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Womens Enews, June 9, 2005
Pro-Voice Hotline
Goes Nationwide
Author : Rebecca Vesely
OAKLAND, Calif. (WOMENSENEWS)--Whether a woman
is pro-choice or pro-life, Aspen Baker feels
that all should be "pro-voice" when
it comes to talking about having an abortion
and the emotions that follow.
Others apparently agree.
This month, Exhale, the peer counseling hotline
she co-founded for women who have had abortions
and their partners seeking emotional support
is going nationwide.
Exhale has been operating in the San Francisco
Bay Area since January 2002. Starting this
month, Exhale is lifting a block on its phone
lines from all incoming calls outside the region
and will field calls from across the U.S. The
group has also extended its hours, trained
additional peer counselors and made the service
available in Spanish, Vietnamese and Cantonese.
In a 2002 story, Baker told Women's eNews that
she had no plans to go national and that she
hoped to instead train groups in other parts
of the country to adopt the Exhale model in
post-abortion counseling. But she changed her
mind when she realized that the replication
idea wasn't catching fast enough and she started
thinking about women in rural California who
come to San Francisco for an abortion and then
go home and can't access Exhale. She noted
that another group in New York City that planned
to launch a similar service called Epilogue
hasn't gotten the project off the ground.
"Because we're the only ones in the country
we felt we had a strong obligation to open
it up," Baker said.
Creating a Safe Environment
Exhale has purposefully stayed out of political
discussions around abortion. Baker won't comment
on parental consent laws or other restrictions
being placed on abortion access nationwide.
Exhale hasn't been a target of anti-abortion
protesters and Baker said she hopes to keep
it that way by reminding people the reason
for the service: to create a safe environment
for women to talk about their feelings about
a very personal experience.
Three years after it launched, Oakland-based
Exhale runs on a $250,000 annual budget in
foundation grants and in-kind donations. Modeled
on rape-crisis hotlines, Exhale's 25 volunteer
peer counselors attend 40 hours of training
in the history of abortion, sexuality, rape,
religion and suicide.
Exhale is attracting attention from health clinics,
abortion providers and others that want to
incorporate after-abortion peer counseling
into their services. Baker and program director
Carolina De Robertis have held trainings around
the country to help groups that come in contact
with women who have had abortions to discuss
the procedure in a non-judgmental way.
"There's this myth that everyone is traumatized
after an abortion; there's a myth everyone
is relieved," says Baker. "There's
all these boxes everyone is expected to fit
into."
The talk-line received more than 700 calls in
2004. Repeat callers comprised 11 percent and
9 percent were men. Nearly 40 percent of callers
had undergone an abortion in the past month
but some had abortions years earlier. Exhale
referred 35 percent to other services.
"We see ourselves as one piece in a network
of support," Baker said. "It's about
making links to the system."
Exhale is toll-free at 1-866-4-EXHALE. The talk-line
operates nationwide Monday through Friday 5
p.m. to 10 p.m. PST and weekends from noon
until 10 p.m. PST.
Other Services, Other Perspectives
Post-abortion counseling is provided by other
groups, but most are tied to a religious or
moral perspective. Project Rachel, founded
in 1984 by the Roman Catholic Church diocese,
counsels women who have had abortions over
several months of self-forgiveness and reconciliation
with the church.
Exhale's philosophy is unique and based on two
fundamentals: abortion is legal and abortion
is normal.
Some women who call Exhale are deeply religious
and are seeking help with feelings of relief,
not regret. Other women call seeking help with
domestic violence after an abortion, or looking
for food bank services because they spend their
monthly paycheck on an abortion, Baker says.
Planned Parenthood clinics refer women to Exhale,
but Kathy Kneer, executive director of Planned
Parenthood Affiliates of California, says she
thinks the need is small.
"Most women think long and hard before they
have an abortion and they come to the decision
by themselves and feel comfortable with that
decision," Kneer says. She commends Exhale
as a good service and says she "wishes
them well."
Exhale grew out of the founders' personal experience.
When Baker was 23, she had an abortion and was
surprised at the lack of emotional support
for women after terminating a pregnancy. So
she and four other women founded a free post-abortion
talk-line for the San Francisco Bay Area in
January 2002 with seed money of $500.
"Some women identify (themselves) as pro-life
or pro-choice or don't identify with either,"
says Baker, now 29. "It's crucial that
we remain supportive of everyone. And we value
that for many women abortion can be part of
a normal and productive life."
For Monica Lois, 27, Exhale normalized her feelings
about her abortion. Lois had an abortion at
age 25 after deciding with her long-term boyfriend
that it was the right option at the time. Always
pro-choice, Lois has no regret over her decision.
But months after terminating her pregnancy,
she had intense feelings of grief and was crying
a lot.
"My body just knew (that it was the due
date)," Lois says.
Like Baker, Lois said she felt angry with the
pro-choice movement for not providing more
after-abortion resources. She found Exhale
online through a Web search and was grateful
she lived in the Bay Area so could access the
line. She spent about 15 minutes on the call
and felt better afterwards, she says.
"The best thing about it was hearing that
my experience was normal," she says. "I
felt like, wow, someone knows what's going
on with me."
By the age of 45, 1 in 3 U.S. women will have
an abortion. Whatever a woman is feeling about
that experience, it is important to normalize
it and allow the woman to talk about it if
they want to, Baker says.
Rebecca Vesely writes about health care from
the San Francisco Bay Area.
<< Women's Enews -- 6/9/05 >>
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