How a network of women in Latin America transformed safe, self-managed abortions
How a network of women in Latin America transformed safe, self-managed abortions

How a network of women in Latin America transformed safe, self-managed abortions

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How a network of women in Latin America transformed safe, self-managed abortions

In the 1990s, Latin American abortion-rights activists learned about misoprostol. The drug was designed to treat stomach ulcers, but women in Brazil were using it for safe, at-home abortions. Activists connected the dots: If women could get their hands on it, they could end their pregnancies. With this new pill, they wouldn’t have to wait for the law to change, activists said. The World Health Organization approved the pill as a safe abortion method in the first trimester of a pregnancy in 2003. The WHO’s stamp of approval didn’t change the fact that abortion was illegal in many parts of the world. But it was a step in the right direction for women in Latin America to have an abortion in a formal health care setting, activists say. The pill is still illegal in some countries, but it’s becoming more and more available to women in the U.S. and elsewhere in the world, they say. It’s also becoming more widely available outside of Latin America.

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How a network of women in Latin America transformed safe, self-managed abortions

Violeta Encarnación for NPR

In November 1990, more than 3,000 women descended on the sleepy beach town of San Bernardo del Tuyú, Argentina, for what was becoming a legendary event.

Activists, doctors, academics, social workers and lawyers from across the Americas traveled all the way to attend a feminist gathering known as an Encuentro.

While they publicly debated their political demands, the piece of information that made the biggest impact on the future of abortion was exchanged in private, in whispers.

Alicia Cacopardo, an OB-GYN from Buenos Aires, was part of those whispers. In between sessions, she fell into conversation with a group of Brazilian women in the hallway, who talked about a pill she had never heard of before: Cytotec, the commercial name of misoprostol. The drug was designed to treat stomach ulcers, but women in Brazil were using it for safe, at-home abortions.

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Though Cacopardo was an expert in reproductive health, she was stunned — you can have an abortion on your own, just by taking a pill?

“It’s a huge change. It’s brilliant,” she remembers thinking at the time.

In the years to come, other abortion-rights activists across the region were thrilled when they learned about misoprostol, and, like Cacopardo did, wanted to spread the word to other women.

Activists connected the dots: If women could get their hands on misoprostol, they could end their pregnancies despite the severe legal restrictions on abortion most Latin American countries had. With this new pill, they wouldn’t have to wait for the law to change.

Word spreads

toggle caption Claudia Ferreira/Getty Images

When Cacopardo returned to Buenos Aires after the Encuentro, she wanted to get her patients Cytotec. If she succeeded, women could end their pregnancies despite legal restrictions on abortion. At the time, Argentina only allowed abortion in cases of rape or when the mother’s life was at risk.

But Cacopardo ran into a problem: Cytotec wasn’t available in Argentina.

She flipped through a pharmaceutical directory and looked for any drugs that contained misoprostol, the generic name of Cytotec. She only found one medication in Argentina: Oxaprost. But Oxaprost included a second substance, called diclofenac, an anti-inflammatory drug typically used to treat arthritis and other problems.

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So Cacopardo came up with a solution — one that required her patients to do a makeshift science project at home. Cacopardo told them to buy Oxaprost at the pharmacy and then crush the pills to separate the outer layer of misoprostol from diclofenac, which was contained in an inner layer. Cacopardo wanted her patients to avoid any potential side effects from taking too much diclofenac, such as heartburn and other stomach issues.

toggle caption Marta Martínez

It was difficult to crush the pills, so some women just took the whole thing — an indication of just how DIY it was at first to self-manage an abortion with pills. Cacopardo says that none of her patients reported any serious side effects and most of them had complete abortions.

A scientific stamp of approval

Kelly Blanchard, the president of the research and advocacy organization Ibis Reproductive Health, says that experiments with misoprostol in the 1990s represented activists doing “research in real time.”

“In the clinic setting, those innovations often come from health care providers,” she explains. “The activists are doing exactly the same thing: thinking about and working with people who need the care and seeing what works and what doesn’t.”

