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California universities are required to offer abortion pills. Many just don't mention it

Jackie Fortiér, LAist, Adolfo Guzman-Lopez, LAist, KFF Health News on

Published in Lifestyles

“We need to work harder if there is a student who needed the service and wasn’t aware that they could access it through us and not have to pay for it,” said Beth Jaworski, executive director of health, counseling, and wellness at CSU-San Bernardino. “But it’s one student. We haven’t been providing the service very long. It’s been just about a year now.”

Medication abortion has since been added to the list of services on the clinic’s website.

Ray Murillo, California State University’s interim assistant vice chancellor of student affairs, said he and other administrative staffers are developing guidance so campuses share the same information “to help in our training efforts for the frontline staff and providers when they’re being asked questions about the service and what we provide.”

Gomez wants more done, including flyers, emails, and social media posts directed at both faculty and students.

“You want to market the football games, you want to market the volleyball games. Why is that important, and abortions are not?” she said.

 

Gomez did graduate in December 2023, becoming the first person in her family to earn a bachelor’s degree. But she’s angry at her alma mater for keeping the abortion pills a secret.

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This article is from a partnership that includes LAist, NPR and KFF Health News.


©2024 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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