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Archive for the ‘Health’ Category

I recently reviewed a film called Orgasm, Inc.: The Strange Science Of Female Pleasure whic I reviewed for the site RH Reality Check. The topics discussed are ones that I believe need to be ocurring in as many spaces as possible, hence a semi-cross posting here at VL.

The film synopsis as listed on the website reads:

In the shocking and hilarious documentary ORGASM INC., filmmaker Liz Canner takes a job editing erotic videos for a drug trial for a pharmaceutical company. Her employer is developing what they hope will be the first Viagra drug for women that wins FDA approval to treat a new disease: Female Sexual Dysfunction (FSD). Liz gains permission to film the company for her own documentary. Initially, she plans to create a movie about science and pleasure but she soon begins to suspect that her employer, along with a cadre of other medical companies, might be trying to take advantage of women (and potentially endanger their health) in pursuit of billion dollar profits. ORGASM INC. is a powerful look inside the medical industry and the marketing campaigns that are literally and figuratively reshaping our everyday lives around health, illness, desire — and that ultimate moment: orgasm.

Check out the film trailer below

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Well, the weekend brought us some mixed good news. The good news seems to be that the US will soon have a health care bill that will make affordable health care a reality for all.

The bad news is, is that it’s just not true.

I am still trying to unpack everything that is being said about this health care bill, but it’s been difficult work as it seems that every hour another change is taking place. But the essentials seem to be most accurately described here at Fire Dog Lake.

Some of the more points that are not making me happy:

3) Individual Mandate

The individual mandate, which uses the IRS to force people to buy a product from a poorly regulated, private industry, is an affront to the American people.

4) Abortion

This bill is a massive rollback of a woman’s right to choose. It would take away the abortion coverage of millions of Americans. The system of exchanges and affordability tax credits could easily be modified to ensure federal funds are not used to pay for abortions, while still not taking away the ability of women and small businesses to buy insurance packages that cover abortion.

6) Immigration

Under this almost-law, undocumented immigrants would not be allowed to buy insurance on the new exchanges, even if they are willing to pay the full cost of the insurance with their own money.

I am rebelling against this legislation. I am trying very hard not to. I am trying to believe and listen when various news outlets tell me that this is some of the most life changing world changing legislation–as if it is a positive thing. I’m not going to go on a massive rant quite yet, as I know that a lot can happen in even the one week it is estimated that it will take to get the Senate to apply all their changes.

But…I’m am worried. And a bit scared. How many people do I know who can’t afford health insurance–even “affordable” health insurance that they get vouchers on? I know people (and was one of those people for a long time) that couldn’t even afford to go to the community clinic where they had a sliding scale fee chart because even the bottommost fee (15$) was too much for me.

Forcing poor people to buy health insurance that isn’t even going to cover them when there are surprises (abortion) is little more than a cruel joke to me. Penalizing those same people for not having health insurance (even “affordable” insurance) when that insurance isn’t going to cover them during times they need it most is nothing short of criminal.

But–it’s seems to be a wait and see game at this time. Wait and see, wait and see. How badly will we all be screwed over?

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In just a few days the March for America will jump off and thousands of gente from comunidades across the country will arrive in D.C.. Each person will have their own individual story and reason for being there and some of the messages will even conflict pero the unifying message is justicia for migrantes and their familias.

I will be highlighting over several posts some reasons why people are heading to D.C., including why I am going, and even some issues I have with the rally itself.

One reason to attend the March for America is to demand that immigrants not be ignored when it comes to health care reform.
In recent posts here at VivirLatino, La Macha has been pointing out how the current immigration and health care system fail immigrants, especially mujeres. Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL), who was poised as the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Champion, has been taking heat for saying that he won’t support the current health care reform proposal on the Senate floor because it prevents undocumented immigrants from using their own money to buy into the health care exchanges.

Wait, aren’t Republicans supposed to be against telling peeps what to do with their money?
When you’re an immigrant, I guess the rules are different.

PS. I never do this, pero please click on the March for America ad on the sidebar and the NCLR banner on the top to show them that you support them supporting independent Latino media like us, even when we disagree with them :)

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Miscarriage: The New Crime

4:02 pm By la Macha · Health|Women · 2 Comments

24 Feb 2010

Utah is working to implement a cleaver new law that will make it a criminal offense for women to miscarry a pregnancy.

The bill responds to a case in which a Vernal woman allegedly paid a man $150 to beat her and cause miscarriage but could not be charged. The Senate on Thursday approved HB12 on a vote of 24-4, criminalizing a woman’s “intentional, knowing, or reckless act” leading to a pregnancy’s illegal termination. It specifies that a woman cannot be prosecuted for arranging a legal abortion.

The measure now goes to Gov. Gary Herbert for final action.