Researchers like Blanchard eventually ran studies on women using misoprostol to end pregnancies, gathering evidence from all around the world — from Peru to India to South Africa. Again and again, the researchers found the same thing: Misoprostol was a safe and effective way to have an abortion outside the formal health care setting.

The studies conducted by these researchers also persuaded major public health institutions like the World Health Organization (WHO). As early as 2003, the WHO included misoprostol as a safe abortion method in the first trimester (in combination with another pill called mifepristone).

The WHO’s stamp of approval didn’t change the fact that abortion was illegal in many parts of the world. So activists had a problem: They knew of an effective method to have abortions outside of the medical system, but how could they get more women access to something that was illegal?

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Hotlines in Ecuador and Argentina

The statue of a virgin, la Virgen del Panecillo, looms over the city of Quito, the capital of Ecuador. She has wings, like an angel.

One day in 2008, Ecuadorian activists and a group of European activists from the abortion access organization Women on Waves hung a big white banner on the balcony of the virgin statue.

The banner read “SAFE ABORTION” in Spanish, with a phone number. That number was for the first abortion hotline in Latin America.

Later that day, that cellphone number blew up with dozens of text messages and calls.

The idea for a hotline — and the stunt promoting it — threw these abortion activists into a new, more public era. They reached thousands of women this way with work that was bold, organized and replicable.

Timeline of events

1986: Women in Brazil discover they can use Cytotec, a stomach ulcer medication, to have safe abortions without the help of medical professionals.

1990: At a feminist gathering in Argentina, known as an Encuentro, word spreads about Cytotec (and the generic version misoprostol) among more than 3,000 feminist activists across Latin America.

2000: Las Libres in Mexico starts supporting women throughout their abortion process with a new model of care called acompañamiento (accompaniment), helping women use misoprostol to have safe abortions despite the legal restrictions.

2008: The first abortion hotline in Latin America launches in Ecuador, establishing a large-scale and public method of spreading information about self-managed medication abortion.

2009: Argentinian activists with Lesbianas y Feministas por la Descriminalización del Aborto launch an abortion hotline and begin systematizing information about how to have an abortion with misoprostol, making it more accessible to women.

2010: Lesbianas y Feministas publish a step-by-step manual on how to have an abortion with pills.

2015: Accompaniment groups reach every state in México.

2018: The Argentine Congress first debates legalizing abortion.

2021: Argentina legalizes abortion up to the 14th week of pregnancy.

2021: The Mexican Supreme Court rules that criminalizing abortion is unconstitutional.

2022: Colombia legalizes abortion up to the 24th week of pregnancy.

2024: 50,000 women attend an Encuentro in San Salvador de Jujuy.

In 2009, a year after the Ecuador hotline launched, Argentina got its own.

The collective Lesbianas y Feministas por la Descriminalización del Aborto (Lesbians and Feminists for Abortion Decriminalization) started the hotline with a dozen volunteers.

“In the beginning, the hotline was so bare bones,” says Ana Mines, one of the first hotline volunteers. The group boasted a backpack they passed around to one another, with a Nokia 1100, a notebook and flash cards.

They were short on resources, but they were determined to give rigorous information on how to use misoprostol to have safe abortions. And they advertised the helpline everywhere they could, putting up posters all over Buenos Aires with their phone number and talking about it on TV and the radio.

The helpline volunteers referred to the guidelines developed by global and regional scientific bodies, such as the WHO. This research gave the activists credibility. They thought it also gave them a legal defense: They were just sharing publicly available information.

The volunteers delivered this disclaimer to callers — that they were not doctors but were providing public information — before offering step-by-step instructions on how to use misoprostol. They answered the callers’ questions, such as: If I’m overweight, will the pills work? Can the pills fall out of my vagina? Will hospital staff be able to tell that I took misoprostol?

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In Argentina, no one had ever done what this collective was doing — speaking so openly about abortions and how to have one on your own. Mines says most of the volunteers like her were scared of getting arrested. And the Argentine government had a record of going after abortion cases. Between 1990 and 2008, nearly 450 abortion cases were prosecuted in Argentina.

Not all feminists were happy about what the collective was doing. Mariana Romero, a prominent reproductive health researcher and advocate for abortion rights in Argentina, worried that the helpline could inadvertently reduce access to misoprostol.

