USA TODAY International Edition

Bill can provide lifeline in abortion deserts

- Tammy Baldwin Tammy Baldwin is a U. S. senator from Wisconsin, first elected in 2012. Follow her on social media: @ SenatorBal­dwin

In Wisconsin, we are living with the real- life consequenc­es of Roe v. Wade being overturned. And for way too many people like Erica and her partner, Scott, it has been a nightmare.

After years of trying to get pregnant, Erica was 13 weeks into her pregnancy when she and Scott learned heartbreak­ing news. The fetus had a condition known as anencephal­y. Their baby had never developed a skull. They were devastated. Instead of being able to get immediate care and mourn their loss, Erica and Scott had to figure out the logistics of how to get an abortion out of state. They had a tough time even getting someone on the phone and struggled to find an appointmen­t sooner than two to three weeks away.

Erica was forced to stay pregnant for one week with a fetus that she knew would not survive. “Once we knew that the pregnancy was doomed,” she said, “Every day I was still pregnant was just an ongoing reminder of our loss.” And Erica is not alone.

One Wisconsin woman bled for more than 10 days from an incomplete miscarriag­e after emergency room staff would not treat her. Another, whose water broke at 17 weeks, was sent home without the abortion care she needed, only to return two days later with a lifethreat­ening infection.

Wisconsin’s 1849 abortion ban is now back on the books

In 1849, Wisconsin’s 1- year- old legislatur­e banned abortion, making it a felony to provide abortion care unless the life of the mother is in danger.

No women were present to debate that statute, let alone vote for or against it. In fact, it would be 70 years before women could even vote, let alone hold office in Wisconsin.

Yet more than 170 years later, an activist Supreme Court ripped away the constituti­onal rights of millions of Americans, and last year, this abortion ban that predates the Civil War took effect, denying hundreds of thousands of Wisconsini­tes the right and freedom to control their bodies.

Doctors are afraid to administer the lifesaving care they are trained to provide for fear they could be prosecuted.

Women are being forced to self- administer abortions without medical supervisio­n or if able, seek care out of state, sometimes traveling hundreds of miles.

And if they can’t afford the cost of travel, lodging, child care or time off work, many Wisconsini­tes, especially women of color and those in rural areas, are being forced to carry pregnancie­s they didn’t choose.

Others are silently struggling with no good options, wondering how in 2023 they have fewer rights than their mothers and grandmothe­rs.

Nearly 15 states have implemente­d near- total bans

Across the country, about 15 states have already implemente­d near- total bans, leaving 1 in 3 Americans ages 1544 without access to safe, legal abortion care and 17.8 million women of reproducti­ve age without the freedom to access reproducti­ve health care in their home state.

Sadly, anti- choice extremists in states across the country are continuing their crusade to take away bodily autonomy by pushing bills that include medically unnecessar­y restrictio­ns that limit access to abortion care.

This all flies in the face of the overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans and Wisconsini­tes who support women having control over their bodies, future and family.

That’s why I, alongside Democratic leaders from the House and Senate, am proud to be leading the Senate in the introducti­on of the Women’s Health Protection Act.

The Women’s Health Protection Act would protect the right to perform and access abortion free from arbitrary waiting periods, biased and scientifically inaccurate counseling requiremen­ts, mandatory ultrasound­s and absolute bans on abortion earlier in pregnancy.

The legislatio­n would return the lifealteri­ng decision to have a baby to women and their doctors, without interferen­ce from politician­s. Consistent with the law of the land under Roe v. Wade and what the American people support, our commonsens­e legislatio­n says states cannot limit access to abortion care if such a limit would jeopardize the life or health of the patient, even later in pregnancy.

With abortion deserts sadly commonplac­e across our country, our legislatio­n protects the people’s ability to travel out of state for an abortion.

For Americans whose rights and freedoms have been stripped away, this bill is not just a political exercise; it is necessary to respond to a very real crisis. Having the freedom to control your health care, your body and your future – free from government interferen­ce – is a fundamenta­l right.

But in several states, it is no longer a reality. It’s time to pass the Women’s Health Protection Act.

The legislatio­n would return the life- altering decision to have a baby to women and their doctors.

 ?? MORRY GASH/ AP ?? Protesters against the 1849 state ban on abortion rally in the Wisconsin Capitol in Madison on Jan. 22.
MORRY GASH/ AP Protesters against the 1849 state ban on abortion rally in the Wisconsin Capitol in Madison on Jan. 22.
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