Science Friday - Abortion-Restrictive States Leave Ob-Gyns With Tough Choices
Episode Date: March 18, 2024Roe v. Wade was overturned almost two years ago, and a lot has changed in terms of abortion choices in the United States. Some states have effectively banned abortion, while others have such confusing... laws that it’s difficult for the people who live there to know what their reproductive rights are.The post-Dobbs landscape hasn’t just affected the care people can receive: It’s also changed where physicians choose to work, especially if they’re in states where they can be criminally prosecuted for performing abortions.Last month, the Idaho Coalition for Safe Healthcare published a report that found that 22% of ob-gyns have left the state since June of 2022 — a massive amount for a state that already has the fewest physicians per capita in the country. Ongoing research in Wisconsin has found that the Dobbs decision has affected where medical students choose to study, and has even dissuaded some from choosing obstetrics as a specialty.Joining Ira to talk about this are two ob-gyns from states with abortion restrictions: Dr. Sara Thomson, based in Boise, Idaho, and Dr. Abby Cutler, assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.Transcript for this segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
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In the two years since the fall of Roe versus Wade, physicians face a tough decision about whether to leave states where abortion is restricted.
Many of us have had a crisis of conscience about what to do, feeling both deeply committed to our patients, but also what this means for us personally and for our own families.
It's Monday, March 18th, and of course, it's also Science Friday.
I'm SciFRI producer Kathleen Davis. A lot has changed when it comes to abortion choices in the United States.
States. Some states have effectively banned abortion. Others have such confusing laws that it's difficult
for the people who live there to know what their reproductive rights are. So how has the post-Obs
landscape affected the people who work in this field? Ira speaks to two physicians in restricted
states who face these tough decisions. Dr. Sarah Thompson and OBGYN based in Boise, Idaho,
and Dr. Abby Cutler, an OBGYN and assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin.
School of Medicine and Public Health, based in Madison, Wisconsin.
Welcome, both of you to Science Friday.
Thank you for having me.
Thanks so much for having me.
Thank you for being here.
Dr. Cutler, I want to start by getting a quick understanding of how abortion access
has changed in your state.
What's the landscape like in Wisconsin?
The short answer to your question is that the legal landscape in Wisconsin right now looks
by and large pretty similar.
to the pre-Dobbs landscape in Wisconsin. But that's a recent change, so it bears explaining
what's happened to abortion access in Wisconsin since Dobbs was decided two years ago.
Pre-Dob's law in Wisconsin imposes a number of limitations on the provision of abortion services
here in our state. So to name a few, we have a mandated 24-hour waiting period, a 22-week ban
with limited exceptions, a ban on telemedicine and the use of abortion provision. And many
other laws and various barriers like a general lack of insurance coverage, for example, for abortion,
that makes it really challenging both access and provide abortion care for patients and providers alike.
Abortion care provision basically stopped the day Roe fell, except in circumstances where providers felt
they could legally intervene to save the life of the mother, which was difficult to determine.
Our attorney general quickly filed a lawsuit in the fall of 2022, seeking clarity.
on whether that law was valid.
But in the meantime, Wisconsinites who needed abortion care were forced to leave the state to
access that care.
But in the meantime, as a couple of months ago, many of us providers in Wisconsin can and have
resumed providing abortion services following the same set of legal restrictions that applied
predups, if that makes sense.
Yeah, well, that's what I was going to.
Is there confusion here among providers and patients?
Yes, I think it's impossible to undo.
you know, the 18 months of time where abortion was interpreted to have been banned in our state.
And so it really varies across the state, you know, whether health systems and providers
have resumed abortion services if they ever provided them in the first place, you know,
because that also varied prior to Dobbs. And I think there's still quite a lot of confusion
among patients as to what they can legally access here and whether they need to leave the state.
to access the care that they need. So, yeah, it's been a mess.
Yeah. And Dr. Thompson in Idaho, what are the circumstances there about abortion legality?
Circumstances are extremely limited. The way our law is written is that anyone who performs an abortion
of a clinically diagnosable pregnancy is guilty of a felony unless it is to prevent the death of a
pregnant woman, or in cases of reported rape or incest, but only with the police report and only in the
first trimester. Wow. The penalty is two to five years imprisonment and suspense of a medical
license for anyone who assists. We also have another law that includes a civil penalty that allows a
pregnant patient or family members to sue medical professionals for performing an abortion for a
minimum of $20,000. Wow. Last month, a report from the Idaho Coalition for Safe Health Care,
said that 22% of OBGYNs have left Idaho since Roe versus Wade was overturned.
Wow, have you seen that migration, Sarah, in your own eyes?
Yes, I have.
And I can tell you that no physicians making that decision to leave lightly.
Many of us have had a crisis of conscience about what to do,
feeling both deeply committed to our patients,
but also concerned about what this means for us personally and for our own families.