“I said, do we have to do this so public? You’re nuts,” Romero recalls. “You are going to make the pharmaceutical company that produced misoprostol take it out of the market.” Despite the publicity around the hotline, in the end, no volunteers were arrested. And misoprostol remained available.

Barbie gets abortions

In 2010, a year after the hotline started, Lesbianas y Feministas got more provocative with the way they talked about abortion. They published a manual on how to self-manage an abortion with misoprostol and without a doctor.

It did not look like a conventional medical text. The cover was pink with two big rainbows and illustrations of pills with smiley faces. On the back, there was a picture of Barbie in a pink convertible, with sunglasses and a glamorous scarf over her head, along with the words “Barbie, how’d it go?”

“It was awesome,” Barbie replies. The implication was that any woman can have an abortion — even Barbie.

toggle caption Lesbianas y Feministas

The manual was thorough — more than 100 pages long — and it went into vivid detail, including drawings of how to insert the pills into the vagina.

“It was a bestseller,” says Mines, the hotline volunteer. “It had two printings of 10,000 copies each.”

Other helplines and feminist groups in Latin America started using the manual to help more women. Mines herself was able to help thousands of women through the helpline.

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But some abortion activists believed sharing information on the phone and through written manuals wasn’t enough.

Mexico: The birth of “accompaniment”

In 2010, the activist Veronica Cruz met volunteers from the Argentine helpline at a conference about safe abortions. Cruz is the founder of a feminist collective called Las Libres (The Free) in Mexico. She recalls a lot of hype around abortion helplines at the gathering, but she was skeptical.

“How do you know for sure that those women are not at risk?” she asked the volunteers. “You gave them information and then what? Did she get the pills? Did she follow the instructions correctly? Did she end up in the hospital? You actually don’t know anything.”

Cruz, on the other hand, did know how the women she helped in Mexico fared because she used a different method: “acompañamiento.”

In Spanish, acompañamiento means being with someone, supporting them, or just keeping them company. When helping a woman seeking an abortion, acompañamiento has come to mean being there for someone throughout the whole process of an abortion, from beginning to end, regardless of the legal risks.

Cruz started doing acompañamiento in 2000 — the same year she founded Las Libres, and nearly a decade before any of the helplines started in Latin America. At the time, abortion in Mexico was essentially banned. In the state where Cruz lives, the only exception was for women who were raped. But even in those cases, hospitals often denied women their right to the procedure.

In the beginning, Cruz focused her work on these women. Through Las Libres, she worked with a gynecologist to help women who had been raped get safe, legal abortions. One day, she saw the doctor use a new method: misoprostol, the ulcer medication that women in Brazil first started using for abortions in the late 1980s.

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As she watched the doctor administer the pills, Cruz had a realization.

“I can just buy the pills, tell the woman how to use them? That was an incredible discovery for me.”

toggle caption Edgard Garrido/Reuters

Not long after, another woman came to Las Libres who wanted an abortion but wasn’t a rape survivor — which meant that she didn’t qualify for a legal abortion. Where they lived, ending a pregnancy that wasn’t a result of rape, through any method, carried a prison sentence for the woman and anyone who helped her.

Cruz decided to accompany the woman, despite the risks. She told the woman to buy the pills at the pharmacy. In Mexico, even though misoprostol technically required a prescription, you could often get it over the counter. Then Cruz gave the woman the same instructions she had seen the OB-GYN give.

Even though Cruz had seen how the pills work and how simple it was to use them, she says it was nerve-wracking to support someone through an abortion without a doctor. Cruz was on standby the whole time. It was late at night when the woman took the pills.

“So I slept with my cellphone on my chest,” Cruz recalls. “All the time … in case it rang or something.”

The next day, the woman went to a doctor, who confirmed that the pregnancy had ended and that there hadn’t been any complications. It was Cruz’s first time doing accompaniment. And in her eyes, it had gone smoothly.

After that, when someone contacted Las Libres for an abortion and they were not rape survivors, Las Libres didn’t go to the gynecologist for help. They handled it themselves.

“We promised ourselves that we were never going to leave anyone without access,” Cruz says. “Whatever we had to do.”

