Women’s Health Care Issues


Resolution Adopted by the

CCAR

Womens’ Health Care

Issues

Adpoted by the 103rd Annual

Convention of

the Central Conference of American Rabbis

San Antonio, Texas, April, 1992

WHEREAS, the Central Conference of American Rabbis has

consistently and frequently

committed itself to full and equal rights for women in all

aspects of our society,

and

WHEREAS, it has become increasingly

clear that women too frequently have been denied

adequate and equal health care and medical

attention, as illustrated by the following

examples:

1). the

overwhelming predominance of medical research focuses on male

subjects, even

in such critical

areas such as cardiac, cardiovascular and oncologic disease;

2. the recent significant concerns

exemplified by disputes as to the safety of silicon

breast implants and facial silicone injections

further imply that adverse medical

reactions affecting women do not receive proper serious

attention,

3. and that, in the

case of HIV infection, the Centers for Disease Control of the

United States Department of Health

and Human Services have not included several prominent

gynecological manifestations of HIV in the

official definition of AIDS, thereby disenfranchising a

disproportionately large number of women from AIDS resources and

treatment

options.

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the Central

Conference of American Rabbis strongly urges

that health care and medical institutions and

policy-making bodies of the United

States turn their immediate attention to equal concern for the

health of women.        

In particular, the Conference

points to the need to broaden and increase medical research

projects and protocols to include women

equally and the need to focus on diseases

and health issues of particular import to

women.        

Furthermore, the Conference strongly

encourages the Food and Drug Administration and

other appropriate regulatory agencies to take a more

serious approach when reviewing

products, procedures and treatment, that specifically affect

women.        

In addition, the Conference implores the

Centers for Disease Control to expand its

definition of AIDS to include all those clinical manifestations

of HIV disease which

are uniquely

gynecological in

nature.        

Finally, we urge swift creation of universal

health care for all people which will

also provide the following essential health rights for

women:

1. provision of good pre-

natal care for the disenfranchised ( poor, undocumented women),

2. insistence that all insurance

companies acknowledge the need for preventive health

care such as pap smears and mammograms and give

coverage,

3. provision and

funding of more research on methods of birth control,

4. protection of women’s reproductive

rights so that sterilization for any length

of time must be the decision of the woman alone, and

allowing no person or agency

to

abuse that right,

5. educating

women about their own bodies thus enabling them to take control and

make

intelligent decisions,

6. educating the health care system

about the real problems women face and firmly

discouraging condescending and patronizing responses

which, in too many instances,

discount the very real complaints of women.