Some Senate Democrats attempted a last-minute amendment to remove the word “reckless” from the list of criminal acts leading to miscarriage. They argued that criminalizing reckless acts leaves open the possibility of prosecutions against domestic violence victims who return to their abusers only to be beaten and lose the child.

“It’s part of the cycle of domestic violence,” said Sen. Luz Robles, D-Salt Lake City.

“I hope none of you ever have to face that situation,” she said after realizing the majority would pass the bill as is, “or have a daughter facing that situation, or a granddaughter.”

But the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Margaret Dayton, R-Orem, said the bill doesn’t target victims at all — only those who arrange to terminate their pregnancies illegally.

Now, let’s be clear here, of course this legislation is about ending or severely restricting a woman’s right to abortion. Of course this legislation is about controlling and even hating women (rather than opening up more choices for women’s reproductive health, let’s just make it illegal for them to be desperate!). And of course, the life of a fetus is far more important to many people making laws than the woman’s life is.

But along with the women hating anti-choice violence this law is enacting on women in Utah, this law (which looks as if it is going to pass) *also* has the (perhaps) unintended consequence of particularly targeting poor women of color–and even more pointedly, undocumented women.

Remember that undocumented women are not allowed medicaid or medicare–and even if they were, most states prevent women from using state funds to get abortions. Under the new health legislation being proposed, it would be illegal for undocumented immigrants to even *buy* their own health insurance (much less get it for free or at a reduced cost from the government), and again, even if they did, abortion coverage (even if women want to buy their own) is being written out of the legislation.

So, after making it near impossible and mostly illegal for undocumented (and even documented) women to buy their own health insurance that covers abortions, after making it impossible to get free or reduced cost health insurance that covers abortions–the state of Utah feels it’s important to then criminalize women who don’t have “legal” abortions.

But…what is a “legal” abortion? Is getting advice on what herbs to take from a midwife “legal?” Is taking various medications that many Latinas can get from Mexico and other Latin American countries “legal?” Is a coat hanger “legal?”

Because there seems to be no definition of what equates “legal” written into this legislation, that means any woman anywhere who for whatever reason miscarries–will be subject to criminal charges. And lest you think that prosecutors have ever shown restraint when it comes to pressing criminal charges against women who are making their own *often times very LEGAL* choices about their bodies, please, surf around the National Advocates for Pregnant Women website for a while. This organization of lawyers that defend pregnant women from criminal prosecution, has worked to defend women who have done such things as being pregnant and addicted to various drugs to refusing c-sections to being “uppity” in the birthing room.

It is not a “safe” thing to be a woman who is pregnant. And unfortunately, rather than feeling compassion for a woman who would willingly be beaten so that she doesn’t have a child (and maybe increasing funding for free reproductive health care options), we hate that woman, and do what we can to punish all women who would dare to be as desperate as she was.

via Jezebel

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At 11 pages, President Obama’s health care reform proposal is an easy read. You can download the PDF here and read for yourself. So far it’s been the clearest and easiest to understand out of all the health care documents to come out over the last few months.

The White House’s proposal does not include anti-abortion Stupak-like language. What also isn’t in the proposal is a public option, although Obama’s plan lowers the “fine” for those who still don’t have health care once it becomes a mandate.

According to Obama’s proposal, families like mine should be exempt from being required to have health insurance and maybe I can get the entire family under the same coverage, as opposed to my kids having health insurance and their primary caregiver, me, not having anything.

But don’t bother reading the President’s proposal if you are looking for lifting the 5 year ban on immigrants accessing government subsidized services or for the undocumented to be able to use their own hard earned money to buy their own insurance. There is no mention of immigrant access and as the saying goes silence speaks volumes.

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Often, the narrative of the Latin@ immigrant is one of “good” immigrant versus “bad” immigrant. That is, there is the “good” hardworking, family centered, grateful, unquestioningly US loving immigrant and the “bad” fuck ups who are every other immigrant (queers, those who won’t/don’t learn English, women who are pregnant, drug addicts, etc). Vivir Latino has investigated this good/bad dichotomy for a very long time–and tried to complicate it. Which is why I found the following article about a drug dealer from Mexico to be very compelling and interesting.

Esteban Avila–an undocumented immigrant from Mexico, lived a life of extreme poverty and surrounded by violence until he found a way out. He was recruited to sell black tar, or heroin, in the US. Life improved considerably for him and his family (and oddly enough, even for his community), but came at the expense of the people in the US who he sold drugs to:

When he was a boy, the village of Emiliano Zapata was poor and notorious for its violence. In The Toad, where Avila’s family lived, roofs leaked and the hills were the bathroom. When Avila and his friends went to the village basketball court, other boys ran them off with rocks and insults.

Later, Avila wanted to join the Mexican Navy or highway patrol, but only sons of well-connected fathers were admitted, he said.

