Screenshot/YouTube/Barnard College
A partner campus of Columbia University will be rolling out a plan in May that involves supplying students with abortion pills, the Columbia Spectator reported Tuesday.
Barnard College will be implementing its plan, which was announced in the fall 2022 semester, to provide additional abortion service in the form of mifepristone abortion pills to students at the school following the overturning of Roe. V Wade, according to the Spectator. The U.S. Supreme Court is slated to decide on access to the pill, which the Food and Drug Administration allegedly fast-tracked safety protocols to approve.
Barnard’s Primary Care Health Service will host student focus groups in upcoming weeks to find out student perspectives about the service and to identify new ways to support students considering abortion, according to the Spectator.
“We wanted to make sure that we’re addressing this from every angle that will be supportive of students,” Sarah Ann Anderson-Burnett, director of Medical Services and Quality Improvement of Barnard, told the Spectator.
Barnard now has six medical professionals, including two physicians and four nurse practitioners, who are capable of performing the procedure, Mariana Catallozzi, vice president for Health and Wellness and chief health officer of Barnard, told the Spectator. The school also launched a partnership with AccessNurse, a medical call center that will assist with patient concerns related to abortions by bill.
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