California Gov. Jerry Brown's veto of legislation that would have allowed women to sell their eggs for medical research has infuriated some women's rights supporters.


"Not everything in life is for sale nor should it be," Brown, a Democrat, wrote in his veto message[1] Tuesday.


The author of the bill that would have allowed[2] the sale of human eggs for research, Assemblywoman Susan Bonilla (D-Concord), called Brown's statement "regressive" and "very troubling."


"Women should be very troubled that Gov. Brown doesn't think they should be able to have a choice when it comes to their own eggs," Bonilla said to The Huffington Post. "There's a deeper level in his veto statement that questions the ability of a woman to engage in informed consent and assess the risks for herself of this procedure," Bonilla said. "It’s regressive to women's health, medical breakthroughs and the fertility issues that are so very important for a woman."


California is one of only three states -- with South Dakota and Massachusetts -- that bans women from selling their eggs for medical research.


The ban in California, imposed in 2006, was backlash to a 2004 initiative that granted $3 billion for a California stem cell research agency. If Bonilla's bill had been signed into law, the eggs could have gone towards stem cell research but would have gone primarily toward fertility and contraceptive research. That's because compensation for eggs used in research financed by the California stem cell agency would have remained banned.


Social conservative groups, including the California Catholic Conference and the California Right to Life Committee, opposed the bill, citing ethical concerns about stem cell research and selling a part of the body.


In his veto statement, Brown, who spent three years studying to become a Jesuit priest before leaving the seminary, seemed to have an ethical concern as well. “The questions raised here are not simple; they touch matters that are both personal and philosophical,” he wrote.


Brown and other opponents of the bill said that the long-term health risks of egg donation surgery are not known. Some women have reported health problems from the procedure.


Bonilla conceded that, as with any surgery, there are risks to egg donation. But she and supporters of the bill, including the National Organization for Women, said women should be able to assess the risk and make their own choices.


Patricia Bellasalma, president of NOW in California, accused Brown of "believing that women are incapable of giving informed consent, incapable of contracting when money is involved," she said to HuffPost. "It’s a shame Jerry Brown doesn’t trust women."


The bill was supported by other women's groups, including Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, the American Association of University Women and the Silver Ribbon Campaign to Trust Women. It was also backed by the fertility industry, including the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, a nonprofit that represents fertility clinics and researchers.


Women in California can already legally sell their eggs to fertility clinics. Bonilla said that if women are allowed to sell their eggs to these for-profit clinics -- for which they are generally paid $5,000 to $10,000 -- they should be allowed to do so for research purposes.


"There's a completely open market on the for-profit side," Bonilla said. "On the research side, you have nonprofit researchers at some of the country's preeminent research institutions, where there are layers upon layers of accountability, who can't get eggs."


Bonilla said her bill was also a matter of gender equity because men are allowed to sell their sperm for research.


But the Center for Genetics and Society, a pro-abortion rights nonprofit in Berkeley that opposed the bill, said the comparison is misleading because selling sperm doesn’t require surgery and is therefore safer.


"This was intentionally misleading language that was used to try to convince Democrat politicians and women's groups to support the bill," Diane Tober, associate executive director of the Center for Genetics and Society, said to HuffPost. Tober, concerned about the procedure on egg donors' health, said the push to lift the ban came from researchers trying "to build their careers."


Bonilla said she wrote the measure after researchers approached her about the lack of eggs, which are harder to preserve than sperm, for research.


Other opponents of the bill raised the concern that low-income women would disproportionately sell their eggs.


"People in need of money will take risks," Jennifer Lahl, president of the Center for Bioethics and Culture Network, said to HuffPost. "It's why public policy doesn't permit selling of organs too. Wealthy can buy; poor have to sell."


Mark Sauer, MD, chief of reproductive endocrinology at Columbia University Medical Center, called that characterization "absolutely myth and a misrepresentation of the reality," he said to HuffPost. "It sadly demonstrates the lack of understanding such individuals possess about how egg donation is performed in this country."


In the egg-donation-for-research program that Dr. Sauer and colleagues have run since 2009, with 78 donors so far, 34 percent of donors were Caucasian and two thirds had college or graduate degrees, he told HuffPost. He is working with two researchers who are on sabbatical from Harvard, where egg donation for research is banned by Massachusetts.


He said of donors, "They do undergo a lot of risk but it's an acceptable risk. This is a 35-year-old medical procedure, and the safety track record is well-defined."


Bonilla's bill easily passed the California Senate (July 1[3] ) and the Assembly (Aug. 2[4] ), largely on party lines. Bonilla said she may reintroduce the bill next year. In the meantime, she said she hopes to educate people and "clear up the confusion that's out there."



