Action Alert: Support birth control with no co-pays? Make your voice heard!
If you think making birth control more accessible and affordable for U.S. women is a good thing, the Obama Administration needs to hear from you. They’re asking for comments on a new compromise to get coverage for women who work for certain organizations with religious objections to birth control while also respecting those objections. Get all the details and take action through The National Campaign’s policy portal. Then spread the word!
For more background on what the new health care law means for women with insurance, check out the article the National Women’s Law Center wrote about it for Bedsider.
We’re Up for a Classy Award - and Public Voting Closes Tonight (!)
Bedsider was chosen as a Top 5 Regional Finalist in The CLASSY Awards, but we need your help to get to the next level—and public voting closes tonight. Will you vote before midnight and reblog to help spread the word?
1) Go to the CLASSY voting page.
2) Select “EAST” as the region and find the “MOST EFFECTIVE AWARENESS CAMPAIGN BY A CHARITY” category.
3) At the far right you’ll see an entry for The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy. (That’s us!)
4) Select, submit, and enjoy the cozy thank-you vibes we’re sending your way.
The Birth Control Solution: Education + Re-Branding

In Nicholas Kristof’s NY Times column today he writes, “What’s needed isn’t just birth-control pills or IUDs. It’s also girls’ education and women’s rights — starting with an end to child marriages — for educated women mostly have fewer children.” Clearly, Mr. Kristof had women and girls worldwide in mind when he wrote that.
But as we are one week away from the official launch of a nationwide public service announcement campaign for Bedsider—including TV, print, and web ads—which will be the first time such a campaign runs in the U.S., we are reminded that education is needed here too. But the education needed is regarding all the options of birth control available and how to use it correctly and consistently.
Among single women in their 20s, more than 7 in 10 pregnancies are unplanned according to The Fog Zone, a nationally representative survey commissioned by The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy and conducted by the Guttmacher Institute.
Young adults care about avoiding pregnancy. The overwhelming majority say they really don’t want to get pregnant right now. But, they don’t put this into practice very well. If we look at those in a current sexual relationship who are not pregnant or trying to get pregnant, nearly one fifth use no contraception at all!
With Bedsider, we’ve tried to address the real issues and hurdles that women face, and give them tools they can actually use to stick with their plans to not get pregnant before they’re ready. Part of it is education, for sure. But it’s education in a voice that makes sense and comes from the point of view of the women to whom we’re speaking.
Bedsider re-brands birth control. And through this re-branding we hope to make birth control a normal part of healthy lives and, ultimately, healthy families.
-Lawrence Swiader
Lawrence Swiader is an observer and pundit of digital media and how it educates and influences us all. He is on Team Bedsider and the Senior Director of Digital Media at The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy.
