Seattle 6th Graders Can’t Get a Coke at School, But Can Get an IUD

rockin'robin

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(CNSNews.com) -- Middle and high school students can’t get a Coca-Cola or a candy bar at 13 Seattle public schools, but they can get a taxpayer-funded intrauterine device (IUD) implanted without their parents’ consent.

School-based health clinics in at least 13 Seattle-area public high schools and middle schools offer long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs), including IUDs and hormonal implants, to students in sixth-grade and above at no cost, according to Washington State officials.

LARCs are associated with serious side effects, such as uterine perforation and infection. IUDs, specifically, can also act as abortifacients by preventing the implantation of a fertilized egg.

The state and federally funded contraceptive services are made possible by Take Charge, a Washington State Medicaid program which provides free birth control to adults who are uninsured, lack contraceptive coverage, have an income at or below 260 percent of the Federal Poverty Level -- or, in this case, to teens who don’t want their parents to know they’re on birth control.

In an email exchange with the Washington State Health Care Authority and CNSNews.com, a Take Charge spokesperson acknowledged that underage students are eligible for a “full array of covered family planning services” at school-based clinics if their parents meet the program’s requirements.

Take Charge added that “a student who does not want their parents to know they are seeking reproductive health services is allowed to apply for Take Charge using their own income, and if they are insured under their parents’ plan, the insurance would not be billed.”

When asked if a sixth grader could get an IUD implanted without parental consent, Take Charge told CNSNews.com: “We encourage all Take Charge providers to offer long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs) in their clinics. A young person does not need parental consent to obtain a LARC or any other contraceptive method...If the young person is not choosing abstinence, she would be able to select a LARC and have it inserted without parental consent.”

So while the students can’t get a soda from the cafeteria due to the Seattle School Board’s 2004 ban on junk food, they can get an IUD implanted at their school’s health center without their parents’ knowledge or permission.

According to the Washington State Medicaid website, health centers at four middle schools and nine high schools in Seattle participate in the Take Charge program. Other Take Charge providers are located in close proximity to schools.

“We have public health departments, community-based clinics, college and university clinics, pediatric clinics, private physician practices, and family planning clinics, like Planned Parenthood” as providers, Take Charge said in the email exchange. A total of 38 Planned Parenthood clinics participate in the Take Charge program.

Seattle school-based clinics participating in the program include Aki Kurose Middle School, Washington Middle School, Denny Middle School, Madison Middle School, Franklin High School, Nathan Hale High School, Roosevelt High School, West Seattle High School, Garfield High School, Ingraham High School, Rainier Beach High School, South Lake High School, and Chief Sealth International High School.

“Because we’re at the school, which is so wonderful, we have access to the students, and they have access to us, pretty much any time,” said Katie Acker, a health educator at two high school clinics run by Neighborcare Health, which participates in the Take Charge program.

“We will send them a pass for whatever class is easiest or best to get out of. Of course, there are always students who are like, ‘I wanna miss IB Math!’ We are not gonna pull you out of IB Math — how about ceramics instead?”

Washington State law grants any individual “a fundamental right of privacy with respect to personal reproductive decisions.”

A 2014 Washington University study “document[ed] the activities of the reproductive health educator and trends in teen LARC uptake” at clinics participating in the Take Charge program in West Seattle High School and Chief Sealth International High School. School-based health providers, Neighborcare administrators, public health officials, and community partners were interviewed.

Researchers found that “school-based health providers often cited their lack of formal training not only in inserting or removing IUDs and contraceptive implants, but also with the procedures in general.”

One health care provider who was interviewed reportedly commented: “It’s still scary to begin putting them in. Scary meaning that we know the biggest complication risk come with the least experienced providers. So how do you take that leap and just go for it?”

http://cnsnews.com/news/article/kat...tm_content=facebook&utm_campaign=n-school-IUD
 
to round it off the school believe; in safe sex a pass to get out of lessons and no coca cola..no where do it say SHOW boys what condom is or lessons in relationships only got one childhood be out enjoying it. not udi pill veneral disease
That the law a young girl of sexual maturity can have pill or udi,as a parent I would like to know if daughter was on pill or had coil in case of complications but lots parents are not like me...how old are 6th graders...
It all double edge sword
 
to round it off the school believe; in safe sex a pass to get out of lessons and no coca cola..no where do it say SHOW boys what condom is or lessons in relationships only got one childhood be out enjoying it. not udi pill veneral disease
That the law a young girl of sexual maturity can have pill or udi,as a parent I would like to know if daughter was on pill or had coil in case of complications but lots parents are not like me...how old are 6th graders...
It all double edge sword

Assuming they started 1st grade....they would be 10 or 11 years old....and let me say...kids may be or may not be having sex at this young of age....But bet my bottom dollar...if the school implanted my daughter with a IUD...:pissed::mad::rl::rifle:...that's my responsibility...and I would remove her from this school and home school her.
 
now 7th grade is 11yr olds here I think..any medical thing below 16 at least one parent should know..
but here a kid can go to doc and get implant are you meaning the one that go in uterus..i would not be thrilled that for sure..i brought my son up to use his childhood as a child..it is sad world and if it daughter I like get me hands on who boiking..
It all to early it sullys sex
 
This could be very dangerous if a girl has a yeast infection and has an IUD put in. Her parents would not know what was going on and the girl might not dare to say she has an IUD or realize or it making her sick.
 
