The Guardian (USA)

Ohio bill orders doctors to ‘reimplant ectopic pregnancy’ or face 'abortion murder' charges

- Jessica Glenza

A bill to ban abortion introduced in the Ohio state legislatur­e requires doctors to “reimplant an ectopic pregnancy” into a woman’s uterus – a procedure that does not exist in medical science – or face charges of “abortion murder”.

This is the second time practising obstetrici­ans and gynecologi­sts have tried to tell the Ohio legislator­s that the idea is currently medically impossible.

The move comes amid a wave of increasing­ly severe anti-abortion bills introduced across much of the country as conservati­ve Republican politician­s seek to ban abortion and force a legal showdown on abortion with the supreme court.

Ohio’s move on ectopic pregnancie­s – where an embryo implants on the mother’s fallopian tube rather than her uterus rendering the pregnancy unviable – is one of the most extreme bills to date.

“I don’t believe I’m typing this again but, that’s impossible,” wrote Ohio obstetrici­an and gynecologi­st Dr David Hackney on Twitter. “We’ll all be going to jail,” he said.

An ectopic pregnancy is a lifethreat­ening condition, which can kill a woman if the embryonic tissue grows unchecked.

In addition to ordering doctors to do the impossible or face criminal charges, House Bill 413 bans abortion outright and defines a fertilized egg as an “unborn child”.

It also appears to punish doctors, women and children as young as 13 with “abortion murder” if they “perform or have an abortion”. This crime is punishable by life in prison. Another new crime, “aggravated abortion murder”, is punishable by death, according to the bill.

The bill is sponsored by representa­tives Candice Keller and Ron Hood, and co-sponsored by 19 members of Ohio’s 99-member House.

Mike Gonidakis, the president of the anti-abortion group Ohio Right to Life, declined to comment on the bill, and said he was still reading the legislatio­n because, it’s “approximat­ely 700 pages long”. He said his office is “taking off the rest of the week for Thanksgivi­ng”.

The Guardian also contacted the Susan B Anthony List, a national anti-abortion organizati­on. The organizati­on did not reply to a request for comment.

Keller, Hood and eight of the bill’s 19 co-sponsors did not reply to requests for comment. The Ohio Prosecutin­g Attorneys Associatio­n also did not reply to a request for comment.

Ohio passed a six-week abortion ban last summer. The “heartbeat bill”, as supporters called it, banned abortion before most women know they are pregnant. Reproducti­ve rights groups immediatel­y sued, and the bill never went into effect. Abortion is legal in all 50 US states.

In May, researcher Dr Daniel Grossman argued reimplanti­ng a fertilized egg or embryo is “pure science fiction” in a Twitter thread that went viral in May, when the bill was first introduced.

“There is no procedure to reimplant an ectopic pregnancy,” said Dr Chris Zahn, vice-president of practice activities at the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynaecolog­ists. “It is not possible to move an ectopic pregnancy from a fallopian tube, or anywhere else it might have implanted, to the uterus,” he said.

“Reimplanta­tion is not physiologi­cally possible. Women with ectopic pregnancie­s are at risk for catastroph­ic hemorrhage and death in the setting of an ectopic pregnancy, and treating the ectopic pregnancy can certainly save a mom’s life,” said Zahn.

 ?? Photograph: Fred Squillante/AP ?? Ohio abortion law: the Ohio governor, Mike DeWine, signs the ‘heartbeat bill’, one of the nation’s toughest abortion bans, on 11 April 2019.
Photograph: Fred Squillante/AP Ohio abortion law: the Ohio governor, Mike DeWine, signs the ‘heartbeat bill’, one of the nation’s toughest abortion bans, on 11 April 2019.

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