Earlier on HuffPost:




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  • Birth Control Causes Prostate Cancer


    Earlier this year, a New Hampshire lawmaker came up with a new reason the government should not require health insurance companies to provide contraception.

    "As a man, would it interest you to know that Dr. Brownstein just published an article that links the pill to prostate cancer?" state Rep. Jeanine Notter (R) asked a male representative at the hearing, the <a href="http://merrimack.patch.com/articles/merrimack-rep-claims-the-pill-has-been-linked-to-prostate-cancer" target="_hplink">Merrimack Patch reports</a>.

    "In the children that are born from these women?" he asked. Notter could not clearly explain the study or how the pill results in prostate cancer.

    The study described in <a href="http://www.newsmaxhealth.com/dr_brownstein/Prostate_Cancer_The_Pill/2012/02/06/432113.html" target="_hplink">the newsletter of Dr. David Brownstein, a physician and holistic practitioner in Michigan,</a> suggests men may ingest estrogen through environmental contamination, not in utero from mothers taking birth control. An author of the study <a href="http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2011/11/15/study-link-between-birth-control-pills-and-prostate-cancer/" target="_hplink">told ABC News</a>, "This is just a hypothesis-generating idea. Women should not be throwing away the pill because of this."




  • Abortion Causes Breast Cancer


    The New Hampshire House in 2012 <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/14/abortion-breast-cancer-new-hampshire-_n_1345771.html" target="_hplink">passed a bill </a>that would require doctors to tell women seeking abortions that the procedure can cause breast cancer. Here is an excerpt from the bill, sponsored by Notter:

    <blockquote>Materials that inform the pregnant woman that there is a direct link between abortion and breast cancer. It is scientifically undisputed that full-term pregnancy reduces a woman's lifetime risk of breast cancer. It is also undisputed that the earlier a woman has a first full-term pregnancy, the lower her risk of breast cancer becomes, because following a full-term pregnancy the breast tissue exposed to estrogen through the menstrual cycle is more mature and cancer resistant. In fact, for each year that a woman's first full-term pregnancy is delayed, her risk of breast cancer rises 3.5 percent. The theory that there is a direct link between abortion and breast cancer builds upon this undisputed foundation. During the first and second trimesters of pregnancy the breasts develop merely by duplicating immature tissues. Once a woman passes the thirty-second week of pregnancy (third trimester), the immature cells develop into mature cancer resistant cells. When an abortion ends a normal pregnancy, the woman is left with more immature breast tissue than she had before she was pregnant. </blockquote>

    There is <a href="http://www.cancer.org/Cancer/BreastCancer/MoreInformation/is-abortion-linked-to-breast-cancer" target="_hplink">no link between abortions and breast cancer</a>, according to the World Health Organization, the American Cancer Society and other major health organizations. Similar provisions requiring doctors to make the abortion-breast cancer connection remain on the books in other state laws. Alaska, Kansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Texas all inaccurately assert a risk in written counseling materials, according to the <a href="http://www.guttmacher.org/statecenter/spibs/spib_MWPA.pdf" target="_hplink">Guttmacher Institute</a>, a New York-based reproductive health research organization.




  • Birth Control Is A Sex Pill


    Rush Limbaugh showed he has no understanding of how birth control pills work when he attacked Sandra Fluke, a Georgetown law student barred from testifying as a Democratic witness at a congressional hearing about the Obama administration's contraception policy. Limbaugh <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/29/rush-limbaugh-sandra-fluke-slut_n_1311640.html" target="_hplink">called Fluke a "slut"</a> for needing lots of birth control to manage her sex life.

    "She wants to be paid to have sex," Limbaugh said. "She's having so much sex she can't afford the contraception. She wants you and me and the taxpayers to pay her to have sex."

    Rick Santorum has also said that contraception encourages a bad kind of sex. Last year, in an interview with the Evangelical blog Caffeinated Thoughts, <a href="http://swampland.time.com/2012/02/14/rick-santorum-wants-to-fight-the-dangers-of-contraception/" target="_hplink">Santorum warned of the "dangers of contraception:"</a>

    <blockquote>"It's not OK because it's a license to do things in the sexual realm that is counter to how things are supposed to be. They're supposed to be within marriage, they are supposed to be for purposes that are, yes, conjugal, but also [inaudible], but also procreative. That's the perfect way that a sexual union should happen. We take any part of that out, we diminish the act."</blockquote>

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-b-keegan/gop-obama-birth-control_b_1281808.html" target="_hplink">Most women who have had sex have used contraception</a>. Birth control pills -- which are taken daily, regardless of how frequently a woman has sex -- may also be taken to manage endometriosis, ovarian cysts, acne or other health problems. A <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/14/arizona-birth-control-bill-contraception-medical-reasons_n_1344557.html" target="_hplink">bill in Arizona proposed penalizing women who use the pill for non-medical reasons</a>.