If a woman couldn’t afford to buy misoprostol, which was expensive in Mexico, Las Libres would give her the pills free.

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Sometimes women had leftover pills and offered to give them to Las Libres. Cruz told them to pay it forward.

“The next woman who comes, you are going to give her the pills as a gift and you’re going to tell her about your experience,” Cruz said.

Cruz would set up a meeting between the two women, in a park or at a mall. The woman who’d had an abortion would share her extra pills and her story. By connecting women directly — one by one — Las Libres was recruiting volunteers and building a network.

Las Libres helped create accompaniment networks that, today, reach every state in Mexico.

But over the years, some activists criticized Cruz’s approach. At that conference in 2010, Cruz recalls activists telling her that “what we were doing — of personally accompanying the women and giving them the pills — was risky for us. For us and for the whole movement.”

These activists, who were fighting to legalize abortion, didn’t want the movement for abortion rights to be associated with people who were breaking the law.

Many abortion-rights activists across Latin America found themselves on opposite sides: Some were fighting to legalize abortion — those women were playing the long game. Others, like Cruz, were actively breaking the law, because women who needed abortions immediately couldn’t wait until the law changed.

One group realized that they didn’t have to choose between the two sides.

Argentina: From an art to a science

toggle caption Marta Martínez

Nearly 35 years after that Encuentro in San Bernardo, in the fall of 2024, another Encuentro kicked off in Argentina. This time, the annual gathering brought 50,000 women to a small city called San Salvador de Jujuy, right by the Andes Mountains.

They flowed through the downtown streets in a big demonstration, like a river of women.

In Jujuy, Ruth Zurbriggen was hard to miss. She was usually the person with the megaphone and seemingly endless energy.

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Zurbriggen is one of the founders of an Argentine accompaniment network: Socorristas en Red (First Responders Network). It’s now the biggest abortion accompaniment network in the world. And to make that happen, she and the Socorristas decided to build systems, turning acompañamiento into a science.

toggle caption Marta Martínez

Whereas Cruz, the founder of Las Libres, thought that women could figure out accompaniment on their own, the Socorristas built a whole accompaniment method and even have a school to train volunteers — La Escuela Socorrista (the Socorrista school).

In school, trainees learn the Socorristas’ method, which includes holding an in-person workshop for women who are interested in having an abortion and administering a survey. That survey is exhaustive. It asks straightforward questions, such as the person’s age and how far along they are in their pregnancy. Other questions are more personal, such as why the woman wanted to have an abortion, whether her partner supported her choice and whether she expelled the embryo. They tracked the answers in spreadsheets, carefully documenting trends in women’s experiences self-managing abortions with misoprostol.

One question on the survey inadvertently helped the Socorristas strengthen their relationships with doctors. They asked: How did you find out about us?

“Thirty percent had come to us recommended by health care professionals,” Zurbriggen recalls. “And that’s when we said, ‘What’s happening? Who are they?'”

Zurbriggen was surprised by that high number. Most doctors in Argentina did not support abortion at that time. The Socorristas wanted to understand why medical staff were referring patients to them, so they started scheduling appointments with these health care providers, as if they were personal appointments. That allowed the activists to talk to the clinicians in private.

“We started creating a bond with professional medical staff. And then we started asking them ‘what’s the problem if you write two prescriptions a month for us? Nothing, right?’ And they’d write us two or three prescriptions for us with different dates. And we’d get male names from friends or sons, and the prescriptions would be under male names,” Zurbriggen says. She describes the process as “very DIY.” It was also illegal — and the Socorristas don’t do it anymore.

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Doctors and nurses were often willing to help even though they risked losing their license by doing so. One OB-GYN named Gabriela Luchetti, who worked in the public health system for 30 years, says she felt “relief” sending people who needed an abortion to the Socorristas.

Luchetti said, “Someone was going to do what we didn’t dare to because we had a license, and we were afraid of the law.”

The fight to legalize

Many feminists who had focused their fight on getting a law to protect abortion weren’t comfortable with Zurbriggen and the Socorristas’ work. Just as activists criticized Cruz’s accompaniment work in Mexico, they believed Socorristas would damage their country’s movement for abortion rights because it would be associated with criminal activity.

