logo
A ‘striking' trend: After Texas banned abortion, more women nearly bled to death during miscarriage

A ‘striking' trend: After Texas banned abortion, more women nearly bled to death during miscarriage

CNN02-07-2025
This story was originally published by ProPublica, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive its biggest stories as soon as they're published.
Before states banned abortion, one of the gravest outcomes of early miscarriage could easily be avoided: Doctors could offer a dilation and curettage procedure, which quickly empties the uterus and allows it to close, protecting against a life-threatening hemorrhage.
But because the procedures, known as D&Cs, are also used to end pregnancies, they have gotten tangled up in state legislation that restricts abortion. Reports now abound of doctors hesitating to provide them and women who are bleeding heavily being discharged from emergency rooms without care, only to return in such dire condition that they need blood transfusions to survive. As ProPublica reported last year, one woman died of hemorrhage after 10 hours in a Houston hospital that didn't perform the procedure.
Now, a new ProPublica data analysis adds empirical weight to the mounting evidence that abortion bans have made the common experience of miscarriage — which occurs in up to 30% of pregnancies — far more dangerous. It is based on hospital discharge data from Texas, the largest state to ban abortion, and captures emergency department visits from 2017 to 2023, the most recent year available.
After Texas made performing abortions a felony in August 2022, ProPublica found, the number of blood transfusions during emergency room visits for first-trimester miscarriage shot up by 54%.
The number of emergency room visits for early miscarriage also rose, by 25%, compared with the three years before the COVID-19 pandemic — a sign that women who didn't receive D&Cs initially may be returning to hospitals in worse condition, more than a dozen experts told ProPublica.
While that phenomenon can't be confirmed by the discharge data, which tracks visits rather than individuals, doctors and researchers who reviewed ProPublica's findings say these spikes, along with the stories patients have shared, paint a troubling picture of the harm that results from unnecessary delays in care.
'This is striking,' said Dr. Elliott Main, a hemorrhage expert and former medical director for the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative. 'The trend is very clear.'
The data mirrors a sharp rise in cases of sepsis — a life-threatening reaction to infection — ProPublica previously identified during second-trimester miscarriage in Texas.
Blood loss is expected during early miscarriage, which usually ends without complication. Some cases, however, can turn deadly very quickly. Main said ProPublica's analysis suggested to him that 'physicians are sitting on nonviable pregnancies longer and longer before they're doing a D&C — until patients are really bleeding.'
That's what happened to Sarah De Pablos Velez in Austin last summer. As she was miscarrying and bleeding profusely, she said physicians didn't explain that she had options for care. Sent home from the emergency room without a D&C two times, she ultimately needed blood transfusions so that she wouldn't die, according to medical records. 'What happened to me was just so wrong,' she told ProPublica. 'Doctors need to be providing care to pregnant women — that needs to be a baseline.'
After ProPublica exposed preventable deaths following delays in care, the Texas Legislature passed a bill this year to clarify that doctors can provide abortions when a patient is facing a life-threatening emergency, even if it is not imminent.
But many Texas doctors say the reform does not address the difficulty of treating women experiencing early miscarriages, which almost always involve blood loss; they say it's hard to know when the expected bleeding might evolve into a life-threatening emergency — one that could have been prevented with a D&C. Women can bleed and remain stable for a long time, until they crash.
Texas forbids abortion at all stages of pregnancy — even before there is cardiac activity or a visible embryo. And while the law allows doctors to 'remove a dead, unborn child,' it can be difficult to determine what that means during early miscarriage, when an array of factors can signal that a pregnancy is not progressing.
An embryo might fail to develop. Cardiac activity may not emerge when it should. Hormone levels might dip or bleeding might increase. Even if a doctor strongly suspects a miscarriage is underway, it can take weeks to conclusively document that a pregnancy has ended, and all the while, a patient might be losing blood.
Some OB-GYNs and emergency room physicians have long been advising patients to complete their miscarriage at home, especially at Catholic hospitals, even if that is not the standard of care. But now, physicians across the state are faced with a law that threatens up to 99 years in prison, and more are making a new calculus around whether to intervene or even tell patients they are likely miscarrying, said Dr. Anitra Beasley, an OB-GYN in Houston. 'What ends up happening is patients have to present multiple times before a diagnosis can be made,' she added, and some of those patients wind up needing blood transfusions.
While they can be lifesaving, transfusions do not stop the bleeding, experts told ProPublica, and they can introduce complications, such as severe allergic reactions, autoimmune disorders or, in rare events, blood cancer. The dangers of hemorrhage are far greater, from organ failure to kidney damage to loss of sensation in the fingers and toes. 'There's a finite amount of blood,' said Dr. Sarah Prager, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington. 'And when it all comes out, you're dead.'
ProPublica's findings about the rise in blood transfusions make clear that women who experience early miscarriages in abortion ban states are living in a more dangerous medical climate than many believe, said Amanda Nagle, a doctoral student investigating the same blood transfusion data for a forthcoming paper in the American Journal of Public Health.
'If people are seeking care at an emergency department,' Nagle said, 'there are serious health risks to delaying that care.'
Waiting for certainty
In some clinics and hospitals across Texas, the pressure to definitively diagnose a miscarriage has led to delays in offering D&Cs.
Considering the chance of criminal prosecution, some doctors now default to what many pregnancy loss experts view as an overly cautious method for diagnosing miscarriage: ultrasound images alone, using criteria from the Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound. Relying only on images to diagnose — and discounting other factors, like lab results or clinical symptoms — can take days or even weeks.
Dr. Gabrielle Taper was a resident at a Catholic hospital in Austin when the ban was enacted, and a culture of fear took hold among her colleagues, she told ProPublica. 'We started asking, 'Are we certain that we can document that we've met the radiology guidelines?' as opposed to just treating the patient in front of us,' she said.
If they couldn't show that the likely miscarriage met the criteria, they often felt they had to discharge patients without offering a D&C. 'People are already in distress, and you are giving them confusion, a false sense of hope,' she told ProPublica. 'Having to send a patient home knowing they may bleed so much they would need a blood transfusion — when I know there are procedures I could do or medicine I could offer — is just excruciating.'
