Texarkana Gazette

Five women denied abortions sue Texas in landmark post-Roe case

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Five women have filed a lawsuit against Texas over the state’s near-total abortion ban in the first case of its kind since the Supreme Court overturned Roe last year.

The women say the Republican-led state’s abortion law has denied them, and countless other pregnant women, proper obstetrics health care and placed their lives in danger, according to the lawsuit unsealed Tuesday.

The suit, first reported by the New York Times, is the first to be brought on behalf of women denied abortions against a state that enacted a new abortion ban after the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, the group representi­ng the women say.

Texas’s abortion ban has stoked fears among physicians of losing their licenses, being fined, and possibly facing civil and criminal charges for performing lifesaving obstetrics care, according to the suit, filed in Travis County District Court. This, the women say, has created a hush-hush code within the medical community that prevented them from accessing urgent care when they needed it most.

All five women should have qualified for an abortion under the law’s exception, lead attorney Molly Duane said at a Tuesday news conference.

“We invite the court to help us craft a remedy to make sure the harms we are seeing every day in Texas and in the country do not continue to happen,” Duane said.

Nancy Northup, president and CEO for the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights, said the lawsuit was the first of its kind but is unlikely to be the last.

“It is now dangerous to be pregnant in Texas,” Northup told reporters at Tuesday’s news conference alongside four of the five women. ” … No one should be forced to wait at death’s door to receive health care… . These women represent only the tip of the iceberg.”

As a result of the ban, four of the women were forced to travel to other states to get emergency abortions, the lawsuit states. The fifth, lead plaintiff Amanda Zurawski, could not have an abortion despite her fetus having no chance of surviving, and was only allowed to deliver after she became septic, leaving her with permanent physical damage.

At Tuesday’s news conference, Zurawski, 35, recounted the day she learned during her 18th week of pregnancy that her fetus would not survive after she was diagnosed with an “incompeten­t cervix,” weakening of the cervical tissue that causes premature dilation of the cervix.

Zurawski, who underwent a-year-and-a-half of fertility treatments, was only allowed to deliver baby Willow after she developed sepsis, the lawsuit states. Willow died after birth.

“We were told by multiple doctors that the loss of my daughter was inevitable,” Zurawski said Tuesday. “Even though I had lost all of my amniotic fluid - something an unborn child cannot survive without - we had to wait.”

After the delivery, court records state, she spent three days in the ICU while doctors treated her infection, which left her with an obstructed fallopian tube.

“I could not put adequately into words the trauma or despair that comes with waiting to lose your own life, your child’s life or both,” Zurawski said. “For days, I was locked in this bizarre and avoidable hell. Would Willow’s heart stop, or would I deteriorat­e to the point of death?”

Another of the women suing the state, Lauren Miller, 35, said she had no option but to fly with her husband to Colorado to undergo a fetal reduction abortion to save the life of one of her twins at 15 weeks.

“How is it that I can get an abortion for a dog but not for me?” Miller asked Tuesday.

One of Miller’s twins was diagnosed with trisomy 18, a condition with a high chance of miscarriag­e or stillbirth, and low survival rates beyond their first birthday, court records state. Her life and the life of her other baby depended on an abortion that the state of Texas denied her, she said.

“I was lucky,” Miller said. “I had the connection­s with out-of-state doctors. I had family to watch my son. We had the time and money to make the journey, but money and privilege should not dictate how much access [a woman has.]”

The lawsuit comes as drugstore chains have become another battlegrou­nd in the fight for abortion and medication access in the United States. Walgreens recently announced that it would not distribute abortion pills in 20 Republican-led states, including some where abortion medication is legal.

 ?? ?? Amanda Zurawski, one of five plaintiffs in Zurawski v. State of Texas, speaks Tuesday in front of the Texas State Capitol in Austin, Texas, as the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights and the plaintiffs announced their lawsuit, which asks for clarity in Texas law as to when abortions can be provided under the “medical emergency” exception. All five women were denied medical care while experienci­ng pregnancy complicati­ons that threatened their health and lives. (Sara Diggins/Austin American-Statesman via AP)
Amanda Zurawski, one of five plaintiffs in Zurawski v. State of Texas, speaks Tuesday in front of the Texas State Capitol in Austin, Texas, as the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights and the plaintiffs announced their lawsuit, which asks for clarity in Texas law as to when abortions can be provided under the “medical emergency” exception. All five women were denied medical care while experienci­ng pregnancy complicati­ons that threatened their health and lives. (Sara Diggins/Austin American-Statesman via AP)

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