Guest guest Posted April 26, 2004 Report Share Posted April 26, 2004 If you had told me six months ago I'd be attuned enough to care about a play about hysterectomy, I would've never believe it. And yet... This play comes to St. Louis this weekend, and probably near lots of you during its nationwide tour. Take a look. amanda ------ Forwarded Message Reply-To: info@...> Date: Sun, 25 Apr 2004 13:46:33 -0700 To: info@...> Subject: Protest and Play PRESS RELEASE!! For Immediate Release ST. LOUIS, APRIL 26, 2004 PROTEST AGAINST DOCTORS SURGICALLY REDEFINING “WOMAN” March Against Unwarranted, Unconsented, Unwanted Operations It is no secret that hysterectomy is one of the most performed major surgeries in the country and is also one of the least necessary and most damaging. It is also no secret that there is widespread hysterectomy-related abuse by gynecologists and that the hospitals, legislators and other authorities who could rein in the maltreatment of women have failed to do so. HERS initiated a year long protest on March 27, 2004 in Birmingham, Alabama which will be taken up by demonstrators in 51 cities throughout the United States, taking place every day for a week in each city. The protest will culminate in Washington DC the week of March 12, 2005 in conjunction with a production of un becoming, Rick Schweikert’s play about the complex issues surrounding hysterectomy. In St. Louis the protest will begin on May 1 and will end May 7, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., daily, at the -Jewish Hospital South at Washington University Medical Center, One -Jewish Hospital Plaza at Kings Highway Boulevard. On Saturday May 1 at 4 p.m. there will be a staged reading of the play. An estimated 76% of women who are hysterectomized are castrated at the same time. The removed uterus and ovaries, however, are commonly found to be perfectly normal. What is worse, some women have never consented to the removal of any of these organs. And according to the HERS Foundation Data Bank, 99.7% percent of women in an ongoing study were given little or no prior information about the acknowledged adverse effects of hysterectomy – information that is a legal requisite of consent. HERS president Nora W. Coffey makes the point that doctors often frighten women into consenting and give them false and misleading information. “When a doctor tells a woman who manifests no sign of disease or illness that she will be protected against cancer by castration, he is using a common scare tactic. And when a doctor tells an intact woman that after a hysterectomy she will still be ‘the same as before – only better’ that is false and misleading. Demonstrably so.” According to Coffey, the conspiracy of silence regarding these and other offenses that place women in harm’s way will be peeled away as abusive doctors and the hospital staffs and executives who shield them meet demonstrators on American streets everywhere who are protesting against this unacceptable treatment of women. Attached is the schedule for 51 cities in which demonstrators will protest against doctors performing unwarranted, unconsented, unwanted hysterectomy and the hospitals that enable them. The St. Louis Protest will begin May 1 and will end May 7, every day from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the -Jewish Hospital South at Washington University Medical Center, One -Jewish Hospital Plaza at Kings Highway Boulevard. On May 1 at 4 p.m. there will be a staged reading of un becoming, Rick Schweikert’s play about the complex issues surrounding hysterectomy. HERS Foundation president Nora W. Coffey, playwright Rick Schweikert, and other protesters will be available for interviews at the protest site on Saturday May 1, Sunday May 2, and Monday May 3 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. For more information please contact HERS at weekdays or weekends or Rick Schweikert at . Visit us at www.theprotestandtheplay.com ------ End of Forwarded Message Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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