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Shaheen, Menendez urge State Department, USAID to guarantee access to health care services for women employees abroad

By Staff | Jan 26, 2023

WASHINGTON – U.S. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), a senior member and the only woman on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ), Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, are calling on the Biden administration to guarantee access to adequate health care services, including reproductive health care and post-sexual assault care, for women employees at the State Department and United States Agency for International Development (USAID). Following a letter by over 200 foreign service officers expressing serious concerns about individuals being denied consistent access to rape kits, family planning services, including emergency contraceptives and medical abortion, and access to obstetrician-gynecologists and other trained professionals, the Senators urged both agencies to update their policies and procedures that govern operations, including by codifying the right to reproductive health care in the Foreign Affairs Manual.

“In the first National Strategy on Gender Equity and Equality, the Biden administration asserted: ‘Health care is a right–not a privilege. All people deserve access to high-quality, affordable healthcare…we will…promote access to sexual and reproductive health and rights both at home and abroad.’ We struggle to reconcile the National Strategy’s vision with the experience of women working for the State Department and USAID who are asked to carry out the important objectives of that strategy and yet lack access to adequate reproductive healthcare themselves,” the Senators wrote in a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and USAID Administrator Samantha Power. “We urge you to take immediate action to effectuate the policies outlined in this strategy …. It is critical–both for their well-being and for the mission of these agencies–that women employees of the State Department and USAID be provided access to adequate healthcare.”

Acknowledging the agencies’ launch of a Women’s Health Working Group, the Senators pressed for additional information regarding the State Department and USAID’s efforts to address ongoing concerns, including on the commitment of new resources to rectify employees’ inequitable access to health care services overseas.