A New Flushable Pregnancy Test Could Help Women in Abusive Relationships

rapeculturerealities:

When Bethany Edwards and Anna Simpson invented the world’s first flushable pregnancy test, they were trying to save the environment—not women. The idea was simple: Make a medically-accurate test out of sustainable materials instead of the non-biodegradable plastic that current manufacturers use. “Single-use diagnostics are only used for a few minutes and then discarded or incinerated,” Edwards explains. “Discarded plastic [pregnancy test] housings are landfill-bound, existing far beyond the product’s extreme short lifecycle.”

So together, Edwards and Simpson, who met at UPenn during grad school, formed Lia Diagnostics. The test—which is 99 percent accurate on the first day of a missed period, and has has been cleared by the FDA—is slated for online sale (at $10 a pop) starting mid-2018. The test is simple, really: It looks like any other pregnancy stick test, but pinched in the middle and with an edge that looks pin-pricked like a sanitary pad. Lia Diagnostics’ website claims it goes down as well as 3-ply, a toilet paper weight that rural plumbing can’t handle but that city toilets flush just fine.

This flushability, Edwards says, “was part of our very initial research; it was a clear, unmet need that drove the overall product design.” As she and Simpson conducted that research, asking women whether they’d use the test, they heard stories about people taking pregnancy tests at work to hide their results from someone at home. Some women told them about their need to hide sticks deep within the trash. That’s when Edwards realized the difference their product could make was much more than environmental.

“Reproductive coercion is definitely a part of intimate partner violence,” says Nancy Neylon, executive director of Ohio Domestic Violence Network, a Columbus-based non-profit assisting domestic violence shelters throughout the state. She defines reproductive coercion as a type of sexual abuse that manifests in many ways: “This can include forced, unprotected sex in order to ensure pregnancy, tampering with birth control, even threatening to have sex with another woman and get her pregnant. Abusers are sadly very creative as they try to achieve and maintain control over their partners.” In this sick quest for power, the same plus sign that brings some women joy brings an abuser new information they can use to control their partner.

The ability to keep pregnancy test results secret could save lives, National Coalition Against Domestic Violence (NCADV) associate director, Gretchen Shaw, tells me plainly. “[I]t’s not a perfect answer,” Neylon adds. “If [a woman was] pregnant and wanted to get away from the abusive relationship without the abuser knowing about the pregnancy, this would be helpful. Of course if she is, then there are other decisions she needs to make. But [she] could make those decisions more safely.”

After next year’s launch, the test will be available for purchase on pre-order at MeetLia.com. (If internet use is monitored at home, women can use incognito browser at the library.) Lia Diagnostics then ships it to you, thankfully, not in a conspicuous envelope. “We’re working very hard to balance the FDA requirements and maintain discretion,” Edwards says. The test itself is thin enough to slip inside a traditional, discrete mailing envelope.

Neylon says 1 in 4 women who experience partner abuse—be it sexual, emotional, or physical—face reproductive coercion. The concern is so widespread, she believes it needs its own place on the Power and Control Wheel, a diagram listing patterns of abuse that domestic violence professionals use to guide victims through awareness of their situation.

“[Reproductive coercion] is very widespread but something women may not even recognize themselves,” Neylon says. “Women may not understand that abuse can be something other than physical violence. They may think if they are married that it’s his right to demand sex and have children. The abuser may damage the condom without telling her, the abuser may engage in unprotected sex with HIV or an STD without telling her, or she may have sex to avoid promised physical abuse.”

A New Flushable Pregnancy Test Could Help Women in Abusive Relationships

violue:

If you or a friend has been texting with this number, please know it is NOT Misha Collins. Be safe, don’t share your number or other personal information with this person, who is apparently intentionally misleading people.

Please pass this along, and RT the source tweet [here]

angrynebula:

brunhiddensmusings:

lady-violaceous:

lyrangalia:

oakumura:

gnarly-art:

Lilo and Stitch presenting an accurate representation of Hawaiians perspective on luaus held by tourists. 

#what’s sad about this is that this is actually what Hawaiians had to do when the western culture took over #a luau was a sacred practice #until the westerners took the concept and had the audacity to change it into a time to stuff your face with food and put on grass skirts and coconut bras and dance the hula #and when they had these events, they didn’t even let actual Hawaiian people in #so to make money to take care of themselves, the Hawaiians were hired to work in these disgraceful events to clean up after the tourists like slaves only to make less than a buck #so good job disney for doing your fucking research and educating these people #sadly, this still goes on even until today and it makes me sick

“good job disney” my ass, good job CHRIS SANDERS

Let’s not credit just Chris Sanders for this. This happened because they cast actual Hawaiian Actors like Tia Carrere and Jason Scott Lee to play Hawaiian characters, and allowed the actors to have input into writing the characters’ lines. 

