Florida abortion clinic ordered to be shut down
PENSACOLA, Fla. – A Pensacola abortion clinic was ordered closed by the state of Florida after three women were hospitalized and required major medical intervention in the last nine months.
American Family Planning was the only operating abortion clinic on the Gulf Coast between New Orleans and Tallahassee.
Florida’s Agency for Healthcare Administration issued an emergency order late Friday to suspend the clinic’s operations until an administrative hearing can be held in Tallahassee.
The News Journal, a USA TODAY Network newspaper, was unable to reach a representative at American Family Planning for comment on Saturday.
The order details three cases where the doctor and staff at the clinic failed to report necessary hospitalizations of the three patients required within 10 days and failed to keep any record of the patients’ vital signs during the procedures.
In one procedure in August 2021, the patient had to be hospitalized and have parts of her colon removed, according to the emergency order.
In March, another woman started bleeding following an abortion and the clinic’s staff determined the woman needed to go to the hospital. When Emergency Medical Services personnel arrived to transfer the woman to a local hospital, they documented “pools of blood on the floor,” the order said. The woman was cool to the touch, did not have a pulse detectable in her wrist and had extremely low blood pressure.
At the hospital, she had emergency surgery where a doctor found a “big hole on the left wall of the uterus and another on the right side” along with lacerations to her cervix, according to the emergency order. After surgery failed to save her uterus, the woman had to undergo a complete hysterectomy and received 10 pints of blood to
stabilize her.
In May, another woman arrived for an abortion, and after being administered drugs she was told to wait in her car despite regulations requiring her vital signs be monitored in an exam room, the order said. Her procedure was halted before it was complete after she received lacerations to her cervix and a possible rupture of her uterus.
The clinic staff told her and her spouse to go to a hospital in Mobile, Alabama, rather than a local hospital in Pensacola requested by the woman’s spouse and as required under the clinic’s license, according to ACHA’S emergency order. The clinic did not document the woman’s discharge, though her spouse was given discharge paperwork.
The woman’s spouse told ACHA that the staff of the clinic was unable to get a blood pressure reading from the woman. She was driven by her spouse to the hospital in Mobile, and when she arrived the hospital recorded that she had no blood pressure and her blood oxygen level was at 80%.
She was resuscitated at the hospital and had to have a blood transfusion to “replace egregious blood loss,” according to the ACHA’S emergency order.
The doctor at the clinic, who is not named in the report, “candidly” admitted to ACHA officials “that he is unfamiliar with (the clinic’s) policies and procedures” and that he relies on the clinic’s manager for direction. The manager holds no medical or clinical license, the order noted.