But the Socorristas’ accompaniment work always went hand-in-hand with the fight to legalize abortion. In 2018, when the Argentine Congress first debated passing an abortion law, Zurbriggen and other Socorristas were there, speaking to representatives, along with other abortion-rights groups.

They shared data they had been rigorously tracking for six years. In that time, they’d accompanied nearly 20,000 abortions. Their data challenged stereotypes Argentinians had about abortion. They showed that the women who are most likely to have abortions are already mothers, and that many of them are religious.

Some of the other feminists who testified in front of Congress, like the researcher Mariana Romero, had been critical of the Socorristas. But she, and other skeptics, came around. “They were radical, but, if they weren’t, I don’t know if things would have happened the way they happened,” Romero says.

In December 2020 the senate voted to legalize abortion in Argentina and in January 2021 it was officially signed into law. Now any woman can go to a hospital or a community clinic and ask for an abortion up to 14 weeks, no explanation needed.

toggle caption Marcelo Endelli/Getty Images

The campaign in Argentina inspired feminists all over Latin America. Argentinians made the green bandana the symbol for their movement and the fight to legalize abortion across the region became known as the Green Wave. Within a couple of years, Colombia and Mexico also decriminalized abortion.

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One might think that once abortion was legalized in Argentina, the work of Socorristas wouldn’t be necessary anymore. Women could go straight to doctors for the procedure. And yet, Socorristas are just as busy as they were before abortion was legalized.

The year after abortion became legal in Argentina, more than 13,000 reached out to the Socorristas. Of those, more than three-quarters chose to have a self-managed abortion with the collective’s support. In other words, the vast majority of these women preferred to self-manage their abortions with acompañamiento over going to a doctor.

Some OB-GYNs like Luchetti, who signed prescriptions for the Socorristas every once in a while, understand why so many women are making this choice. She says, “The Socorristas method is far superior to medical care and is different and better. It’s warm, friendly, committed.”

Another doctor, Nadya Scherbovsky, mentioned that Socorristas make themselves available 24/7, while the public health system has strict schedules.

People who need an abortion aren’t the only ones who are reaching out to Socorristas. Zurbriggen says she sometimes gets calls from OB-GYNs who ask her about how to use abortion pills, because she has more experience with medication abortion than many doctors in Argentina.

The Socorristas have become international experts on self-managed abortion with pills. A 2022 study published in The Lancet Global Health looked at their accompaniment method for pregnancies under 9 weeks, and it found that it was just as effective and safe as a medication abortion managed in a clinic.

“Misoprostol is a technological revolution that when you put it in the hands of women and those who need an abortion, it generates another revolution,” Zurbriggen says. “It’s a cultural, social, political, medical revolution.”

Reporter Victoria Estrada and editor Rhaina Cohen contributed to this article. This reporting was supported by the International Women’s Media

Foundation’s Reproductive Health, Rights, and Justice in the Americas Initiative.

Source: Npr.org | View original article

Boulder Jewish Festival moves forward with heightened security after attack

Boulder Jewish Festival will focus on community healing after attack. Run for Their Lives will be “front and center” at the festival, organizer says. Police chief: “I want them to see that we have a lot of people there” Man who yelled “Free Palestine” threw Molotov cocktails at Run for their Lives demonstrators, police say.. The group is raising awareness of the 55 people believed to still be in captivity in Gaza. The violence unfolded against the backdrop of the Israel-Hamas war, which continues to inflame global tensions and has contributed to a spike in antisemitism in the U.S. The attack came at the start of the holiday of Shavuot, which commemorates God giving the Torah to the Jewish people at Mount Sinai in Egypt.. A federal judge on Wednesday granted a request to block the deportation of Mohamed Sabry Soliman’s wife and children.

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BOULDER, Colo. — The group that was attacked last weekend in Boulder, Colorado, while calling for Hamas to release Israeli hostages will be a central focus of the Boulder Jewish Festival, which kicks off Sunday morning in the same location where the firebombing took place.