The hospital where she worked did not respond to ProPublica's request for comment.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists does not recommend this approach, advising doctors instead to review the ultrasound as one piece of information among many and counsel patients on all their options.
The Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound said that the guidelines 'are not meant to apply in the setting of a life-threatening situation, such as heavy bleeding,' but did not respond to a question about whether it agreed with ACOG that doctors should use a combination of ultrasound images and clinical judgment to assess a pregnancy loss.
Dr. Courtney A. Schreiber, an obstetrics and gynecology professor and expert in early pregnancy care, said that even if a patient wants to let a likely miscarriage complete at home, the medical team should still explain different management options, including medication to speed up the process or a D&C, should symptoms like bleeding get worse.
'It's our obligation to share information, help manage expectations and keep women safe,' she said.
What happened to Porsha Ngumezi shows how dangerous it can be to delay care, according to more than a dozen doctors who previously reviewed a detailed summary of her case for ProPublica.
When the mother of two showed up bleeding at Houston Methodist Sugar Land in June 2023, at 11 weeks pregnant, her sonogram suggested an 'ongoing miscarriage' was 'likely,' her doctor noted. She had no previous ultrasounds to compare it with, and the radiologist did not locate an embryo or fetus — which Ngumezi said she thought she had passed in a toilet; her doctors did not make a definitive diagnosis, calling it a pregnancy of 'unknown location.' After hours bleeding, passing 'clots the size of grapefruit,' according to a nurse's notes, she received two blood transfusions — a short-term remedy. But she did not get a procedure to empty her uterus, which medical experts agree is the most effective way to stop the bleeding. Hours later, she died of hemorrhage, leaving behind her husband and young sons.
Doctors and nurses involved in Ngumezi's care did not respond to multiple requests for comment for ProPublica's story last fall, and the hospital did not answer questions about her care when asked about it again for this story. A spokesperson from Methodist Hospital said its OB-GYNs follow ACOG's miscarriage diagnosis guidelines, which recommend considering clinical factors in addition to ultrasounds.
Visit after visit
Even in circumstances in which the abortion ban allows a doctor to intervene — to treat a life-threatening emergency, for example, or to 'remove a dead, unborn baby' — there's plenty of evidence, detailed in lawsuits and federal investigations, that doctors in Texas still aren't offering procedures.
As soon as Sarah De Pablos Velez, a 30-year-old media director, learned she was pregnant last summer, she began attending regular checkups at St. David's Women's Care, in Austin. During her third appointment at about nine weeks, a resident, Dr. Carla Vilardo, and her supervisor, Dr. Cynthia Mingea, reviewed the ultrasound, according to medical records, which indicated her pregnancy wasn't viable. Instead of being offered treatment for a miscarriage, De Pablos Velez says she was advised to hold out hope and come back for the next checkup.
Five maternal health experts and practicing OB-GYNs who reviewed the records for ProPublica said by that ultrasound visit, doctors would have had enough information to determine that the pregnancy wasn't viable, even under the most conservative guidelines. If they wanted to be extra sure, they could have done blood work or one more ultrasound during that visit.
Instead, De Pablos Velez was told to come back in two weeks, according to medical records. During a visit when she should have been nearly 11 weeks pregnant, Mingea wrote in her chart she was 'not optimistic' about the pregnancy's viability. Still, De Pablos Velez was advised to return in another week to be sure.
Within a few days, when the cramping got so bad she could barely walk, De Pablos Velez went to the emergency room at St. David's Medical Center, unaware that a D&C could stop the pain and the bleeding. 'I've never researched what it looks like for women who have a miscarriage,' she told ProPublica. 'I always thought you go to the bathroom and have a little bit of blood.'
Over two visits to the emergency room, doctors told her that she could complete the miscarriage at home, even as she reported filling up three toilet bowls with blood and a nurse remarked that they needed a janitor to clean the floor, De Pablos Velez and her husband recalled. No obstetrician ever came to assess her condition, according to medical records, and while her hospital chart says 'all management options have been discussed with the patient and her husband,' De Pablos Velez and her husband both told ProPublica no one offered her a D&C.
She was told to follow up with her OB at her next appointment in three days. Six hours after discharge, though, she was trying to ride out the pain at home when her husband heard her muttering 'lightheaded' in the bathroom and ran to her in time to catch her as she collapsed. 'She was pale as a ghost, sweating, convulsing,' said her husband, Sergio De Pablos Velez. 'There was blood on the toilet, the trash can — like a scene out of a horror movie.'
An ambulance rushed her to the hospital, where doctors realized she no longer had enough blood flowing to her organs. She received two blood transfusions. Without them, several doctors who reviewed her records told ProPublica, she would have soon lost her life.
Vilardo and the doctors who saw De Pablos Velez in the emergency room did not respond to requests to speak with ProPublica or declined to be interviewed. St. David's Medical Center, which is owned by HCA, the largest for-profit hospital chain in America, said it could not discuss her case unless she signed privacy waivers. The hospital did not respond to ProPublica's questions even after she submitted them. The De Pablos Velezes say that a hospital patient liaison told them after the ordeal that the hospital would conduct an internal investigation, educate the emergency department on best practices and share the results. It never shared anything. When ProPublica asked about the status of the investigation, neither the liaison nor the hospital responded.
Mingea, who supervised Vilardo's care during checkups, reviewed the clinic's records with ProPublica and agreed that De Pablos Velez should have been counseled about miscarriage management options at the clinic, weeks before she ended up in the ER. She said she did not know why she wasn't but pointed ProPublica to the Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound criteria, which is hanging on the clinic's wall and is used to teach residents.
She was adamant that her clinic, which she described as 'very pro-choice — about as much as we can be in Texas,' regularly provides D&Cs for miscarrying patients. 'I feel badly that Sarah had this experience, I really do,' she said. 'Everybody deserves to be counseled about all their options.'
Doctors had five opportunities to counsel De Pablos Velez about her options and offer her a D&C, said Dr. Jodi Abbott, an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Boston University School of Medicine, who reviewed case records. If they had, the life-or-death risks could have been avoided.
De Pablos Velez 'basically received the same care Porsha Ngumezi did, only Porsha died and she survived,' said Abbott. 'She was lucky.'
Sophie Chou contributed data reporting, and Mariam Elba contributed research.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Missouri resident hospitalized with 'brain-eating' infection possibly linked to water skiing, officials say
Missouri resident hospitalized with 'brain-eating' infection possibly linked to water skiing, officials say

