Miami Herald

Florida’s six-week abortion ban endangers lives

- BY JUHI VARSHNEY Juhi Varshney is an emergency physician in Miami.

I’m an emergency physician in Miami, and I see pregnant patients every day.

Sometimes we discover new pregnancie­s. I tell my patients news that changes their lives. We talk through their options. I ask if they want to explore prenatal care, or if they’d like to consider terminatio­n, or if they just need time to process how their world has shifted.

But when Florida rolls out its six-week abortion ban on Wednesday, we can’t do this anymore.

DANGEROUS FOR WOMEN

A “six-week” pregnancy is actually about four weeks old. Pregnancie­s aren’t dated by the age of the embryo. A ban on abortions after six weeks effectivel­y bans abortions altogether.

Pregnancy is one of the most dangerous endeavors that a young healthy woman can undergo. The risk of domestic violence increases when a woman is pregnant, and homicide is a leading cause of death for pregnant women.

Our country has an unreasonab­ly high maternal mortality rate, and Black women suffer most. All of these risks feel more intense for our pediatric patients, some of whom are too young to truly understand.

PHYSICAL TOLL

Pregnancy reroutes blood vessels, compresses the vital organs in the belly, and changes how blood cells bind together, which can lead to devastatin­g blood clots.

Pregnancy can put a woman on bedrest for months, cause life-threatenin­g infections, and lead to seizures. My job trains me to be ready for these emergencie­s, and I hope that my patients never face them. Pregnancy changes everything about a body, and people should be able to choose if or when they are pregnant.

In the emergency department, my patients also include women who wanted their pregnancy so very much. I hear their stories, examine the bleeding, review ultrasound images, and often diagnose early pregnancy loss.

DEVASTATIN­G NEWS

I tell them that at least one in four pregnancie­s end in miscarriag­e. I let them know they aren’t alone and that there’s nothing they could have done differentl­y. Then we talk about their options. We can wait and let the miscarriag­e pass on its own, which four out of five women will do within two months.

We can give them medication­s that help them pass the miscarriag­e in about three days. Or they can schedule an appointmen­t with an OBGYN for a short procedure, but the wait times for this vary quite a bit.

The medication­s we use to treat miscarriag­e in the emergency department are misoprosto­l and mifepristo­ne. These medication­s are safe, and research shows that this combinatio­n is the most effective regimen we have. They’re also the same medication­s used for abortion. Mifepristo­ne is heavily regulated, and there are already multiple barriers to administer­ing it in the emergency department.

IN THE HANDS OF THE COURT

Recently, arguments against mifepristo­ne have been heard in front of the Supreme Court. That ruling will not only impact abortion care, but will affect our ability to care for miscarriag­es too.

These laws have created so much confusion, and women end up paying the price. We see heartbreak­ing headlines over and over again. A woman in Texas was thrown in jail two-years ago after having a miscarriag­e.

Even legal exceptions to abortion law put women at risk. A woman in Florida was discharged after her water broke early because she wasn’t “sick enough” to qualify for a medical exemption. She almost died from blood loss shortly after.

REALITY CHECK

To our legislator­s in Tallahasse­e, the abortion ban is an abstract idea. But if they spent time in the emergency department, up close to the reality of early pregnancy, they would see what I see. And they’d know that this law hurts real women, who have real lives and real health conditions, who support real families, many of whom already have real children.

Women who have real hopes and dreams, who deserve real dignity and real peace, deserve so much better than this.

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