Organizers of the festival, which is in its 30th year, said they have reimagined the cultural celebration to focus on community healing after a man who yelled “Free Palestine” threw Molotov cocktails at Run for Their Lives demonstrators, according to law enforcement officials.

Authorities have said 15 people and a dog were victims of the attack. Not all were physically injured, and some are considered victims for the legal case because they were in the area and could potentially have been hurt.

Run for Their Lives, a global grassroots initiative with 230 chapters, started in October 2023 after Hamas militants from the Gaza Strip stormed into Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking 250 others hostage.

Sunday’s festival at the downtown Pearl Street pedestrian mall will center the group’s cause — raising awareness of the 55 people believed to still be in captivity in Gaza. The Boulder chapter walks at the mall every weekend for 18 minutes, the numerical value of the Hebrew word “chai,” which means “life.”

“It is going to look very different this year. Run for Their Lives is going to be featured front and center,” said Miri Kornfeld, a Run for Their Lives organizer in Denver. “The community is looking for a way to come together after an act of violence. People just want to be together, and they want to celebrate who they are.”

A group representing families of the Israeli hostages plans to send at least one family to join the Boulder chapter Sunday as it resumes its weekly walks during the festival, Kornfeld said. Art, food and music are also planned.

In response to the attack, the Boulder Police Department and the FBI are coordinating to provide increased security at the festival, local synagogues and the Boulder Jewish Community Center. Festival attendees can expect drones, SWAT elements and plainclothes officers in the crowd to increase safety and make people feel at ease, police Chief Stephen Redfearn said.

“Any would-be attacker, anybody that might come there to cause harm, I want them to see that we have a lot of people there, and hopefully that dissuades anyone from doing anything nefarious,” Redfearn said Thursday.

The victims of the attack include eight women and seven men, ranging in age from 25 to 88. One is a Holocaust survivor.

Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, was charged Thursday in state court with 118 counts, including attempted murder, assault, illegal use of explosives and animal cruelty. He has also been charged with a hate crime in federal court and is jailed on a $10 million cash bond.

Soliman, an Egyptian national who federal authorities say was living in the U.S. illegally, told police he was driven by a desire “to kill all Zionist people,” a reference to the movement to establish and sustain a Jewish state in Israel. Authorities said he expressed no remorse about the attack.

U.S. immigration officials took Soliman’s wife and five children, who also are Egyptian, into custody Tuesday. They have not been charged in the attack.

A federal judge on Wednesday granted a request to block the deportation of Soliman’s wife and children.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, who is Jewish, has deemed the attack antisemitic, meaning it targeted Jewish people because of their identity or beliefs.

Organizers have not confirmed whether all the demonstrators last Sunday were Jewish. The group is open to Jewish and non-Jewish participants.

The violence in downtown Boulder unfolded against the backdrop of the Israel-Hamas war, which continues to inflame global tensions and has contributed to a spike in antisemitism in the U.S. It also came at the start of the holiday of Shavuot, which commemorates God giving the Torah to the Jewish people at Mount Sinai in Egypt.

“In the wake of the most violent antisemitic terrorist attack in Colorado history, we are reminded of the profound power of standing shoulder to shoulder,” Mindy Miller of Stop Antisemitism Colorado said at a community vigil Wednesday night. “Let today be the beginning of a new chapter in Colorado — one where Jews no longer have to stand alone.”

Copyright 2025 NPR

Source: Knpr.org | View original article

Salmonella outbreak linked to California egg distributor sickens 79 people

A salmonella outbreak linked to a California egg producer has sickened at least 79 people. Of the infected people, 21 hospitalizations were reported, U.S. health officials said. Organic and cage-free brown eggs from August Egg Company with specific sell-by dates should be thrown away. The recalled eggs were sold under several brand names, including Clover, First Street, Nulaid, O Organics, Marketside, Raleys, Simple Truth, Sun Harvest and Sunnyside. They were sold in California and Nevada at grocery stores and retail locations.

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As of Friday, a salmonella outbreak linked to a California egg producer had sickened at least 79 people. Of the infected people, 21 hospitalizations were reported, U.S. health officials said.