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Missouri resident hospitalized with 'brain-eating' infection possibly linked to water skiing, officials say

A Missouri resident has been hospitalized with what health officials described as a deadly "brain-eating infection" after possibly waterskiing in a local lake. The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services said in a Wednesday news release that the patient — who they have not identified — appears to have been exposed to a Naegleria fowleri. The agency described Naegleria fowleri as "a microscopic single-celled free-living ameba that can cause a rare, deadly infection of the brain called primary amebic meningoencephalitis (PAM), also known as 'brain-eating' infection." Health officials said that a preliminary investigation suggests that the patient may have been water skiing in the Lake of the Ozarks, a reservoir in central Missouri, days before becoming ill. Naegleria fowleri is commonly found in freshwater, according to the agency, but PAM is "extremely rare." The ameba is typically ingested through the nose and travels up to the brain, where it damages the brain tissue, the agency added. "Recreational water users should assume that Naegleria fowleri is present in warm freshwater across the United States; however, infection remains very rare," the agency said. The health agency said that between 1962 and 2024, there were only 167 reported cases of the infection in the United States. Last month, 12-year-old Jaysen Carr died from contracting PAM days after swimming in Lake Murray in South Carolina, according to a statement the law firm representing Carr's family posted on Facebook. "We stand beside this family not only to seek the truth, but to help ensure no other family endures a loss like this," the Bailey Law Firm said. Early symptoms of PAM include headache, fever, nausea, and vomiting, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC says that most people with PAM die within 1 to 18 days after symptoms begin, and that the infection typically leads to coma and death within five days. The Missouri HHS advised that residents "avoid water-related activities in warm freshwater during periods of high-water temperature," use nose clamps, and avoid putting their heads underwater. It also suggested avoiding the excavation of wet sediment, as "Naegleria fowleri amebas are more likely to live in sediment at the bottom of lakes, ponds, and rivers." This article was originally published on Solve the daily Crossword

