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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 01:40 PM Nov 2013

An Interview With a Texas Abortion Doctor Who Can No Longer Do His Job

On Tuesday the U.S. Supreme Court declined to block a new law in Texas that requires doctors who perform abortions to have admitting privileges at a local hospital, a measure that has caused at least a dozen clinics in the state to stop terminating pregnancies. Dr. Lester Minto owns and operates one of the affected clinics, Harlingen Reproductive Services. I spoke with him last week as he awaited the Supreme Court’s vote.

Slate: Are you closed? 


Lester Minto: Of course not. I have nine ladies scheduled for tomorrow.

Slate: What do you tell them? 


Minto: That I do not do abortions. I cannot do them legally. And I tell them that I know that there are other things that people do.

Slate: What do other people “do?”


Minto: If they have a passport and enough money, they go over the border to Mexico and go to a pharmacy and buy misoprostol at a pharmacy. It is an ulcer drug, but it works as an abortifacient. It is not as effective mifepristone, which is the on-label medicine used in the U.S. But in these ladies’ situations, misoprostol can be a good choice. It is proper medicine in a blister pack from a proper pharmacy. Someone might even know how to dose it. But it can be an expensive choice. In the U.S., misoprostol costs 10 to 12 cents a pill. I have had ladies charged $80 a pill at Mexican pharmacies. Also passports are expensive and can take too long to get if you don’t have one already. Misoprostol only works up to about seven weeks after your last menstrual period. You need a passport now just to walk over the bridge into Mexico and back. Of course if you are undocumented this isn’t an option at all.

more

http://www.slate.com/blogs/xx_factor/2013/11/20/abortion_in_texas_dr_lester_minto_on_what_it_s_like_at_his_clinic_now_that.html

9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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An Interview With a Texas Abortion Doctor Who Can No Longer Do His Job (Original Post) n2doc Nov 2013 OP
He seems to have a pretty efficient way to avebury Nov 2013 #1
Passports are a huge expense for anyone living hand-to-mouth. bullwinkle428 Nov 2013 #8
Passports are expensive but a passport and a bill purchased in Mexico are avebury Nov 2013 #9
I was surprised this story did not get more play here. hfojvt Nov 2013 #2
Good interview Gothmog Nov 2013 #3
Slate: What do women do if they don’t have a passport? Control-Z Nov 2013 #4
GMTA! ismnotwasm Nov 2013 #6
Wow ismnotwasm Nov 2013 #5
You don't HAVE to have a passport to go across the border Rstrstx Nov 2013 #7

avebury

(11,197 posts)
1. He seems to have a pretty efficient way to
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 01:47 PM
Nov 2013

get around the new law if his patients have passports and can go over the border to Mexico and get the right medicine. Just another reason for women to make sure that they have a passport.

bullwinkle428

(20,662 posts)
8. Passports are a huge expense for anyone living hand-to-mouth.
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 02:27 PM
Nov 2013

Congratulations, Republican bastards, on doing everything you can to further differentiate the "2 Americas".

avebury

(11,197 posts)
9. Passports are expensive but a passport and a bill purchased in Mexico are
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 02:31 PM
Nov 2013

still a whole lot cheaper then the cost of raising an unwanted child for 18 years.

What could happen is that a demand for these Mexican drugs may create an underground market for them. Where there is a demand, a supply might arise.

Gothmog

(179,869 posts)
3. Good interview
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 01:50 PM
Nov 2013

I am still upset that Priscilla Owen was allowed to be on the 5th Cir. Owen is a horrible human being and a horrible judge. The fact that Texas has to suffer under this law is very sad.

Control-Z

(15,686 posts)
4. Slate: What do women do if they don’t have a passport?
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 02:00 PM
Nov 2013
Minto: They buy the drug at a flea market. This is bad and sad and wrong. They are going to be buying things on the street. You don’t even know if you are getting the real thing. But these goddamn politicians ... Women are forced to crawl around like goddamn criminals. So I am here to help them.

Slate: How do you help them? 


Minto: I give them a sonogram to make sure they are pregnant—and if they are pregnant, to make sure it is a uterine pregnancy—that they have no ectopic issues or anything. Then I give them vitamins. Because if they decide to keep the pregnancy, you want it be a healthy one. If they decide to do “something,” you don’t want them to hemorrhage excessively. That is a risk if a lady is anemic. A lot of my patients don’t have great health care, so a lot are anemic.

Slate: So the women take the drug and ...

Minto: They stay close to home, and sometimes it all works fine. But if it doesn’t—or it works part-way, that is what often happens— they can come to me, and I can do “miscarriage management.”

Slate: That’s legal in Texas?

Minto: Yes, in Texas once a woman is vaginally hemorrhaging, it is legal for me to help her.


(Emphasis mine.)

ismnotwasm

(42,674 posts)
5. Wow
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 02:20 PM
Nov 2013

Texas is such a huge state.

Slate: What do women do if they don’t have a passport? 


Minto: They buy the drug at a flea market. This is bad and sad and wrong. They are going to be buying things on the street. You don’t even know if you are getting the real thing. But these goddamn politicians ... Women are forced to crawl around like goddamn criminals. So I am here to help them.

Slate: How do you help them? 


Minto: I give them a sonogram to make sure they are pregnant—and if they are pregnant, to make sure it is a uterine pregnancy—that they have no ectopic issues or anything. Then I give them vitamins. Because if they decide to keep the pregnancy, you want it be a healthy one. If they decide to do “something,” you don’t want them to hemorrhage excessively. That is a risk if a lady is anemic. A lot of my patients don’t have great health care, so a lot are anemic.

Slate: So the women take the drug and ...

Minto: They stay close to home, and sometimes it all works fine. But if it doesn’t—or it works part-way, that is what often happens— they can come to me, and I can do “miscarriage management.”

Slate: That’s legal in Texas?

Minto: Yes, in Texas once a woman is vaginally hemorrhaging, it is legal for me to help her.

Rstrstx

(1,648 posts)
7. You don't HAVE to have a passport to go across the border
Wed Nov 20, 2013, 02:23 PM
Nov 2013

I see people do it all the time, they bring their IDs and birth certificate just like they did in the old days, the officer issues them the same terse warning that they always do about having a passport to cross and then let them go, worst case they send them for secondary followup. I believe by law if you're a US citizen you cannot be denied access into the country, they can just make life difficult for you if they want to. But still, quite a few people down here still do it the pre-9/11 way. The border passport card is a cheaper alternative. Or they can always have someone else go get it for them.

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