Organic and cage-free brown eggs from August Egg Company with specific sell-by dates distributed across nine states and retail locations should be thrown away or returned to where they were purchased, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

The CDC report acknowledged that the number of sick people in the outbreak was likely much higher than the number reported, because most people with salmonella recover without seeking medical care or getting tested for the bacterial infection.

August Egg Company voluntarily recalled 1.7 million dozen eggs that may be contaminated with salmonella, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration . In a company announcement shared by the federal agency, the egg supplier said that as soon as it found possible Salmonella contamination, it began diverting all eggs from its processing plant to an egg-breaking facility, which pasteurizes the eggs to remove bacteria.

The recalled eggs were sold under several brand names, including Clover, First Street, Nulaid, O Organics, Marketside, Raleys, Simple Truth, Sun Harvest and Sunnyside.

The recalled eggs were sold in California and Nevada with sell-by dates from March 4, 2025, to June 4, 2025, at grocery stores and retail locations including Save Mart, FoodMaxx, Lucky, Smart & Final, Safeway, Raley’s, Food 4 Less and Ralphs.

They were also distributed to Walmart locations in Nevada and California and seven other states — Washington, Arizona, Wyoming, New Mexico, Nebraska, Indiana and Illinois —with different sell-by dates ranging from March 4, 2025, to June 19, 2025.

In the CDC report from Friday , officials confirmed they had identified two illness “sub-clusters,” groups of people who became sick after eating at the same location or event, such as a restaurant. According to the report, eggs were served at both locations.

Last month, San Diego health officials reported recording 37 probable and confirmed cases of people sick with Salmonella after dining at a restaurant in the San Diego area. In a statement released on May 8, city officials said, “The source of the Salmonella outbreak has not been identified and the investigation is ongoing.”

Symptoms of salmonella include diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps. Most people recover from the bacterial disease within a week, but it can be fatal in children, older adults and people with weakened immune systems.

To determine whether you have recalled eggs in your home, the FDA reported that the contaminated eggs have the plant code number P-6562 or CA5330 printed on their packaging.

Copyright 2025 NPR

Source: Knpr.org | View original article

Sea turtle Dilly Dally released into the ocean with three flippers after undergoing amputation

Dilly Dally, an adolescent loggerhead, first arrived at the LMC back in January after being attacked by a predator. Three weeks after her arrival, she went under the knife to remove the damaged appendage. She joins fellow rehabilitated loggerheads, Falafel — a fellow amputee — and Scout, in their return to the wild. The World Wildlife Fund reports that of the seven species of sea turtles across the world, three are endangered — including two that are listed as critically endangered. “We are so happy to see Dilly back in the ocean safe and sound!” a LMC post says.

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Dilly Dally, a loggerhead turtle who survived a run-in with a predator that ultimately cost her a front flipper, has been released from a Florida animal hospital back into the Atlantic Ocean.

“No dallying here! Dilly Dally is back home,” the Loggerhead Marinelife Center (LMC), a sea turtle conservation institute, wrote in a Wednesday post on Facebook. “We are so happy to see Dilly back in the ocean safe and sound!”

The post included a video of Dilly Dally swimming in a pool, sans her right front flipper, shortly before veterinary staff transported her to the ocean’s shore. Waiting for her at the beach, dozens of supporters watched as the nearly 160-pound reptile was gently placed on the sand, where she slowly pushed herself back into the Atlantic waters.

Dilly Dally, an adolescent loggerhead, first arrived at the LMC back in January after being attacked by a predator. Three weeks after her arrival, Dilly Dally went under the knife to remove the damaged appendage.

Despite a few wound complications during her five-month stay at the animal hospital, Dilly Dally now joins fellow rehabilitated loggerheads, Falafel — a fellow amputee — and Scout, in their return to the wild.

Dilly Dally, like other turtles treated and re-released by the LMC, will be tracked via satellite attached to her shell to chart her movements and monitor her re-acclimation to living in the wild.

Organizations like the LMC prioritize helping heal and protect sea turtles like loggerheads, amid ongoing threats to the endangered creatures’ dwindling population — estimated at only about 6.5 million left in the wild.

