Many families across the U.S. lack access to supplies essential to their baby's well-being, including clothing, food, and diapers.
The coronavirus pandemic has played a heavy role in this crisis, and as households seek help from nonprofit organizations, anti-abortion centers (AACs) may be misrepresenting the extent of their services.
In 2019, Heartbeat International, an AAC giant, claimed to have provided 1.85 million individuals with free baby supplies, including more than 2 million baby clothing outfits, more than 19,000 strollers, and more than 1.2 million packs of diapers. However, data from Equity Forward, an accountability organization that produces investigative research related to gender equity and sexual and reproductive health, found inconsistencies with those numbers.
"Instead of providing direct material support to people, they're using this money for overhead costs to pay for staff salaries, to engage with SEO marketing professionals, to expand their outreach to promote themselves, and all sorts of things that are not providing services to people in need," Equity Forward Director Ashley Underwood told Yahoo Finance. "They solely exist to deter people from getting abortion care."
According to Equity Forward's findings, Heartbeat International only provided one stroller for 1% of clients, one car seat for 1.6% of clients, and less than one pack of diapers per person.
Heartbeat International did not respond to Yahoo Finance's request for comment.
Heartbeat International is an interdenominational Christian organization that claims to serve approximately 2,850 pregnancy help centers, maternity homes, and nonprofit adoption agencies in over 65 countries, including 1,722 in the United States. This makes them the world’s largest affiliate network of pregnancy centers.
However, Underwood argued that the organization, in addition to other AACs, is doing more harm than good.
"Since June when the Dobbs decision was released, we've definitely seen an uptick in rhetoric from anti-abortion centers," Underwood said. "They are in the perfect position to help people, but they've existed decades before that decision, and we've seen that they don't use this money towards helping people. So much of the money, specifically the public tax dollars they receive, goes towards promoting their own endeavors; not serving the communities in which they exist."
Roughly one-third of U.S. families are unable to afford diapers necessary to keep their babies dry and clean, according to the National Diaper Network, which is part of an ongoing public health issue known as "diaper need." Oftentimes, diaper need can lead to a variety of issues for both baby and caregiver, affecting not only physical health but also mental and economic health.
"When caregivers don't have a sufficient amount of diapers to keep a baby clean, dry, and healthy, they often are forced to keep their babies in soiled diapers longer than they should or dump and dry used diapers so that they can be reused," Moms Helping Moms Founder and Co-Executive Director Bridget Cutler told Yahoo Finance. "As a result, infants and toddlers are at risk of skin infections, open sores, urinary tract infections, and other conditions that may require medical attention."
What's more, almost all childcare providers require parents to provide a daily supply of disposable diapers in order to drop their child off each day, Cutler explained. If parents do not provide diapers, they cannot go to work or school. Parents who struggle with diaper need "report missing an average of four days of work or school per month," according to National Diaper Network CEO Joanne Samuels Goldblum.
Additionally, households that are experiencing diaper need reported higher levels of stress.
"Research has shown that mothers who are unable to provide a sufficient amount of diapers for their child are more likely to suffer from depression," Cutler said. "Being a parent is hard enough without having to constantly stress about meeting your child's basic needs."
Currently, government programs that provide assistance to families in need of diapers are severely limited.
Households are restricted from using WIC (the Special Supplemental Foods Program for Women, Infants and Children) or SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) — both federal programs used to provide nutritious foods to lower-income households — to purchase diapers.
TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) is a federal program with benefits that can be used for diaper purchases. However, Cutler said these funds are inadequate because only 23% of families living below the Federal Poverty Level receive cash assistance through TANF.
A separate report from Equity Forward found that at least 10 states diverted or currently divert TANF dollars away from families in need and into Alternatives to Abortion (A2A) programs. These programs are state-funded and created with the intent to reduce abortions and improve pregnancy outcomes.
Public records from Ohio’s AAC program obtained by Equity Forward revealed that a majority of TANF funds were used by grant recipients for marketing and overhead costs.
In fact, two Ohio programs — a diaper bank and an anti-abortion center — each received $50,000 in federal public dollars. The Columbus Diaper Bank allocated $30,000 toward supplies, while the anti-abortion center, Elizabeth New Life Center, spent just $2,650.
"It's very disturbing that a pool of funds like Temporary Assistance for Needy Families is not going directly towards needy families," Underwood said. "It's going towards funding these propaganda machines. That's the best way to describe these anti-abortion centers."
Underwood stressed that there needs to be a proper system that supports both parenting and individuals who are currently pregnant.
