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You're the Only One I've Told : The Stories Behind Abortion
You're the Only One I've Told : The Stories Behind Abortion
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Author(s): Shah, Meera
ISBN No.: 9780897336550
Pages: 304
Year: 202601
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 27.99
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Author available for events in New York, Texas and select locations across the US Outreach to women''s right to choose groups and Planned Parenthood Online buzz in conjunction with anniversaries of Roe v. Wade and Dobbs decisions Previous Publicity Coverage You''re the Only One I''ve Told was mentioned in an essay for Dua Lipa''s Service95 newsletter on July 7, 2022. Dua Lipa shared the news on her Twitter to her 9.8 million followers. Glamour Magazine UK included You''re the Only One I''ve Told in a roundup of books, podcasts, films, and TV shows on reproductive rights on July 7, 2022. The author interviewed with CNN Health (site reach:149,361,977) on July 6, 2022 about contraception demand being on the rise. The article has also been syndicated on: KOMU St. Louis Post-Dispatch CBS Baltimore KTVZ KVIA The author was interviewed with The Daily Beast (article reach: 5,274,784)on July 3, 2022.


The author was interviewed with Input (article reach: 500,683) on June 28, 2022. Rewire News Group (article reach: 46,114) listed You''re the Only One I''ve Told as a resource on June 16, 2022. Next Question with Katie Couric listed You''re the Only One I''ve Told as a resource for an episode on June 9, 2022. The author was interviewed on the podcast Tuckered Out with Ami Thakkar on May 5, 2022 Teen Vogue (excerpt), October 12, 2020 The Kinswomen (podcast interview), TBD Immigrantly Podcast (interview), September 22, 2020 Girl Talk HQ (mention), September 18, 2020 Buzzfeed (event mention), September 9, 2020 Elle Magazine (interview and feature) September 8, 2020 Newsweek (interview), September 3, 2020 ACCESS: A Podcast About Abortion (interview), September 3, 2020 Brown Girl Magazine (Instagram Live interview), TBD Diatribe Podcast (interview), TBD Shakti Collaborative (website feature and Instagram live interview), TBD Howl at the Womb (Instagram Live interview), September 2, 2020 Howl at the Womb (website feature), TBD after September 1, 2020 The Woke Desi Podcast (interview), August 23, 2020 Brown Girl Magazine (review), August 15, 2020 Girls Gotta Eat Podcast (interview), August 10, 2020 Booklist (review), August 1, 2020 Publishers Weekly (review) July 27, 2020 Kirkus Reviews (review) July 1, 2020 City Book Review (review) October 16, 2020 The Sex Ed with DB podcast, November 2020 New York Times Online (article reach: 119,146,648), June 10, 2021 NPR''s All Things Considered , (interview), June 27, 2021 The Washington Post Online (uvpm: 57,702,469), feature, December 2, 2021 Recovering from Reality podcast (interview), May 23, 2022 Complete Trade Reviews: Booklist (August 1, 2020) Once Shah, medical director of a New York State Planned Parenthood center, decided that it was important to be specific about her job-not just saying she was a doctor, but that she provided abortion services-she found that many women would share their story with her. Shah believes that sharing these stories is necessary in destigmatizing abortion, showing it is not only one of the safest medical procedures, but also extremely common. After an introduction covering the ways abortion rights have been politicized, limited, and attacked, Shah shares the stories of 17 people. While individuals'' racial, gender, age, and socioeconomic diversity make each story different, their stories'' similarities highlight the difficulties of receiving abortion services. Many must travel, endure needless waiting periods, face the judgment of protesters as well as health professionals, and figure out how to pay for a procedure often not covered by insurance.


Shah places each person''s experiences into a larger discussion about attacks on abortion services, and the disinformation that comes with them. An important addition to the field of reproductive justice. Publishers Weekly (July 27, 2020) In this nuanced and compassionate debut, Shah, the chief medical officer of Planned Parenthood Hudson Peconic in New York State, analyzes the social, financial, and legal barriers to abortion through the stories of people who have dealt with those hurdles. Shah highlights the experiences of women of color, and incorporates the perspectives of a trans person seeking an abortion and the male partner of a woman who chose to end her pregnancy. Each chapter documents one individual''s backstory and evolving feelings before taking up such issues as the growing prevalence of "fake health centers" that attempt to "coerce" women into continuing their pregnancy, the use of "junk science" (e.g., unproven links between abortions and breast cancer) by antiabortion policymakers and activists, and the criminalization of self-managed abortions. Shah is a fierce yet empathetic advocate for her own patients and those who have confided in her, and provides a wealth of resources for getting involved in reproductive health activism.


Readers who have felt isolated or stigmatized in talking about their own abortions will find stories that resonate, while others will have their concept of who seeks an abortion broadened. This is a moving and deeply informed argument for abortion as a human right. Kirkus Reviews (July 1, 2020), starred Women''s candid stories bear witness to the state of reproductive health care. Family medicine physician and chief medical officer of Planned Parenthood, Hudson Peconic, Shah has long served as a reproductive health advocate. As in recent books such as Diana Greene Foster''s The Turnaway Study and Annie Finch''s Choice Words, Shah''s profiles of 17 women-of diverse racial, ethnic, and gender identity-testify to the complexities of choosing to abort a pregnancy. The author contextualizes each woman''s story with information about reproductive rights and access in different states, treatment in various facilities, and the challenges a woman faces within different cultures. "Being a woman of color, specifically Indian American, and a daughter of immigrants," writes Shah, "has given me some insight to the intersections and complexities that come with being pregnant." Her subjects include an unmarried woman in Austin, Texas, forced to undergo a mandatory 24-hour waiting period before an abortion could be performed; a teenage daughter of West Indian parents who sought an abortion in the 1990s; a biracial 15-year-old granted judicial consent so she could proceed with an abortion; several women who chose abortion when faced with evidence of the fetus''s severe abnormalities; and a genderqueer individual whose experience made Shah aware that "gender diversity among patients should be matched with gender diversity among health care providers.


" For some women, abortion was proscribed by their religious background or family beliefs; others were unable to be helped at Catholic hospitals, which provided other medical services. Some women were forced to go out of their home state, incurring huge expenses besides the cost of the procedure. "Abortion is health care," Shah writes. "But there is no other form of health care that requires patients to face as many obstacles." These moving stories, taken together, sharply reveal the connections among "reproductive justice, gender justice, racial justice, and economic justice." A strong contribution to discussions of reproductive rights.


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