Worldwide, the animals and their eggs face the threat of poaching, accidental catching by fishermen and habitat degradation as a result of climate change, pollution and other factors. The World Wildlife Fund reports that of the seven species of sea turtles across the world, three are endangered — including two that are listed as critically endangered.

A 2023 study published in the Zoological Society of London’s journal Animal Conservation that sought to track reproduction among female loggerhead amputees wrote that “limb amputation is a well-known phenomenon in sea turtles,” and the creatures are able to recover well and relearn to swim after rehabilitation.

The paper concluded that among sea turtles who had suffered amputations, adult females were able to swim ashore in order to nest, but the damaged appendages put them at greater risk from terrestrial threats during the process.

In addition to removal as a medical necessity, accidental amputations can occur among turtles in the wild, often as a result of collisions with boats or the reptiles getting caught in fishing gear.

Fans who want to watch Dilly Dally’s movements, or those of other sea turtles the LMC currently tracks, can virtually follow her journey here.

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Source: Knpr.org | View original article

New Podcast Series “The Network” Highlights Latina-Led Movement for Abortion Access

The Network is a new limited-run podcast series from NPR and Futuro Media. The series explores the underground movement for self-managed abortions in Latin America. It also examines the shifting landscape in the U.S. after the fall of Roe v. Wade. With clinic access becoming more limited, American women are turning to the same strategies Latin American women pioneered under even stricter conditions. The Network premieres June 5 at 10 p.m. ET on NPR’s Embedded and Futur Media’S Latino USA podcast platforms, including iTunes, Stitcher, and Google Play. For more information on The Network, visit The Network website.

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For decades, women across Latin America have quietly shared a revolutionary method for safe, self-managed abortions, often outside traditional clinics and beyond the reach of restrictive laws. Now, their stories are being told in The Network, a new limited-run podcast series from NPR’s Embedded and Futuro Media’s Latino USA, premiering June 5.

Hosted by Victoria Estrada and Marta Martínez, both award-winning Latina journalists, The Network unpacks the history of this underground movement that began in 1980s Brazil, where abortion is still largely illegal. The series explores how women discovered that a common over-the-counter medication could be used to end pregnancies safely, and how this knowledge traveled across borders to empower women from Argentina to Mexico, and more recently, the United States.

“This isn’t the abortion story most people expect,” said Embedded showrunner Katie Simon. “It’s the story of how women around the world have taken control of their own reproductive health for decades, often without clinic support—and how those strategies are now deeply relevant in the U.S. post-Roe.”

Estrada and Martínez trace this network through deeply personal stories, talking with the Brazilian women who first experimented with the method, and the activists in Argentina and Mexico who turned it into a movement. These women built a support system, often through hotlines, WhatsApp groups, and word-of-mouth networks that crossed language, class, and national boundaries.

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“Self-managed abortion with pills is more than a personal choice—it’s become a political act,” said Peniley Ramírez, Co-CEO and Executive Director of Futuro Media. “Understanding this global movement, led by Latinas, helps us better grasp where the fight for reproductive rights in the U.S. is heading.”

The series also examines the shifting landscape in the U.S. after the fall of Roe v. Wade. With clinic access becoming more limited, American women are turning to the same strategies Latin American women pioneered under even stricter conditions. Estrada and Martínez emphasize the resilience and ingenuity of these women, and the urgent need to share their stories.

The podcast’s release comes at a time when abortion access is increasingly under attack in the U.S., particularly affecting Latinas and other women of color who already face barriers to healthcare. The Network brings these voices to the forefront, highlighting how Latinas have not only endured but innovated, transforming reproductive rights activism around the world.

You can listen to the trailer now, and stream all three episodes starting June 5 wherever you get your podcasts. Embedded+ subscribers can binge the entire series early.

Source: Hiplatina.com | View original article

Source: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMifkFVX3lxTE0wWFRqMnRobmFMemRPclhHcldwNk93RVhVX1lwUGluemdFaVQ2NkNwVXlkWDhMMUt3NmgzbkNUMUpfUk94Z3RMaGFSazF3ZUEySmFzaFhjYjZGR01NblNJSElyM0p4a0cydkVXM3llSjBENjB0aFpEUUxMNWd4Zw?oc=5

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