The notion of bodily autonomy should not be a difficult
concept to grasp. It isn’t radical: it is simply that each person should have control over his or her own body. Yet we
continue to see policies that deny this autonomy to individuals, particularly
women, through rationales often based on religion or other personally held
moral objections.
Over the last few years, women’s basic reproductive rights have been trampled through
systematic discriminatory legislation on the state and federal levels. This
backward motion shows no signs of slowing, especially in conservative states
that use women’s reproductive autonomy as a political bargaining chip. State
legislatures enacted 205 abortion restrictions from 2011–2013, more
restrictions than the total number enacted in the entire previous decade. Then,
earlier this year, the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. favored
corporations’ religious freedom at the expense of women’s access to
contraceptive care, a decision that has led to a fresh onslaught of religious
exemption lawsuits and requests.
Some of these challenges follow in Hobby Lobby’s footsteps and seek exemptions specifically from the ACA contraceptive care requirement.
But, troublingly, others are using the Hobby
Lobby decision as leverage for exemptions from other legal requirements,
such as the group of religious leaders who urged President Obama to include a religious exemption to his LGBT anti-discrimination executive order.
The aftermath of Hobby
Lobby proved what we’ve known for years—an attack on women’s rights can very easily translate into an attack on
everyone’s rights. So while bodily autonomy is at the core of the
reproductive justice movement—women and their families should be able to decide
how, when, and with whom to form their families—Legal Voice is also working in
other issue areas to change systems that deny women (and men) the right to
control, protect, and make decisions for their own bodies.
For instance: health
care coverage for transgender people. In the health care system,
transgender people have repeatedly been denied the opportunity to have control
over their health care decisions. Both public and private health insurance policies routinely include clauses that specifically prevent transgender people from having the same coverage for medical services that is provided for other policy holders. Some plans exclude coverage for
surgical or non-surgical services for medically necessary transition-related
care, while in other cases, insurance companies outright deny coverage to the
individual. We are currently representing a transgender woman who was denied
coverage for gender reassignment surgery by her insurer on the grounds that it
was “cosmetic”—despite the fact that her health care providers unanimously
regard the surgery as medically necessary under well-established standards of
care.
Bodily autonomy is also at the core of end-of-life decision-making
and care. Death with Dignity laws provide options for elderly and terminally
ill individuals to control their own
end-of-life care. People living in states with these laws—Washington,
Oregon, and Vermont—have access to one of the greatest human freedoms: to live,
and die, according to their own desires and beliefs.
But people living in states without Death with Dignity
laws—or people whose secular, taxpayer-supported hospitals have merged with
Catholic hospital chains—lack the ability to control what happens (or does not
happen) to their bodies at the end of their lives. You may have heard of
Brittany Maynard, the 29-year-old woman who was diagnosed with terminal brain
cancer and who wanted to die on her terms—without suffering and surrounded by the
people she loved. Living in California at the time, Brittany lacked the legal
right to request that her physician aid her in dying. To obtain the right to
control her end-of-life care and to access appropriate medication legally,
Brittany and her family moved to Oregon and, in an act of complete autonomy,
Brittany ended her life on November 1.
We believe all
people have the right to make decisions regarding their bodies without
politicians, insurance companies, employers, hospital policy-makers, or anyone
else telling them what decisions to make or how to make them. We have actively
worked to change culture and policies that threaten individuals’ autonomy over
their own bodies by:
·
Sending a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder
calling on the U.S. Department of Justice to renounce enhanced criminal penalties for women on the basis of
pregnancy.
·
Working with the Seattle City Council to pass a resolution calling on federal lawmakers to repeal
all bans on public insurance coverage of abortion, including the Hyde
Amendment.
·
Engaging in civil discourse about sexual abuse,
street harassment, non-consensual pornography, and other violations to women’s bodies.
·
Advocating for Washington’s Public Employees
Benefits Board (PEBB) to provide
inclusive health benefits for transgender people covered by PEBB plans,
which they approved earlier this year.
When a woman has the power to decide when and how to get
pregnant—or when and how to not get
pregnant—she has control over her body. When transgender people have the ability
to receive the medical treatment they need without the fear of discrimination,
they have control over their bodies. When a woman approaching the end of her
life has the ability to make important decisions for herself, she has control
over her body.
Photo courtesy of Steve Rainwater.