Consider This from NPR - Q & A: What An Abortion Ban Would Mean For Patients Who Need One
Episode Date: May 31, 2022What happens if a medical condition threatens the life of a pregnant patient? What about a fetus with a lethal anomaly? Will treatment for miscarriage change? This episode we're answering those questi...ons and others from listeners about what would happen if the Supreme Court overturns Roe v Wade — with help from NPR health policy correspondent Selena Simmons-Duffin and Dr. Kristyn Brandi, an OB-GYN and family planning doctor who's also the board chair for Physicians for Reproductive Health.In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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A few years ago, Erica Parr had an unexpected experience that she will never forget.
I experienced a miscarriage when I was 27,
a few months after I married my husband. And nobody expects to lose a pregnancy.
And I consider myself fairly educated and body literate.
Parr is 30 years old now. She's more than halfway through another pregnancy.
And when she heard about the leaked Supreme Court draft opinion that could overturn the right to an abortion in the U.S.,
The news has brought up a lot of personal feelings for me.
Parr's religious beliefs as an Orthodox Christian weigh heavily on her feelings about abortion.
And our church definitely holds like strong sanctity of life,
values, and that is something that I personally align myself with.
But she lives in Tennessee, one of 13 states that would immediately ban abortion if the
Supreme Court overturns Roe. In many cases, the procedures and medications that women need after
a miscarriage are the same as those used for abortion. And Parra is thinking a lot about that.
There are actual life and death moments where a matter of hours makes a huge difference in
situations in which, I don't know, legal considerations seem like they shouldn't be
at the forefront of anyone's mind when they're making decisions about their own health care.
Consider this.
The Supreme Court may soon decide that the right to an abortion is no longer protected
by the Constitution. That potential future raises all kinds of practical questions for Erica Parr and for many of you.
This episode, we have answers from one of our health policy reporters and a practicing OBGYN.
From NPR, I'm Ari Shapiro. It's Tuesday, May 31st.
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Download the WISE app today,s Roe v. Wade.
So many that we're going to answer them in multiple episodes.
Today, we'll focus on health policy and medicine. Our experts with the answers are NPR health policy
correspondent, Selena Simmons-Duffin, and Dr. Kristen Brandy, an OBGYN and family planning
doctor who's also board chair for Physicians for Reproductive Health. Good to have you both here.
Hi, Ari.
Glad to be here.
And before we start, I do want to let listeners know that we are going to have a frank discussion
about some difficult topics that might not be appropriate for all listeners. So to begin,
if the Supreme Court lets states make decisions about abortion rights access, the rules are going
to vary from one place to another, and some states have passed laws that prohibit abortion except in
cases where the life of the mother is threatened. Keston Smith in Indiana wanted to know more about
that standard. Here's his question. What medical conditions definitely threaten the life of the mother and medically would require
a procedure that threatens the life of the mother or child?
It seems like that question of whether somebody will die from a pregnancy
is rarely black and white. So, Selena, how will this be determined?
Yeah, you're right. I mean, the exemptions written into these laws often talk about medical
emergencies. So not just a chance that, you know, if your condition that could turn into a
life-threatening condition does so, you're going to be in trouble. But like there's something
happening right now and you need emergency treatment and
that treatment might involve ending a pregnancy. That seems like a much higher standard than you
are likely to die from this. Yeah. And I should say that CDC tracks pregnancy deaths and there
are about 700 a year. A third of them are from heart disease and stroke. But really what these
laws I think are trying to carve out is the really most urgent
medical emergency. And the physicians that I've talked to really talk about when water breaks
way too early in pregnancy. There's actually a famous case of when this happened. Dr. Savita
Halapanavar, she was a dentist in Ireland 17 weeks into her pregnancy. This was 10 years ago.
She ended up not being able to have
an abortion, even though her pregnancy was not going to continue. She got an infection and died.
And that case spurred the country of Ireland to change their abortion laws. And I should say,
NPR has reported of similar cases that are happening now in Texas, which has a six-week
abortion restriction in place right now.
Okay, our next question comes from an obstetrician in Cleveland, Ohio. That's a state where lawmakers
are considering several bills to restrict abortion, including a trigger law should Roe fall.
Here's what Dr. Emily Hamburg-Shields wants to know.
In states that post-Roe do not allow for termination of pregnancy for lethal fetal
anomalies, what are the implications for parents of pregnancy for lethal fetal anomalies. What are
the implications for parents of fetuses and newborns who have issues that are not compatible
with life? Lethal fetal anomalies. So Dr. Kristen Brandy, to put this in very stark terms, under
some of these state laws, could people be compelled to carry a pregnancy to term even if it is clear
that the fetus will not survive outside of the womb? Unfortunately, the answer to that could be yes.
When I have a patient that is facing that outcome,
I want to talk to them about their options
and make sure that they can decide if and when and how to end that pregnancy.
