CHR probes Baguio college’s pregnancy tests on students
>> Tuesday, November 13, 2018
BAGUIO CITY -- The
Commission on Human Rights on Wednesday started the probe on the controversial
memorandum of Pines City College (PCC) in Baguio City mandating pregnancy
testing to its female students.
“The CHR is
alarmed with the documents circulating in the internet showing Pines City
College’s policy of mandatory pregnancy testing not only as to possible MCW
(Magna Carta of Women) violation but also of other women’s rights particularly
on the rights to privacy and bodily autonomy,” CHR spokesperson Jacqueline de
Guia said in a statement.
“Women and
girls should not be denied exercise and full enjoyment of basic rights, they
should not suffer negative consequences in educational and work spaces simply
because they are pregnant,” de Guia added.
De Guia added
that pregnancy does not determine one’s capacity as a student. “That
deregulation and commercialization policies in education that host unjust
determination and widespread collection of widespread exorbitant and dubious
fees must be scrapped.”
“As Gender
Ombud, the Commission through its CAR (Cordillera Administrative Region) office
is investigating the case motu propio, according to the institution due process
and verifying the existence of the policy.”
The
memorandum signed by PCCs’ school physician Dr. Aurelia Navarro and vice
president for administration Maria Regina Prats requires the Dentistry,
Nursing, and Pharmacy department deans and heads to require their female
students to undergo mandatory pregnancy test this week.
The
institution, in a statement late Tuesday afternoon, said that PCC abides by its
policy of pregnancy tests for female students who are enrolling in courses such
as Clinical Dentistry, Roentgenology, Anesthesiology, and Endodontics, that
“would endanger both mother and child.”
“It is a
policy agreed to by our students upon their enrollment in this institution,” it
stated.
“We believe
it is a policy protective of our students while they are in our care and are
deployed to internship programs in hospitals and to clinical practice.”
The copy of
the memorandum went viral on social media on Tuesday on Facebook which drew
flak from netizens.
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