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Kelli Garcia, Senior Counsel

Kelli Garcia, Senior Counsel, first joined the Center in 2009 as a law fellow and was promoted to Counsel, focusing on health care reform implementation and preventing discrimination in health care. She subsequently worked as a law fellow at the O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, where she worked on scholarship related to global health and human rights, health care reform and the Family and Medical Leave Act. Kelli returned to the Center in April 2012, and now oversees the Center's efforts to address religious restrictions on women's access to reproductive health services, including its work on hospital mergers and crisis pregnancy centers. Kelli holds a law degree from Yale Law School, a Ph.D. in social psychology from the University of California, Los Angeles, and an A.B. from Princeton University.

My Take

Another Benefit of Health Reform: Breastfeeding and Working Becomes a Little Bit Easier

Posted by Kelli Garcia, Senior Counsel | Posted on: March 29, 2010 at 02:30 pm

by Kelli Garcia, Fellow,
National Women's Law Center


When I was breastfeeding my daughter, I was lucky enough to have a comfortable private space at work to express breast milk and supervisors who understood the necessity of taking breaks. Now, thanks to the recently passed health care reform bill, more working mothers will have similar benefits. Under the new law, employers will be required to provide reasonable unpaid breaks and a private place, other than a bathroom, for mothers to express breast milk. Employers with fewer than 50 employees will be exempted from these requirements if they would impose “an undue hardship.” This will help protect women like LaNisa Allen who was fired from her job at the Totes/Isotoner Corp. in Cincinnati for pumping during an “unscheduled” break.


Why is this an important health issue?  Because breastfeeding provides substantial benefits to both babies and mothers. According to one study, women who breastfed for at least one year were less likely to have high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, and cardiovascular diseases compared to mothers who never breastfed. The health benefits began for mothers who breastfed for six months but became stronger the longer breastfeeding continued. Breastfed babies are less likely to develop ear infections, stomach viruses, asthma, diabetes and childhood leukemia.  Breastfed babies are also less likely to die from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. The cost of treating three common illnesses in non-breastfed babies during the first year of life is approximately $475 more than the cost of treating those illnesses in breastfed babies. 

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New Mexico Bans Gender Rating

Posted by Kelli Garcia, Senior Counsel | Posted on: March 10, 2010 at 06:26 pm

by Kelli Garcia, Fellow,
National Women's Law Center

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Marching for my Sister

Posted by Kelli Garcia, Senior Counsel | Posted on: February 24, 2010 at 05:00 pm

by Kelli Garcia, Fellow,
National Women's Law Center

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