No OBGYN in our state has spared the stress of this law because every OBGYN has been in a situation
where we've had to induce labor for a mother's health being in jeopardy at a gestational age where the baby will not survive.
And the threat of incarceration for five years for patient care is just too much of a burden for a lot of physicians.
And being told that no physician has been prosecuted yet or that a case of medical necessity is unlikely to be prosecuted is not adequately reassuring.
You know, physicians don't want to be in a situation where we're having to test the boundaries of the law or perform acts of civil disobedience that places at risk of being incarcerated.
Like most people, physicians want to be sure we're legally secure in our work.
And that's hard to do right now because our laws were not written in a way that compassionately considers some of the pregnancy complications that we encounter.
Wow. And Abby, what about in Wisconsin are OBGYN's leaving that state too?
I'm not aware of any data documenting an exodus of OBGYNs out of Wisconsin.
I can tell you that I know several OBGYNs who after Roe fell left Wisconsin and crossed state lines
in order to continue to provide abortion care, oftentimes for our own patients here in Wisconsin,
who, as I mentioned, were also having to leave the state to access that care.
I can also talk a bit about research we're conducting here at the University of Wisconsin,
which does illustrate that some OBGYNs certainly have contemplated leaving the state because of how the post-obs legal landscape threatens their ability to practice medicine
and not just their ability to provide abortions, but their ability to provide, you know, standard evidence-based pregnancy care to their patients,
especially when a pregnancy-related complication arises in the ways Dr. Thompson was just illustrating.
And almost all the OBGYNs we've interviewed have expressed concern that the post-OBS legal landscape
here has jeopardized our ability to train, recruit, and retain OBGYNs. It's also worth noting,
though, that many OBGYNs we've interviewed have expressed a commitment to staying in Wisconsin
for a multitude of reasons, including a commitment to continue to care for their own communities.
But I do think this commitment to Wisconsin is contingent on some things, an optimism that
abortion access would eventually return to Wisconsin, at least temporarily, like we've seen,
recent months, having or trusting in some minimal amount of support from their institution or their
health system to have their backs, and also just general security and stability in other areas
of their work. Right. Sarah, is there any optimism like Abby has in Wisconsin about possibly
abortions returning, the law changing at all in Idaho? Well, no. I mean, I don't think there's a lot
of optimism amongst my physician community, and I spoke with someone last week who told me he was
feeling kind of hopeless about this situation. Our state legislature is only in session from January
through March, and at the beginning of the session, we were hoping we would get at least a maternal
health exception, but that has not happened so far, and I'm very disheartened that there's been no
bill introduced by our legislature to protect pregnant women with a health exception. Being able to care
for pregnant women safely without a threat of criminal prosecution could really help stem the loss
of our OBDIN workforce. And I understand that our Idaho legislators may not have anticipated that this
would happen because when the laws were written, it was prior to Dobbs and this legislation felt
probably more theoretical. But now that we're seeing the consequences of criminalizing health care
with only a prevention of death exception, I really would expect more in terms of
changes. One of my obstetrician colleagues told me she's willing to give our legislature some time
to fix this, but she won't stay in the state indefinitely if our laws aren't changed, and she's
certainly not alone in that sentiment. That is amazing. I know that both Wisconsin and Idaho have
large rural areas, Sarah. How has OBGYN care in these regions changed? Well, that's really the
tragic consequence of Idaho's criminal abortion ban. And now we have fewer OBGYNs left.
in the state to provide prenatal care and to deliver babies. And we've had three hospitals
close their labor and delivery units in our state. And over half of our high-risk maternal fetal
medicine specialists have left full-time practice in the state. And we only had nine MFMs in our state
to begin with before the law changed. A pregnant woman in Idaho will likely have to wait longer
for an appointment and have limited access to specialists. And especially in rural areas,
she may find herself in an expanding maternity desert with no obstetrician in her town or city
and may have to drive more than an hour for prenatal care or to deliver her baby.
And this is going to have a disproportionate impact on women in our community who already have
barriers to care, especially if she lacks transportation or has limited financial resources
or has limited childcare options for her other kids.
And really, even if a pregnant woman has optimal resources, if she experienced,
is a rapid labor, she might find herself having an unintended out-of-hospital birth because the
closest labor and delivery is now further away. Abby, I know you've been collecting data about how
the post-Dob's landscape is affecting the future of OBGYNs, specifically young people in mid-schools
who now have to decide if they want to work in reproductive health as their specialty.
What have you learned? Has this stifled that interest? It's definitely raised concerns.
I'm involved in a very interesting study that's not yet published, but analyzes posts from the social media site Reddit, in which premedical and medical students were posting about discussing the impact of the Dobbs decision on their professional decision making.
We looked at posts on Reddit between May 2nd, 2002, which was the date of the Dobbs Supreme Court case leak to August.