This could be very dangerous if a girl has a yeast infection and has an IUD put in. Her parents would not know what was going on and the girl might not dare to say she has an IUD or realize or it making her sick.

or thrombosis anyhow girl would keep it quiet...if she unable to talk with mother about sex girl get herself in real mess.
NO JOKER IT NOT CALLED SOCIALISM it called American educational system
 
Parents need to understand one thing.....
Your children belong to the state, not you.....
 
This is a very dangerous situation.

I don't believe the promoters of this program are putting the health of the girls as their priority.
 
or thrombosis anyhow girl would keep it quiet...if she unable to talk with mother about sex girl get herself in real mess.
NO JOKER IT NOT CALLED SOCIALISM it called American educational system

Go to China and see if you're allowed to go in places as you please.
 
Go to China and see if you're allowed to go in places as you please.

I not sure how little girls implanted with contraception and china the connextion...you said socialism not me...it a part of your educational system bleedin obvious it being taught in American schools
 
Why don't we use an article with correct information and a non-preachy stance, like this one

http://www.inquisitr.com/2215740/it...et-an-iud-without-parental-consent-at-school/

IUDs do not act as abortifacient. Pregnancy does not occur until the egg attaches to the uterus. IUDs work by killing sperm. If you insert a copper IUD within 5 days of fertilization, the IUD *might* prevent the egg from implanting. The hormonal IUD kills sperm, but also makes it hard for the sperm to get past the cervix and it makes the lining of the uterus not thick enough to support implantation and growth. Both IUDs might have an effect on a fertilized egg, but pregnancy doesn't occur until the egg implants. Therefore it doesn't cause abortion because it messes things up before pregnancy.

It is entirely legal in that state for girls under the age of 18 to get birth control without their parents knowledge or consent. I think this is fantastic. It allows girls to make sure their lives aren't ruined by a pregnancy they cannot handle. Don't forget that these IUDs are inserted by professionals who have taken the girls' medical history into account. It's not like they are pushed in willy nilly by someone with dirty fingers in an alley.
 
I posted in the other threat, but these contraceptives are put in by medical professionals. It's not like they are buying them in a kit at the pharmacy and using them without any medical support.

I think it's a great program. I doubt it encourages girls to have sex. Rather, it allows girls who are having sex the ability to continue with their lives without the burden of a pregnancy. I would be absolutely fine if my young daughter did this. I would hope she didn't, because I would be perfectly willing to take her to the gynecologist with no judgement whatsoever. I would prefer my children were a little older before they had sex so they would be better able to emotionally and financially handle the repercussions of sex, but if they started younger I'm damn well going to make sure they have the medical support they need as someone who is sexually active.
 
I posted in the other threat, but these contraceptives are put in by medical professionals. It's not like they are buying them in a kit at the pharmacy and using them without any medical support.
Who is going to monitor their continued health after? No one.

What about STD's?
 
I've asked Calvin to merge or delete this post because I did not realize it was posted before.
 
Young girls in high schools are too young to have babies. They have their life ahead of them to plan what they want to be like going to college or vocational training or need to find jobs to make life better. I think the girls can make decisions on their own if they want to have IUDs or not.

I don't know about 6th graders who they were very young girls who have just started their first periods like 10 or 11 years old. Few of them started at 13 years old. If the girls don't want IUDs, then that is fine. For young girls in 6th grade, It would be advisable to let their parents know that they are having IUDs. Because IUDs, you have to remember to take the IUD out within a year. You can not let the IUD in for too long for more than one year. So there is a timeline to put a safe IUD in for the young girl otherwise after a year and not being able to get the IUD out, it will become infected, I think. I guess a young girl need to get IUD out every year and new IUD in every year.

Correct me if I am wrong. Is there a nurse who knows about this? :hmm:
 
Middle and high school students can’t get a Coca-Cola or a candy bar at 13 Seattle public schools, but they can get a taxpayer-funded intrauterine device (IUD) implanted without their parents’ consent.

I have already posted in another thread about IUDs.

I noticed what the high schools threaten them saying young teenagers are not allowed to get pop like Coca Cola or candy bars because they want the young teenage girls to get IUDs so that there is no pregnancy involved while they are attending their schools. It is like forcing them to do what the high schools want them to do. If they refuse to get IUDs, the girls would not get their treats. That is pretty harsh. This is not freedom for them to make decisions on their own without the threat of Coca Cola and candy bars. This is not fair. This is bribe. No, I would not go for that. The girls need to talk with their parents about having IUDs if they need to or not. I understand about that first paragraph. It should be between the doctor and the patient like the young girl but with her mother or both father and mother. I would go for that. That is not the schools' decision to force them to do what the schools want.

Being forced is not the solution. This is wrong.

Edit: I had been forced to go into the mainstream schools and to be forced to become like White person instead of Native or Indian. They want to eliminated me to be like them all the way. I hate being forced like that. :(
 
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