  • Abortion Industry Is 'Selling Abortions'


    A Republican state legislator in Arizona <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/20/abortion-bill-arizona-terri-proud-witness-email_n_1368386.html" target="_hplink">wrote in an email to a constituent</a> earlier this year that she wanted to force women seeking abortions to watch the procedure first.

    "Personally I'd like to make a law that mandates a woman watch an abortion being performed prior to having a 'surgical procedure,'" state Rep. Terri Proud (R) wrote. The constituent responded by email that she was "speechless" and after <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/23/abortion-bill-abortion-constituent-email-watching-abortion_n_1376389.html?ref=politics" target="_hplink">a baffling exchange with Proud</a>, released the emails to the media. Facing national outrage, Proud<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/21/terri-proud-arizona-legislator-abortion_n_1371213.html" target="_hplink"> issued a statement</a>:

    <blockquote>For too long, Planned Parenthood and the abortion industry have placed selling abortions above the health and safety of women. My message to a constituent last week emphasized my concerns with how abortion providers have not been honest with women about the realities of abortion, and the short and long-term risks of this dangerous surgical procedure.</blockquote>

    The notion that Planned Parenthood <a href="http://www.whyprolife.com/the-abortion-industry-they-believe-in-getting-children-young/" target="_hplink">baits women into unwanted pregnancies by providing ineffective contraception</a> then profits off the abortions is nothing new, but it's as outrageous as it sounds. Abortions constitute <a href="http://www.plannedparenthood.org/about-us/who-we-are/planned-parenthood-glance-5552.htm" target="_hplink">3 percent</a> of Planned Parenthood's services, and the organization estimates it <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/post/what-planned-parenthood-actually-does/2011/04/06/AFhBPa2C_blog.html" target="_hplink">prevents more than 220,000 abortions each year</a> by providing contraception. Because Planned Parenthood is <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/04/08/title-x-headline_n_846852.html" target="_hplink">not allowed to use federal funds for abortions</a>, defunding the program may limit contraception services and result in more abortions.




  • Women Can't Get Pregnant From Rape


    Just before Idaho's Senate withdrew a mandatory ultrasound bill in March, a Republican bill sponsor <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/20/chuck-winder-rape-abortions_n_1366994.html" target="_hplink">made some startling comments about abortion and rape</a>.

    "Rape and incest was used as a reason to oppose this," said state Sen. Chuck Winder (R). "I would hope that when a woman goes in to a physician with a rape issue, that physician will indeed ask her about perhaps her marriage, was this pregnancy caused by normal relations in a marriage or was it truly caused by a rape. I assume that's part of the counseling that goes on."

    It wasn't the first time a lawmaker has suggested that women seeking abortions may lie about rape. Some anti-abortion activists actually believe that rape cannot result in pregnancy. <a href="http://www.buzzfeed.com/annanorth/the-6-craziest-things-people-have-said-about-pregn" target="_hplink">Buzzfeed dug up a series of bizarre statements </a>Republicans have made about pregnancy, rape, juices not flowing and more. Here's one:

    <blockquote>The odds that a woman who is raped will get pregnant are "one in millions and millions and millions," said state Rep. Stephen Freind, R-Delaware County, the Legislature's leading abortion foe.<br>

    The reason, Freind said, is that the traumatic experience of rape causes a woman to "secrete a certain secretion" that tends to kill sperm.<br>

    Two Philadelphia doctors specializing in human reproduction characterized Freind's contention as scientifically baseless.</blockquote>

    <a href="http://www.plannedparenthood.org/health-topics/ask-dr-cullins/cullins-preg-5291.htm" target="_hplink">According to Planned Parenthood</a>, about 5 percent of rapes result in pregnancy, and providing all rape victims with emergency contraception could prevent more than 22,000 unwanted pregnancies a year.

    <em><strong>Correction:</strong> A previous version of this text misstated the status of Idaho's mandatory ultrasound bill legislation. Lawmakers ultimately decided to table the measure.</em>




  • Prenatal Testing Leads To Abortion


    Former GOP presidential candidate Rick Santorum made prenatal testing a campaign issue in February when <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/22/rick-santorum-prenatal-testing_n_1293153.html#s584044&title=On_Contraception" target="_hplink">he declared</a> the tests are designed to "cull the ranks of the disabled in our society" by encouraging abortions.

    "Amniocentesis does, in fact, result more often than not in this country in abortions," <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/election-2012/post/rick-santorum-prenatal-testing-encourages-abortions/2012/02/19/gIQAvmZeNR_blog.html" target="_hplink">Santorum, who has a severely disabled daughter, said on "Face the Nation."</a> "That is a fact."