“In the United States, there’s no need to be a criminal to live well,” he said. “But in Mexico, they throw you into a dead end.”

At 14, Avila traveled to Tijuana, then slipped across the border and made his way to the San Fernando Valley.

“I wanted to look for some new way to live, something with a future,” he said. “I wasn’t going to find it in the village.”

But he didn’t want to go to school and he was too young to work. So he returned to Emiliano Zapata and bided his time working in the sugar cane fields.

In the mid-1990s, men from Xalisco began selling black-tar heroin across America. A friend who ran a heroin network recruited Avila to work as a driver in Phoenix.

Avila, then 19, accepted. Every day, he drove around the city, his mouth full of tiny, uninflated balloons, each filled with a tenth of a gram of heroin. Addicts phoned in orders. A dispatcher relayed them to Avila, who delivered the drugs to customers and collected payment.

Five months later, he took a bus back to Xalisco with $15,000 in his pocket. He was wearing new Levi’s 501s — a prized garment in many Mexican villages.

“That night was the first time we had more than enough to eat,” Avila said.

There were a few points in this article that made me uneasy. Namely that Avila feels no compunction at all about his drug selling. Coming from a community that has been devastated by drugs, I know that the people he was selling to were not top of the line drug users, but my next door neighbors (if that makes sense).

Also, I have a really hard time with sellers that display their drug wealth through clothes and extravagant lifestyle choices. Again, as somebody from a community that has been devastated by drugs, the jeans and thick gold chains and flashy cars are like a slap in the face to community members struggling to deal with the violence, addiction and even deaths of loved ones.

And yet, in Avila’s testimony, there remains the unequivical truth. Selling drugs made it so that his family could eat without worrying about where the food was coming from or how much if it there was for the first time. As somebody who has lived with poverty on and off throughout the years, I understand how desperate hunger can make a person–and how hunger in a loved one can send you over the edge. How it can harden you to the point you don’t care about anybody anymore–just the food. Getting the food so that you don’t have to hurt.

What it shows is that even in the cases of “bad” immigrants, what we are talking about is a complicated twisting of capitalism, a free market economy and human rights. In other words, what is the difference between “go getters” like Joe Kennedy (of John, Robert and Edward Kennedy fame) and Avila?
What is the difference, really, between Avila and a “good” immigrant that just wants what’s best for her family? Avila is more broken (or is he?) than what we think of as “good” immigrants–but at the base level, he wants what’s best for his family. He wants his family to not be hungry.

SO what do we do here, with this “bad” immigrant? Will punitive actions stop Avila’s from coming into the US–or from contributing to addiction (and all the government violence directed toward ending addiction in the US) in the US? What would happen if we stopped looking for punitive ways to end drug violence in the US–and assume that sellers (as WELL as users) are people acting from a place of humanity? That they want what’s best for their families, just like “good” people do? Or, by way of compromise, if we put drug pushers in jail AND work on ways to end poverty in the various communities that are sending their sons into such dangerous work?

Is there a way to complicate not just the good/bad immigrant dichotomy, but to also complicate the *responses* to “good” and “bad” immigrants?

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After President Obama’s State of the Union address last night, I needed to get out of Casa Mala. I knew what was coming, the analysis, the discussion, and the disagreements about what needed to done and what tone to use in doing it. But I needed a drink, I need to sing and dance a little as an act of mourning because in all of these discussions, which I am now engaged in, there was little mention of actual people.

While I was preparing mentally for the State of the Union address, I saw on the Spanish language news about an immigrant mujer, Alexandra Nunez, who died from massive bleeding during an abortion in a clinic walking distance from Casa Mala. A single mother, like me, made a decision about her body and life within the limits placed on her because of law and who she is.

During the State of the Union speech, Obama spoke about the problems with getting health care reform passed and spoke on immigration from a law and order perspective, following the laws and securing the borders. He failed, as so many do, in pointing out where health care reform and immigration reform intersect, in the very lost life of mami Alexandra Nunez.
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37th Anniversary of Roe v. Wade

11:00 am By BiancaLaureano · Health|Women · Comments Off

22 Jan 2010

Today is the 37th Anniversary of Roe v. Wade being decided in the US. In recognizing this day, many organizations have events and special features, one such space is RH Reality Check, “an online community and publication serving individuals and organizations committed to advancing sexual and reproductive health and rights.” RH Reality Check has a series of writing by various people in the reproductive and sexual health field writing under the feature: What does choice mean to you.

You’ll find writing by several Latinas including:
*Aimée Thorne-Thomsen Executive Director of The Pro-Choice Public Education Project writes about growing up with Roe and how that has impacted her life to do the work she does today in Growing Up With Roe.

*Silvia Henriquez the Executive Director of the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health shares her desire to see an expansion of seeing a “holistic vision for reproductive freedom” in her piece Securing Real Choices Means Going Beyond “Choice”.

