
ABOUT US
Our history
We are able to provide the services that we do thanks to decades of hard
work by scores of dedicated people.
Formation of PPOSBC
Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties is an affiliate
of Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA). When a group of concerned
Orange County visionaries got together in 1965, they created the groundwork
for providing women and men with the education and medical care they needed
to plan their families.
From our first medical center that opened at 211 South Broadway, Santa
Ana CA in 1968, we have grown to eight medical centers.
Our medical centers are located in:
Locally, we provide award winning prenatal care, cutting edge health
education, and access to family planning. Last year we saw over 55,000 patients and in one year made over 39,000 education contacts.
In our medical centers, women and men of all ages and backgrounds come
for
- Reproductive health examinations
- Pregnancy testing
- Options counseling
- Adoption referral
- Prenatal care
- Abortion service
- Cancer screening
- Sexually transmitted infection testing and treatment
- Risk-reduction health education diagnosis and treatment
- Birth control methods
- Vasectomy services
- Emergency contraception
Programs also offer nutrition education and food vouchers to low-income
families for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC).
Health Education is
provided through ongoing projects to reach the teen population in our
medical centers, mainstream schools, correctional schools, juvenile
hall, and substance abuse treatment centers. An anonymous toll-free
hotline is provided by health educators.
Outreach to males is provided by the Male Involvement Program, which fosters
responsible sexual participation by males.
The Health Education department also provides a Resource Library open
to the public.
The department offers a free hotline service as well, which can be found at www.plannedparenthoodchat.org and by clicking here.
Marketing maintains
our presence in the community through advertising, working with local
businesses, patient recruitment and satisfaction, and community outreach
through tabling events.
Public Affairs leads
the way for our investment in advocacy and electoral efforts at both the
affiliate and national levels. Our Community Action Fund monitors and
lobbies for reproductive rights and access to family planning services,
uses the Community Action Network to equip you with information to lobby
elected officials, and participates in pro-choice organizations like The
Orange County Coalition for Reproductive Rights.
Community Affairs/Development
is responsible for the planning, research, and development of fundraising
goals for the agency, prepares grants for funding, and designs fundraising
projects and special events.
Human Resources oversees
full, part-time, and hourly staff members. They provide employee recruitment,
benefits, compensation, and employee-relations administration. They also
administer agency policies and procedures as well as monitor compliance
with labor laws and regulations.
In addition, the Volunteer Program of Human Resources oversees the dedicated
volunteers who donate their valuable time and skills to the organization.
PPOSBC is an affiliate within Planned Parenthood Federation of
America. We are a self-governing, nonprofit organization. The various
departments outlined above operate to provide the delivery of high quality
reproductive health care at an affordable price and to promote the right
to make independent, informed health decisions.
PPOSBC Timeline
• 1965 PPOSBC began in Santa Ana (when Comstock Laws were reversed)
• 1975 Costa Mesa center opens
• 1980 Mission Viejo center opens
• 1981 Colposcopy services offered
• 1986 Garden Grove center opens
• 1988 Upland center opens
• 1996 Anaheim center opens
• 1998 Orange center opens
• 1998 PPOSBC administration moved to 700 S. Tustin; Orange,
CA 92866
• 2001 San Bernardino center opens
• 2004 New, expanded medical sites launched in Santa Ana and
Westminster
When and how Planned Parenthood was established
Planned Parenthood dates back to October 16, 1916 during WWI when Margaret
Sanger, a former nurse, and her sister opened the first American birth
control medical center. The medical center – located in Brooklyn,
NY – was the result of Sanger’s outrage over the cycle of
poverty she saw among women who bore unplanned children.
The medical center provided diaphragms (pessaries) imported from Holland
and offered advice to impoverished women who lined up for blocks outside
the medical center doors in their quest to gain control over their lives.
This was in direct violation of the 1870’s Comstock law that prohibited
publicity and distribution of information about sexuality, contraception,
and human reproduction.
Ten days after opening, the medical center was closed by police. Sanger
and her associates were arrested for violating anti-obscenity statutes
by discussing contraception.
Sanger then joined forces with supporters to form the American Birth Control
League (ABCL) in 1921 and the Clinical Research Bureau (CRB) in 1923,
renamed Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau (BCCRB) in 1928.
Birth control medical centers began emerging across the nation, often
run by the efforts of volunteers.
Several hundred of the more than 1 million letters that came from women
requesting information about contraception were published in 1928 by Sanger
in a book called Motherhood in Bondage.
In 1942, during WWII, The ABCL, now merged with the BCCRB, adopted the
name by which it is known today: Planned Parenthood Federation of America
(PPFA).
PPFA has grown to become this country’s leading family planning
and reproductive health organization.
Katherine Dexter McCormick, heir to International Harvester and one of
the first women graduates of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
supplied funding for the research and first clinical testing of oral contraceptives.
“The pill” was approved by the Federal Drug Administration
(FDA) in 1960.
Breakthroughs in public policy emerged in the 1960s due in part to Planned
Parenthood’s outspoken advocacy and demands by other organizations
for social justice.
A direct challenge by Planned Parenthood of Connecticut resulted in the
1965 Supreme Court case that reversed the Comstock laws. It was now legal
for physicians to prescribe contraceptives to married couples according
to the patient’s “right to privacy”.
However, it was not until 1972 that the “right to privacy”
made birth control legal for single women. That was the year of Watergate.
In 1968 the Therapeutic Abortion Act became law in California. This gave
victims of rape or incest, and women with mental or physical problems,
the right to have an abortion. However, two psychiatric consults had to
prove the woman’s case. In 1970 New York State passed a law permitting
abortions for all women.
Planned Parenthood of Syracuse, NY began performing abortions on the first
day permitted by the law.Finally on January 22, 1973 the Roe v. Wade
Supreme Court decision granted all women a constitutional right to have
an abortion under the guaranteed “right to privacy”.
Comprised of 126 affiliates, PPFA governs 865 medical centers and serves
nearly 5 million people every year. The International Planned Parenthood
Federation began in 1952 and is headquartered in London, serving 17 countries.
PPFA Timeline
1916 - WWI (1914-1918) - 1st American Birth Control medical
center (in Brooklyn, NY) was opened by Margaret Sanger and her sister.
1921 - Silent Films, Jazz & Flappers, 1st regular
radio broadcast,
19th Amendment (women’s vote) - American Birth Control League formed
by Mgt Sanger.
• medical centers started popping up in various cities
• Katherine Hepburn’s mother was one of the founders of
PP Connecticut
• Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau was started in1926
(it was a medical center with physician, Hannah Stone)
1942 - WWII (1939-1945) - Planned Parenthood Federation
of America
• ABC League + Clinical Research Bureau merged and renamed
1960 - Hippies & Free Love - “The pill”
is approved by the FDA (research was funded by private donors).
1965 - Vietnam War (1959-1975) - Comstock Laws reversed
by US Supreme Ct (almost 100 years later) from a direct challenge by PP/Conn;
newly defined “right to (marital) privacy” [Single not until
1972].
1970 - Nixon - Title X was the Public Health Service
Act (support, funding for family planning, education, contraceptive research).
1972 - Watergate (Nixon resigned 1974) - Single women
got “right to privacy”.
1973 - Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court decision granted all
women the constitutional right to have an abortion under the guaranteed
“right to privacy”.
2001 - PPFA has128 affiliates and 850 medical centers

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