Sunday, 27 May 2012

NHS remove word 'Dad' from pregnancy handbook in case it offends same sex couples

It is feared that the term 'dad' may offend same sex couples and it has therefore been replaced with 'partner'. Picture is posed by models
The NHS feared that the term 'dad' may offend same sex couples and therefore replaced it with 'partner' (picture is posed by models)

Hello Friends!


An NHS guide to childbirth will no longer use the term ‘Dad’ when referring to the non-pregnant partner as it may offend homosexual couples.
The ‘Ready Steady Baby’ pamphlet has been revised after receiving a complaint that it ‘was not inclusive of people in same sex relationships’.

After receiving the complaint an equalities assessment was carried out and it was decided to replace ‘dad’ with ‘partner’.

The 220 page guide is funded by tax-payers' money and has been distributed by the NHS to expectant parents for 14 years.
Its purpose is to give advice on dealing with pregnancy and to help parents through the process, as well as their child's first year.

Family campaigners are outraged by the move as they fear it may undermine traditional family set-ups.
Norman Wells, of the Family Education Trust, said: ‘This is all part of an agenda to present as natural a type of family that cannot be created by natural means.

Ready Steady Baby: The 220 page guide has now been reprinted
 Ready Steady Baby: The 220 page guide has now been reprinted


‘The NHS should not be squandering tax payers' money to advance the cause of a minority interest group.
‘No matter how much effort is made to present positive images of families headed by same-sex couples, the fact remains it takes a man and a woman to create a child.’

The news comes in the aftermath of a major survey by equalities charity Stonewall which concluded that gay and bi-sexual men feel neglected and sometimes even discriminated against by the health organisation.
Almost 6,900 gay and bi-sexual men who had used NHS’s services within the last year were asked about their experiences by the gay rights organisation.

Ben Summerskill, chief executive of Stonewall said to MailOnline: 'Gay couples have no problem with using the term 'dad' -  in fact many of them are just that and wish to be called it.
'Most importantly is bringing up children in loving, stable homes not what term you use.'
A spokesman for NHS Scotland, which is behind the booklet, said: 'It is standard practice to review publications on a yearly basis, if not more often.

'At the time this complaint was received the Ready Steady Baby text had just been through its annual review, changes made and the new edition was printed in December 2011.
'The review process identified the need to use language that was more inclusive, particularly in relation to same sex partnerships.'

More than 700,000 copies of Ready Steady Baby have been handed out since 1998, with 90,000 copies being printed last December at a cost of £100,000.

NHS Scotland has upset taxpayer organisation TaxpayerScotland with the reprinting of the pamphlet
NHS Scotland has upset taxpayer organisation TaxpayerScotland with the reprinting of the pamphlet


Robert Oxley, TaxpayerScotland’s Campaign manager said: ‘It's barmy that the NHS is wasting money reprinting guides because of a single complaint.

‘Becoming a dad isn't synonymous with one type of couple so it seems ridiculous to worry about changing it. The NHS has bigger priorities than prescribing how to define who wants to be called dad.’
The booklet is not the first victim of the public sector's equality policies.

Each year six million pounds of tax money is put towards employees who ensure that staff, policies and information stays politically correct.
The NHS alone has 42 such staff members, whose work include ensuring ‘diversity and equality’.
Councils, police forces and the Scottish Government all have staff holding similar roles.

Last month it was revealed that paramedics and nurses are being sent on courses to teach them how to ask questions in a politically correct manner.
The classes are designed to allow them to ask for personal information without upsetting minority groups, such as gypsies and homosexuals.


Culled from The Daily Mail UK.


xoxo
Simply Cheska...


No comments:

Post a Comment