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Governor’s birth control proposal wins senate subcommittee approval

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February 27th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A three-member Senate panel has unanimously advanced Governor Kim Reynolds’ proposal that would expand access to birth control in Iowa. The bill would let Iowa women get birth control pills and some other forms of contraception directly from a pharmacist. Patients would still have to go through a health screening and might be referred to a doctor. Jodi Tomlonovic is director of the Family Planning Council of Iowa.  “We think this is a good step forward and adds to our ability of women, in particularly in the more rural parts of the state, to access birth control,” she said.

Kathryn Kueter of Concerned Women For America, says a woman’s health could be harmed if she takes the wrong dosage of birth control. “We’re also concerned about the lack of accountability this bill provides since there’s no liability for the pharmacist,” she said. “And we think there needs to be some accountability on those fronts.”

Senator Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Ottumwa, the Republican in charge of guiding the bill through the senate, says she wouldn’t be supporting it if she thought it would endanger women’s health. Miller-Meeks is the former director of the Iowa Department of Public Health. A three-member House subcommittee is scheduled to consider a similar proposal tomorrow (Thursday).