    In fact, more than 90 percent of amniocenteses tests result in normal diagnoses, and half of fetuses diagnosed with severe abnormalities -- about 5 percent of those tested -- are aborted, <a href="http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/feb/27/rick-santorum/rick-santorum-says-amniocentesis-does-fact-result-/" target="_hplink">according to PolitiFact</a>.

    A campaign spokeswoman for Obama <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/22/rick-santorum-prenatal-testing_n_1293153.html#s584044&title=On_Contraception" target="_hplink">condemned Santorum's comments</a> as "misinformed and dangerous" and pointed out that the tests help women have safer deliveries and healthier babies.




  • HPV Vaccine Causes Retardation


    Back when Rick Perry was campaigning for president, <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/13/rick-perry-hpv-vaccine_n_961159.html" target="_hplink">his rivals attacked him</a> for signing an executive order mandating the human papillomavirus vaccine for young girls, and misinformation quickly spread. Michele Bachmann <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/19/michele-bachmann-retardation-claim_n_970919.html" target="_hplink">insinuated that the vaccine causes mental retardation</a>, while Santorum spoke out against "having little girls inoculated at the force and compulsion of the government."

    The vaccine is safe and effective in preventing cervical cancer caused by certain strains of HPV, and Perry's 2007 executive order, which was overturned by the state legislature, would have allowed parents to opt out of having their daughters vaccinated. Dr. Renata Arrington-Sanders, a professor at Johns Hopkins University medical school, <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/13/rick-perry-hpv-vaccine_n_961159.html" target="_hplink">told HuffPost's Laura Bassett</a>:

    <blockquote>"The HPV vaccine has been shown to be safe and well-tolerated based on multiple medical reports that have been submitted through government databases. It's unfortunate that this particular vaccine is surrounded by a lot of controversy just because it's been labeled as an STD-prevention vaccine. We have similar vaccines, such as one for hepatitis B, that are also used in a mandated approach and have shown very successful rates with prevention."</blockquote>




  • Plan B Causes Abortions


    The debate over the Obama administration's contraception policy has yielded some puzzling claims about birth control and Plan B. House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) <a href="http://www.lifenews.com/2012/02/08/boehner-pledges-congress-will-overturn-new-obama-mandate/" target="_hplink">addressed the House</a> in February, urging his colleagues to reverse Obama's mandate for health insurance coverage of "abortion-inducing drugs:"

    <blockquote>In recent days, Americans of every faith and political persuasion have mobilized in objection to a rule put forward by the Obama administration that constitutes an unambiguous attack on religious freedom in our country. This rule would require faith-based employers -- including Catholic charities, schools, universities, and hospitals -- to provide services they believe are immoral. Those services include sterilization, abortion-inducing drugs and devices, and contraception.</blockquote>

    Michele Bachmann called Plan B an abortion pill when she incorrectly criticized Obama for making the drug available over-the-counter -- an FDA recommendation the administration and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/08/obama-sebelius-morning-after-pill_n_1137014.html" target="_hplink">rejected last year</a>. "The president can put abortion pills for girls 8 years of age, 11 years of age, on the bubblegum aisle," <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/28/gop-candidates-personhood_n_1172082.html" target="_hplink">Bachmann said</a> at a "pro-life" town hall in December.

    Contraceptives, emergency or not, prevent pregnancy. They don't cause abortions. Plan B works in the same way and with the same ingredients as birth control pills, just at a higher dosage, and<a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2006/august/31.44.html?start=2" target="_hplink"> does nothing to stop the development of a fetus</a>.




  • Your Fetus Is Just Fine


    The Arizona Senate<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/09/wrongful-birth-bill-arizona-senate-abortion-bill_n_1335117.html" target="_hplink"> passed a bill</a> in March to protect doctors from "wrongful birth" lawsuits -- effectively allowing them to withhold information that may lead a patient to get an abortion. HuffPost's John Celock <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/06/kansas-anti-abortion-bill_n_1258185.html" target="_hplink">reports</a>:

    <blockquote>Sen. Nancy Barto (R-Phoenix) told the Claims Journal that she sponsored the law because she did not want claimants to blame a doctor for a baby born with disabilities. Under the provisions of her bill, a doctor could not be sued for medical malpractice if the doctor withholds information from a mother about a child's potential health issues that could influence her decision to have an abortion. In addition, a lawsuit could not be filed on the child's behalf regarding a disability.</blockquote>

    Kansas lawmakers <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/06/kansas-anti-abortion-bill_n_1258185.html" target="_hplink">have considered similar legislation</a>.