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Showing Original Post only (View all)Doctors in Alabama Already Turn Away Miscarrying Patients. This Will Be America's New Normal. [View all]
Link to tweet
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2022/05/roe-dobbs-abortion-ban-reproductive-medicine-alabama.html
If you want to understand the future of medical care for pregnant women in a post-Roe world, look no further than what is happening in Alabama. As others have pointed out for Slate, the leaked draft majority opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization paves the way for criminalizing many aspects of pregnancy. While Texas abortion ban, S.B. 8, has essentially halted all abortions in the state, Alabama offers a glimpse of a troubling future in which the provision of medical care for pregnant people is deeply intertwined with the cultural attitudes that seek to criminalize undesirable pregnancy outcomes.
In the summer of 2020, I got a firsthand experience of these attitudes in action. Three weeks after starting to practice at West Alabama Womens Center, my application for a medical license was denied and my temporary medical license revoked for what we cant help but question may have been political reasons. Although I had been hired to offer general gynecological care, the Womens Center has historically been known as an abortion clinic, and I am open on social media about my views that abortion should be on demand. Because of the eight-month-long process to reverse and reinstate my license, I did not begin to understand how dire health care access was in Alabama until I was able to practice medicine in March 2021.
I was astounded by how often patients were turned away from emergency rooms and their doctors offices in the middle of their miscarriages. No wonder Alabama has the third-highest maternal mortality rate in the nation, I initially thought. People are denied urgent medical attention outright, which left me wondering at first if health care providers were simply negligent and not keeping up with their medical education. Or was this lack of care a reflection of discrimination? Eventually, I landed on discrimination as the cause.
But I was wrong. The reality is much worse. Instead, these medical professionals seem to know what they are supposed to do, but choose not to.
I came to this realization when I saw a patient in active miscarriage (bleeding, passing clots, cramping) who had just had an office visit with her primary physician. She was forced to wait more than 48 hours in order to get the results of her bloodwork. Doctors will sometimes check a patients levels of HCG, or human chorionic gonadotropin, to help distinguish miscarriages from ongoing pregnancies or ectopic pregnancies. I could not understand why someone with all of the clinical signs of a miscarriage in progress was required to wait for much-needed intervention, all the while bleeding and cramping and suffering.
*snip*
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Doctors in Alabama Already Turn Away Miscarrying Patients. This Will Be America's New Normal. [View all]
Nevilledog
May 2022
OP
I almost died in Georgia because of a miscarriage. I had felt unwell all day and went to
Demsrule86
May 2022
#6
I'm so sorry you went through this. Some Republicans have called for outlawing D&Cs.
Lonestarblue
May 2022
#29
The message in Alabama is go home and die! Other states will follow. Some of us remember the 50's
RKP5637
May 2022
#2
A woman can die of a miscarriage. My mother almost bled out & needed emergency surgery...
Hekate
May 2022
#9
"First, do no harm." Either doctors made an oath to their profession & the law, or to a corporation.
ancianita
May 2022
#13
I'm not surprised, doctors being under a medical center's tort liability umbrella. Still,
ancianita
May 2022
#25
Okay. Fair enough. Then I hope the best recourse for death & suffering the system causes women
ancianita
May 2022
#28
The idea that a hospital or clinic would turn away a patient who is miscarrying
milestogo
May 2022
#21