August 21, 2007
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
Planned Parenthood
Lawsuit Puts Profits over Patients Say "Silent No More"
Women
Staten
Island, NY - Leaders of the Silent No More Awareness
Campaign, the nation's largest network of women and men
harmed by abortion, today said that a Planned Parenthood
lawsuit seeking to stop enforcement of a new Missouri
law puts concern for profits ahead of patients. The
recently passed law would require abortion clinics to
meet the same state health and safety standards already
applied to other types of ambulatory surgical centers.
"Planned Parenthood claims that if it had to meet basic
safety requirements for outpatient clinics, two of its
abortion centers would go out of business," said
Georgette Forney, co-founder of SNMAC. "That speaks
volumes not only about the conditions of those clinics,
but also Planned Parenthood’s concern for the well being
of the women it claims to serve."
"It's
all about money," added Janet Morana, also a co-founder
of SNMAC. "We’re talking about fundamental requirements
like having doors and hallways big enough to accommodate
stretchers, scrub-up facilities for operating rooms, and
walls and floors that are washable. Apparently, basics
like that are too much to ask from Planned Parenthood."
Since the
launching of the Silent No More Awareness Campaign in 2003,
2,326 women and men have shared their testimonies publicly
at 189 gatherings in 44 states and six countries where more
than 15,000 spectators have heard the truth about abortion’s
negative after-effects. More than 4,100 people are
registered to be Silent No More. Raising awareness about
the hurtful aftermath of abortion and the help that is
available to cope with the pain are two of the Campaign’s
goals. For more information about the Silent No More
Awareness Campaign, please visit our website:
www.SilentNoMoreAwareness.org
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