America’s already-dreadful maternal mortality rate looks set to rise
After Roe, abortion bans will take their toll
The young woman’s waters broke when she was 19 weeks pregnant. The doctors told her the baby stood no chance of surviving, but that if the pregnancy continued the woman risked an infection, which might lead to sepsis and kill her. They could not perform an abortion, though. Months earlier Texas, where she lived, had passed a law banning terminations after detection of a fetal heartbeat unless there was danger “of death or a serious risk of substantial impairment of a major bodily function”. This wording worried the doctors: if they did an abortion while she still appeared healthy and the baby had a heartbeat, they could be prosecuted. They suggested she fly to Colorado instead.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Mortal danger for mothers”
United States July 23rd 2022
- American climate policy is in tatters
- Is America growing weary of the long war in Ukraine?
- American public transport faces a post-pandemic reckoning
- A report sheds light on the deadliest school shooting in Texas’s history
- America’s already-dreadful maternal mortality rate looks set to rise
- The January 6th committee has hobbled Donald Trump
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