Planned Parenthood faces accusations from former staff that it mistreats its pregnant employees by "sidelining, ousting or otherwise handicapping" them.

Discrimination against pregnant women and new mothers "is so pervasive that even organizations that define themselves as champions of women are struggling with the problem," the New York Times reports.

"In interviews and legal documents, women at Planned Parenthood and other organizations with a feminist bent described discrimination that violated federal or state laws — managers considering pregnancy in hiring decisions, for example, or denying rest breaks recommended by a doctor," Times reporters Natalie Kitroeff and Jessica Silver-Greenberg report. Other women said they feared they would be seen as abandoning colleagues if they announced their pregnancy at work.

And at Planned Parenthood, the country’s leading provider of reproductive services, managers in some locations declined to hire pregnant job candidates, refused requests by expecting mothers to take breaks and in some cases pushed them out of their jobs after they gave birth, according to current and former employees in California, Texas, North Carolina and New York. Most Planned Parenthood offices do not provide paid maternity leave, though many let new mothers take partially paid disability leave.