This sort of authenticity comes from accuracy and authenticity in casting choices. The fact that Chris Sanders as direct/writer facilitated that does not mean he gets credit for the actors’ experience.

This is why diversity and representation in media matters.

Dude as a hawaiian, this is like straight up what my life as a kid was. My mom worked at those fakey luaus full time to pay rent. My mom is someone who is absolutely passionate and proud about being a hawaiian, living and teaching the ways our ancestors lived and taught.

See, we Hawaiians, we live by the way of aloha. And not by the way of “hello” “goodbye”, let me educate you. As Pono Shim, CEO and President of Enterprise Honolulu, the Oahu Economic Development Board, states absolutely perfectly “aloha is to be in the presence of life, to share the essence of one’s being with openness, honesty, and humility. It is a way of being, a way of behaving, a way of life. It is a commitment to accepting others and giving dignity to who they are and what they have to offer.” Aloha is more than hello and goodbye. Think of aloha as an abbreviation.

Akahai: meaning kindness
Lokahi: meaning unity
Olu’Olu’: meaning agreeableness
Ha’aha’a: meaning humility
Ahonui: meaning patience

This is something we all need to live by, seriously, we all should

the dropped sub-plot was that lilo hated tourists, which is why she goes around taking pictures of them like they were attractions instead of people; like how they took photos of locals

similarly there was a deleted scene where she scares tourists off of a beach by sounding a false tsunami siren to watch them run screaming

deeper in the lore that kid thats a prick to her, mertyle, is the daughter of the person who runs the megamart and crushed a lot of other local businesses- when they have to do a hula to tell a story mertyle actually uses it to describe the low prices, where lilo does a hula about a traditional creation myth that was important to her mother. you may notice both lilo and nani are on first name basis with both the coffee shop owner and the fruitseller, there is big disparity between the locals and foreign interest businesses relegating them to just be tourist industry

friendly reminder that lilo & stitch is indisputably the best disney film

snarry-splitpea:

snakeassassins:

one thing that’s always bothered me about most people’s depiction of Holmes’s usage of cocaine is that most people in Victorian England were only just beginning to realize how badly it affected people???

like tbh I feel like a better modern equivalent would just be Holmes dumping a five hour energy into his fifth cup of coffee while Watson, a trained medical professional, stares at him in horror

I’ve always thought this

This post is my new favorite

glumshoe:

glumshoe:

glumshoe:

dadrielle:

I saw a sad facebook post from the gay bookstore back in Ann Arbor where I used to live about how they hadn’t sold any books that day so I went on their online store and bought a couple, and while you don’t get #deals like elsewhere online, I’d love it if y’all would consider buying your next gay book from them instead of like, Amazon.

Common Language is a great bookstore and while I’ve only been there once, I follow it on Instagram and really want to see it succeed!

Their most recent Facebook post (~9:30 PM, April 18):

A little update:

At last count we had 211 online orders over the last couple of days. We generally have a handful of online orders PER MONTH. And many days our in store sales are 3-5 books. In other words, this deluge is significantly more than we sell in a month. We are literally brought to tears by this outpouring.

About 80% of them have already been fulfilled and are on their way to you.

The other 20% require special attention (out of print book, book temporarily out of stock, etc.) or we need to pull together books from various sources. Some of you will be getting emails from me!

Our staff is three people and one dog. And while the dog is, perhaps, the world’s sweetest dog, he’s not much help in this task. The lack of opposable thumbs is a big hindrance to many bookstore tasks.

Mind you, we are not complaining. Having a surge which overwhelms our current resources is a great problem to have. Heartfelt thanks.

As I take a short break from fulfilling orders I wanted to share a few thoughts.

This is transformative.

We will be able to pay some bills which will steady the ship for a longer voyage. In our wildest dreams this surge would continue, we’d hire more people to handle the load, and the world would have a thriving honest-to-god queer bookstore.

But even if it doesn’t continue at this truly astonishing rate, having a regular flow on online orders would give the store a level of security we haven’t seen in a long time.

All of you did this. You made it happen. And you can be a part of making that dream come true. In fact, you can be the most important part of making that dream come true. You can be an ambassador.

It was, after all, an ambassador who made this happen.

When a friend talks about getting a book, steer them to us. Our mission is to create a safe space for LGBT people, a resource for a community, a place of equality for women, a place where black lives truly matter, a place where your gender is what you say it is, not what anyone else says it is.

If this is your mission as well, join us.