about the condoms — as having always been “really helpful.”
“My initial response was that this is going to be a challenge for us, because the biggest part of our mission is preventing unplanned pregnancy,” she said. “But then I decided that we could comply with this request. We have lots of other information we can bring, about sexually transmitted diseases, breast health, parent-child communication, healthy relationships.”
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Hank Sims
meetings / 4 p.m. Sun Yi's Academy of Tae Kwon Do, 1215 Giuntoli Lane, Arcata. Help gather valid signatures to get the 'California Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act' on the 2012 ballot. E-mail northernhumboldtlabelgmos@hotmail.com. 223-0424.
music / 3 p.m. Cafe Veritas/Mosgo's, 180 Westwood Center, Arcata. Informal monthly gathering of musicians playing Irish and other Celtic music. Hosted by Seabury Gould. seaburygould.com. 845-8167.
etc. / 10 a.m. Chinmaya Mission near Piercy. Weekend-long direct action orientation features workshops, role playing, seminars, ceremonies and field trips. Bring food, bedding, warm clothes, signs, banners, bikes, drums, acoustic instruments. Pre-register. saverichardsongrove.org. 932-5898.
outdoors / 9 a.m. Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge, 1020 Ranch Road, Loleta. Meet at Refuge Visitor Center off Hookton Road. Leisurely, two- to three-hour trip intended for people wanting to learn birds of Humboldt Bay area. 822-3613.
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