Chattanooga Times Free Press

AP explainer: The language and reach of new Texas abortion law

- BY KIMBERLEE KRUESI

NASHVILLE — The nation’s highest court has allowed a Texas law banning most abortions to remain in effect, marking a turning point for abortion opponents who have been fighting to implement stronger restrictio­ns for nearly a decade.

The Texas law, pegged a “fetal heartbeat bill,” bans abortions at the point of the “first detectable heartbeat,” which could happen around six weeks into pregnancy, although that timeframe isn’t specified in the measure. Medical experts say the heart doesn’t begin to form until the fetus it is at least nine weeks old, and they decry efforts to promote abortion bans by relying on medical inaccuraci­es.

Nonetheles­s, at least 13 other states with Republican-dominated legislatur­es have adopted similar bans, although courts have blocked them all from being implemente­d. Democrats call the new Texas law an unconstitu­tional assault on women’s health.

The growing anti-abortion campaign is intended to reach the U.S. Supreme Court. Abortion opponents hope the conservati­ve coalition assembled under President Donald Trump will end the constituti­onal right to abortion as establishe­d by the high court in the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling.

THE TERM ‘FETAL HEARTBEAT’ TWISTS THE SCIENCE

Advanced technology can detect a first flutter of electric activity within cells in an embryo as early as six weeks. This flutter isn’t a beating heart, it’s cardiac activity that will eventually become a heart. An embryo is termed a fetus after the eighth week of pregnancy, and the actual heart begins to form between the ninth and 12th weeks of pregnancy.

“It’s not a heartbeat, it’s the motion of the neural cells going up and down tubes in an embryo,” said Dr. Michael Cackovic, a maternal fetal medicine specialist at Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center, where some 5,300 babies are born each year.

Cackovic said ultrasound technology significan­tly advances each year, allowing physicians to provide better informatio­n to their patients, but he’s alarmed that such advances in medicine have been used to promote misinforma­tion.

“We’re using technology to detect early cardiac motion, basically it’s a reflexive moment,” Cackovic added. “But now people are using this technology to forward their agenda.”

In 2013, a pioneering University of Leeds study found that while four clearly defined chambers appear in the human heart from the eighth week of pregnancy, they remain “a disorganiz­ed jumble of tissue” until around the 20th week, much later than previously believed.

ANTI-ABORTION ACTIVIST TAPS INTO EMOTION

The notion that abortion as early as six weeks into pregnancy “stops a beating heart” is a concept originated by Ohio activist Janet Folger Porter, one of the nation’s fiercest advocates for banning the procedure.

Porter found that hearts were easy to market and punctuated her decade-long lobbying efforts by distributi­ng heart-shaped balloons and teddy bears, all while side-stepping whether the packaging of the proposal was medically true.

She’s a polarizing figure, even among Republican­s, due to her lobbying stunts and other controvers­ial actions she’s exercised over the years. Notably, she arranged “testimony” via ultrasound by an in utero fetus. She also questions

President Barack Obama’s citizenshi­p and more recently served as spokeswoma­n for Senate candidate Roy Moore, of Alabama, who has denied allegation­s that he molested a 14-year-old girl.

OTHER STATES JUMP ON BOARD

It took Ohio nearly a decade to sign off on the abortion ban backed by Porter, but other states eventually got on board, after advocates for similar bans mirrored her tactics lobbying lawmakers and using emotive phrases such as “take heart” or “have a heart.”

Arkansas and North Dakota were among the first states to pass these types of bills in 2013. Iowa became the third in 2018. About two dozen states have since introduced similar measures inside their legislatur­es, but only Texas’ version has been enacted.

NOT THE FIRST TIME ABORTION SPARKED WAR OVER WORDS

Plenty of battles have taken place over politicall­y charged, inaccurate or vague terminolog­y over abortion laws.

“Dismemberm­ent abortion” is a term abortion opponents use to describe dilation and evacuation, a common second trimester abortion method. Others used “partial-birth abortion” to describe what is medically called intact dilation and extraction.

In the fight over fetal cardiac activity, anti-abortion advocates counter that using medical terminolog­y dehumanize­s the unborn.

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