"Instead of funneling money into these programs that have been more propaganda than services, we really need to be taking a close look in how we can create an infrastructure that supports parenting and supports pregnant people, and supports people to be able to make the reproductive decisions that are best for them," she said. "We just don't have that."
—
Sandra is an editor for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter at @srsalathe
Click here for politics news related to business and money
Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance
Download the Yahoo Finance app for Apple or Android
Follow Yahoo Finance on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flipboard, LinkedIn, and YouTube
The quiet quitting movement may be overblown, suggests U.S. Labor Secretary.
Beer is withstanding the economic slowdown, at least over at Corona maker Constellation Brands.
First lady Jill Biden recently discussed helping her friend recover from an abortion in Pennsylvania in the late 1960s when the procedure was illegal and warned that “extremist Republicans” will push for more restrictions on abortion now that Roe v. Wade has been overturned.
If there needs to be a recession to cool inflation the Fed would be OK with that, one Wall Street pro explained.
Employer-sponsored retirement plans are one of the best ways for working Americans to build wealth. They offer tax advantages, allow your money to grow over time and many employers even match your contributions. But the job market is changing and … Continue reading → The post Can You Lose Your 401(k)? appeared first on SmartAsset Blog.
The U.S. Federal Reserve may still be able to lower inflation without a sharp rise in unemployment even as it continues raising interest rates, Chicago Fed president Charles Evans said Monday, a rebuttal to arguments the Fed is pushing the world and the U.S. towards a potentially sharp downturn. In remarks prepared for delivery to a National Association for Business Economics conference, Evans said he still sees the target federal funds rate rising to "a bit above 4.5% early next year and then remaining at this level for some time," an outlook in line with a Fed consensus some analysts feel is causing perilous stress in financial markets.
Many people are using Bible verses to justify their stance against vaccines. David McNew/AFP via Getty ImagesA devout evangelical Christian friend of mine recently texted to explain why he was not getting the COVID-19 vaccine. “Jesus went around healing lepers and touched them without fear of getting leprosy,” he said. This story that St. Luke tells in his gospel (17:11-19) is not the only Bible verse I have seen and heard evangelical Christians use to justify anti-vaccine convictions. Other pop
It probably won't be smooth sailing for stocks the rest of October. More on that and what else to watch in markets Monday, October 10, 2022.
(Bloomberg) — Everywhere you turn, the biggest players in the $23.7 trillion US Treasuries market are in retreat.From Japanese pensions and life insurers to foreign governments and US commercial banks, where once they were lining up to get their hands on US government debt, most have now stepped away. And then of course there’s the Federal Reserve, which a few weeks ago upped the pace that it plans to offload Treasuries from its balance sheet to $60 billion a month.If one or two of these usuall
In Musk v. Twitter, a part of the business life of the richest man in the world is revealed. Private messages exchanged with his inner circle immerse us into his process when he conceives an idea. The messages were released by the Delaware Chancery Court as part of the proceedings between the two parties.
U.S. stocks extended a streak of volatile trading on Monday as Wall Street steered into third-quarter earnings season and braced for a batch of inflation reports.
PayPal is in trouble. "You are independently responsible for complying with all applicable laws in all of your actions related to your use of PayPal's services, regardless of the purpose of the use," the document, called "Acceptable Use of Policy," said.
Markets finished last week on a down note, with the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ falling 2.8% and 3.8%, respectively. The Friday collapse came in the wake of the September jobs report, which further fed into investor worries that the Federal Reserve will continue pushing interest rate hikes even at risk of a recession. The headline number, 263,000 new jobs in the month, came in below the forecast of 275,000, and was well below the August print of 315K. At the same time, the headline unemployment rate
Beaufort County is proposing a library in the town but the proposal still needs the OK of the Beaufort County Council.
The Powerhouse Roundtable breaks down the latest news on “This Week.”
Executives, experts, and influencers join the Yahoo Finance team to discuss what's moving the world of finance.
A single court in London has a backlog of delayed cases almost double that for the whole of Wales, warns the city’s victims’ commissioner, as she sees her stalker finally brought to justice.
Whether retirees should pay off their mortgages depends on a number of factors that need to be carefully weighed.
Although Biogen and Eisai’s lecanemab cleared plaque from patients’ brains, researchers say the benefits may be limited
15 those already on Medicare can make changes to their coverage as needed. This is known as the Medicare annual enrollment period. Read: Sticking with your Medicare plan this open enrollment season?