24th, 22, just two months after the Dobbs decision came down. And over that time, in these post-medical
students and residents as well were expressing significant concern about the Dobs' decisions' impact
on their professional futures, particularly in relation to abortion training and education.
Pre-medical students and medical students spoke about how the decision, the fall of row,
had influenced their choices regarding specialty selection, meaning, you know, what
what specialty of medicine they were planning to apply into.
And this was particularly concerning among those who had been most interested in going into
obstetrics and gynecology.
And it was shaping decisions among those folks on where to apply for medical school
and for residency training.
Students and residents expressed apprehension about also the potential decline in the quality
of medical education and training they might receive in states with restrictive abortion
laws. I'm also involved in a study we're conducting here in Wisconsin that explores the experience
of OB-GYN residents who are forced to leave the state to access abortion training because of the
impact that Dobbs had here in Wisconsin. And themes that have come out of those interviews
include moral distress over both the need for having to leave their home state in order to get
this training, distress over an inability to fully care for patients when they returned to their
home state, and also shifting plans when it comes to post-training career goals and intentions.
A big post-Obs decision that made a lot of headlines recently was Alabama's IVF ruling,
where the state Supreme Court said that frozen embryos should be considered children.
And there have been some changes to this to protect providers from criminal liability.
But what was it like to see this ruling in another state?
You know, from what I've seen on the media coverage of this, a lot of legislators had no idea that this would stifle women having children where they're trying to encourage women having children.
I do think that case really demonstrates how far the Dobbs decision in the fall of Roe, meaning,
the removal of the constitutional right, you know, to bodily autonomy when it comes to pregnancy
extends to all sorts of pregnancy-related situations that are not necessarily directly about abortion.
And so I do think that that legislators, you know, weren't necessarily prepared for the ripple effects
that Dobbs would have, even though OBGYNs in our profession, you know, have been trying many of us to sound the alarm
for a long, long time about what would happen if that right were to be taken away.
This is Science Friday from WNYC Studios, talking about the loss of OBGYN services and people since the
overturn of Roe versus Wade. And Sarah, in the post-Obs landscape, is it affecting Idaho's
recruitment of OBGYNs from out of state? Yeah, absolutely. You know, as doctors move out of our
state or retire, we're having a real difficulty replacing them. Idaho has no OBGYN residency training
program, so we can't recruit new OBGYNs from within our borders. And out-of-state applications
to our open positions have decreased dramatically for both private practice and hospital employed
practices. In this 15-month period that this report recently examined, we had 58 out of 268
physicians practicing obstetrics stop in our state, and only two obstetricians moved to Idaho in that
same time period. So that's a really uneven balance there of number of people who are no longer
practicing OB versus the number of people who are willing to move here to take their place.
And I've also spoken to traveling physicians. They're called locum tenants who are reluctant to come to
Idaho for assignments because they're worried their insurance only covers medical malpractice and not
criminal liability. Wow. I'd heard of that.
before. That is amazing. You know, the other thing I read that I think is important to highlight here is that this
recruiting problem is not only limited to OBGYN. Our local paper here in Idaho reported last week that
an emergency medicine physician declined an offer because he was not willing to come to a state that
criminalizes physicians. And I've heard of another doctor and a different specialty declining an
offer because his wife wasn't willing to move to Idaho. You know, and OBGYNs are also commonly married to other
physicians. So we're losing physician spouses as well. And we know that from 2021 data that Idaho already has
the lowest number of doctors per capita of all 50 states. So this is a serious problem for our
entire population and not just for those people in our population that are pregnant. Well, given all those
statistics that you've just quoted me, despite all the difficulties you've outlined today,
you are still practicing in Idaho. What?
keeps you there? Well, yes, I've decided to stay because this is my home. But I will tell you that in the
last year, I updated my resume for job seeking purposes for the first time in 10 years. Wow.
But in staying here, I feel obligated not just to continue caring for pregnant women in my community,
but also to speak up on behalf of my patients who have been harmed by the law, is I don't think
they should be the ones who are having to shoulder the burden of redress for this situation.
physicians really need to find our voices right now to let our legislature know that this is a problem.
In Idaho, we don't have a single physician in our legislature.
So it's really important now to have conversations and try to communicate with our lawmakers to let them know that patients are being harmed.
Wow, I don't think any of us have realized the overarching effect of this decision.
And I want to thank you both for sharing what you know and enlightening us about,
what life is really like. Thank you both for taking time to be with us today. Thank you for having us.
Thanks for having us. Dr. Sarah Thompson, a practicing obstetrician based in Boise, Idaho,
Dr. Abby Cutler, an OBGYN, an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine
in Madison. And that's all the time that we have for now. A lot of folks help make the show happen,
including Annie Niro. Jason Rosenberg.
Shishana Bucksbaum.
And many more.
Tomorrow, we talk to a flavor scientist
about the science behind what and how we taste.
But for now, I'm SciFRI producer Kathleen Davis.
We'll catch you then.