*Bianca M. Velez, Program Assistant for The Pro-Choice Public Education Project writes about being a young woman of Color in NYC and her examination into the terminology of choice and reproductive justice in Will I Ever Have A Choice?

*And yours truly reflects on the sacrifices of Rosie Jimenez, the first victim of the Hyde Amendment and how I see choice as survival and self-determination. Read my contribution The Hyde Amendment Killed Rosie Jimenez…Because of Roe and Rosie, I Exist.

Additional articles I’d like to highlight (there are 17 in total) focus on international work around reproductive justice and access to care, how “choice” also means choices in birth options, a 37-year retrospect on Roe v. Wade, and one man shares why choice is important to him.

What does choice mean to you?

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Helping Haiti : More Ways to Help

6:02 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Haiti|Health · 1 Comment

15 Jan 2010

Una dear amiga out of New Orleans reminded me of some of the issues the Red Cross had and still has surrounding Hurricane Katrina and it’s aftermath. I am going to keep adding events as I see them.

Partners in Health

PIH has been working on the ground in Haiti for over 20 years. We urgently need your support to help those affected by the recent earthquake.

Partners In Health (PIH) works to bring modern medical care to poor communities in nine countries around the world. The work of PIH has three goals: to care for our patients, to alleviate the root causes of disease in their communities, and to share lessons learned around the world.

Based in Boston, PIH employs more than 11,000 people worldwide, including doctors, nurses and community health workers. The vast majority of PIH staff are local nationals based in the communities we serve.

Stand With Haiti

Vegan Bake Sales for Haiti
Portland Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: Sunday January 31st, 2 PM to 5 PM, People’s CoOp upstairs, all proceeds going to Mercy Corps.

NYC Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: TBA

Omaha Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: Sunday January 24th, noon to 2Pm at McFosters.

LA Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: TBA, info here – http://veganpr0n.com/?p=176

SF Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: Saturday, January 23rd in Patricia’s Green (on Hayes Street at Octavia Street), from 11 AM to 4 PM. More info here: http://vegansaurus.com/post/333125052/emergency-vegan-bakesale-for-haiti

Sacramento Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: Saturday, January 16, 2010 – 10:00 AM – 3:00PM, R5 Records – 2500 16th Street, Sacramento, CA 95818. Benefiting: Red Cross: Haiti Relief and Development

Orange County Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: Sat 1/16 noon- whenever 2814 Newport Blvd, Newport Beach, CA .Contact krislegeek@blogspot.com with any questions or advice!

DC Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: TBA, info here- http://www.dcvegan.com/

Miami Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: Date is set for 1/31, more details to come. Contact kimberly@alaskanstar.com

Minneapolis Vegan Bake Sale For Haiti: Animal Rights Coalition on Saturday January 30 from 12pm-5pm. 317 W 48th Street.

Lamp for Haiti
“The LAMP for Haiti” has built, staffed and maintains a free medical clinic in one of the most impoverished areas of Haiti.

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This story of a woman who was sterilized against her will is absolutely heartbreaking. It bears the typical issues with the medical field: Tessa Savicki has had 9 children, she asked to get an implant device that could be removed if she changed her mind, doctors “can’t find” any record of her operation–but then they *can* and the release form patients undergoing sterilization are required to sign is not there.

But the saddest part of it all is that this story also has all the earmarks of becoming a question of “did this woman deserve it or not” argument (rather than a what criminal charges will be brought up against the doctors who committed this heinous act) as influenced by the knowledge that the woman in question is not a ‘steller’ woman. That is: she’s no Suzy Homemaker.

From the article:

In 2001, the newspaper reports, Savicki reached an out-of-court settlement with CVS pharmacy and a spermacide company after she claimed she was sold an expired spermacide.

The Herald reports Savicki’s nine children have several fathers. She reportedly is unemployed and relies on public assistance for two of the four children who live with her.

She receives supplemental security income for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, she tells the paper. Her mother has custody of three of her children, according to the Herald. Two of her children are grown.

I’m not really sure why any of these details are necessary to the story–A doctor performed a surgery on a human being that she gave no consent to perform. That is an act of violence. A direct challenge to the idea of human rights and autonomy.

Unfortunately, Savicki’s illegal surgery is not unusual. Women of color, disabled women, addicted women, sex workers, indigenous women, trans women, “illegal” women and so many others are all groups of women whose basic bodily integrity is only rarely respected.

My question: why is this doctor, and all the doctors that committed these crimes against women, not in jail? What would happen if there was a history of men getting their testicles removed in the U.S.? Would we force the men to sue (rather that imprisoning the doctors)? Would we debate whether or not the men deserved to get their testicles removed?

Would we argue that it may not have been “right” to do remove the man’s testicles, but in the end, he deserved it and it did our country a favor?

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Hola!

VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.

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