According to these abortion bans,
there's not a lot of language that allows for abortion
in the cases of lethal fetal
anomalies. People that are in states where abortion is restricted likely will have to
continue those pregnancies to term. And they would deliver how they normally would deliver,
either by a natural birth, potentially even a C-section. And they likely wouldn't be able to have the palliative care system support them in an outcome
that would help them, you know, grieve the potential loss of this child. So it's really
depressing to think about how devastating that diagnosis is to patients and how they won't be
able to choose what happens to that pregnancy afterward. All right, Erica Parr, who we heard
from at the beginning of this segment, had this question as well. How will treatment for miscarriage be
impacted? What conversations should I be having now with my OB? And will women have to prove that
their miscarriages are accidents? Selena, do you know the answer to that question?
Yeah, I think that the answer is definitely miscarriage care is going to be impacted. It already is happening in Texas. And the reason is that a lot of times people think about miscarriage as something that's spontaneous, that somebody has no control over. And that can be true, but it can also be something that people have to make decisions about. And the standard of care for treating a miscarriage is the same as the standard of care for providing an abortion.
And the way that that can play out is if somebody has a miscarriage and they need to take medication
to empty the uterus so that, you know, they're not at risk of infection, that same medication
is what's used for medication abortion. And we're hearing a lot of reports of pharmacists in Texas
not filling those prescriptions for people who are
suffering miscarriages. And, you know, so I think that the other question that she had about
having to prove it, no, in the laws, there's nothing that says if there's a miscarriage,
somebody has to prove it. But there are reports. A woman wrote a thread on Twitter about how she
had a miscarriage recently in Texas and was grilled by her doctor about what medications she might have taken or how she
might have caused that miscarriage to happen. We got a question from a listener who asked us
not to use his name because he works for a large hospital system in the South, and he is in one of
the states with a trigger law that would outlaw most abortions after a Supreme Court ruling that
overturned Roe. So he wants to know, are hospitals ready for this change? Many rural areas in southern states that did not expand
Medicaid lost hospitals. Are there enough beds for labor and delivery, NICU beds? Will we see
rising medical care and insurance costs because of the rise of charity care for maternity services?
Dr. Brandy, what impact will this have on hospitals?
I think that's a really important
question. I honestly am concerned about whether the healthcare system is ready to face the
increasing number of patients that are coming to our doors that were going to need labor and
delivery care because they weren't able to access abortion care. Rural areas, even before COVID,
were facing lots of closures of hospitals and particularly labor and delivery wards.
People were already traveling long distances to get all types of care.
And women's health providers were leaving those areas.
Imagine now when we double or triple the number of deliveries that are happening in those communities.
Okay, Elaine Foe from Greeley, Colorado,
has this question about in vitro fertilization or IVF.
How will IVF be affected if abortion is banned?
Will IVF be banned?
Selina, what impact could laws banning abortion have on IVF?
Well, there's the question of definition.
So some of the laws that are passing now
have definitions of words that are different from how these things are understood in medicine.
So as an example, the Texas abortion ban declares that pregnancy begins with fertilization.
So when a sperm and egg meet.
In medicine, pregnancy is defined as beginning after that fertilized egg divides and grows and implants into the uterus.
So that's one definition that kind of raises some questions for IVF. Another thing is that in a lot of laws,
there's this line, quote, an unborn child means a human fetus or embryo in any stage of gestation
from fertilization until birth. So by that definition, if you have unused embryos that were created for
IVF, that's an unborn child. But how this is going to play out is kind of up in the air,
according to Liz Sepper, who is a professor of law at the University of Texas in Austin.
It's a fundamentalist movement that takes some of Catholic theology and combines it with some of the evangelical Christian tradition and politics.
And conservative Catholics are opposed to fertility treatments, to IVF. But that has not
been a target for evangelical Christians who are supportive of IVF in order to procreate.
She said that it's hard to predict the consequences because
it seems like the anti-abortion movement itself isn't united on this point.
Okay, one more question. This one is from Megan Voss of Carbro, North Carolina.
You know, we talk a lot about women's birth control, but what about the men?
What birth control options are there for men and how can they help us?
Dr. Brandy, she says surely there have been innovations. Have there been?
I really wish that I had better news
to share about the new innovations
in male birth control.
Unfortunately, there hasn't been a lot of drive
for men to use birth control.
As far as current things that are in the works,
there are several clinical trials
investigating different types of birth control for men.
Things like pills to injections to other types of procedures.
Unfortunately, it's going to take a while for those options to be available on the market,
probably several years.
And so right now, vasectomy and condoms are the options that are available to men that
want to help prevent pregnancy in their couple.
Dr. Kristen Brandy is board chair for Physicians for Reproductive Health and NPR health policy
correspondent, Selena Simmons-Duffin. Thank you both for helping us talk through these
listener questions. Thank you. Thanks for having us.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Ari Shapiro.
This message comes from Indiana University.
Indiana University is committed to moving the world forward,
working to tackle some of society's biggest challenges.
Nine campuses, one purpose. Creating tomorrow, today.
More at iu.edu.