Dow Touches First Record High of the Year as UnitedHealth Group Stock Soars
Dow Touches First Record High of the Year as UnitedHealth Group Stock Soars

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Dow Touches First Record High of the Year as UnitedHealth Group Stock Soars

The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened at its first all-time high of the year on Friday as shares of health care giant UnitedHealth Group (UNH) soared. The Dow opened 0.5% higher to trade at about 45,150 Friday morning, leapfrogging its prior record of 45,073 set in early December. UnitedHealth Group led the index higher, rising nearly 12% after a regulatory filing Thursday afternoon revealed Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) had taken a $1.6 billion stake in the company. The Dow is the last of the major large-cap indexes to set a record high this year. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite have closed at records 18 and 20 times, respectively, since the start of the year. The majority of those came in July, when solid earnings reports helped allay some lingering fears about the effect tariffs could have on corporate America's profits. The Dow started 2025 off on the back foot, mostly because of the stock that's fueling its gains today. UnitedHealth Group shares tumbled last December after the CEO of its insurance arm, Brian Thompson, was fatally shot in Manhattan. The shooting reignited debate over U.S. health care costs and intensified criticism of pharmacy benefit managers, including UnitedHealth's OptumRx. UnitedHealth and other insurers continued to struggle in the new year as elevated health care costs crimped their results and federal regulators scrutinized industry billing practices. By early August, UnitedHealth was trading more than 60% off its all-time high set in November. For the Dow to close at a record high, it will need to close above 45,014.04, about 0.2% above its close on Thursday. The index was up 0.2% at 44,995 in recent trading. Read the original article on Investopedia

Marisa Brahney discusses Mom-Approved Back-to-School Survival Tips with YourUpdateTV
Marisa Brahney discusses Mom-Approved Back-to-School Survival Tips with YourUpdateTV

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Marisa Brahney discusses Mom-Approved Back-to-School Survival Tips with YourUpdateTV

Nationwide media tour conducted in conjunction with D S Simon Media discussing back to school strategies every parent needs to know. NEW YORK, Aug. 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Back-to-school season is in full swing, bringing with it the annual focus on tech essentials, budget-conscious shopping, and snacks that keep kids fueled and focused. Lifestyle expert Marisa Brahney recently shared her top strategies for a smooth transition into the school year during a nationwide media tour. Here's a look at her must-know tips. Staying connected this school yearBack-to-school prep can feel like a full-time job. Want a quick hack? Sort your tech early so it's one less thing to stress about. This year, T-Mobile is making it easy with unbeatable deals — like the latest Samsung Galaxy S25 FREE when you add a line and trade in on most plans — plus free tablets, watches, and more. If you're switching, T-Mobile's Easy Upgrade program gives you a free phone and pays off your old one — no trade-in needed. Plus, their new plans come with a 5-year price guarantee. With Magenta Status, you'll get access to perks like free Apple TV+, Hulu, Netflix, DashPass by DoorDash, and satellite connectivity with T-Satellite. And T-Mobile is also helping students stay connected through Project 10Million, offering free internet and hotspots to eligible K–12 families. Learn more at Boosting confidence on campus with self-care A fresh mindset starts with feeling your best— and Olay Super Serum Body Wash helps you do just that. It's infused with a concentrated serum of 5+ skincare ingredients and uses advanced skin-delivery technology to transform skin— whether it's normal, extra dry, or rough and bumpy. You'll see five visible benefits: it hydrates, firms, smooths, brightens, and evens skin tone. In just 14 days, skin goes from dry and dull to radiant and glowing—just in time to hit campus with confidence. For busy college students, it's the easiest way to feel fresh, clean, and ready to make your mark. Health and wellness support for back to school More moms are thinking beyond the basics this back-to-school season. According to consumer research from SmartyPants Vitamins, many parents now view supporting their kid's brain health just as important as supporting their immune health. That's why parents love SmartyPants Kids Multi & Omegas. It includes a focused blend of six research-backed nutrients, including Iodine, Riboflavin, Biotin, and Vitamins B6, B12, and C, to help support children's brain health.*† Plus, overall, it contains 16 daily nutrients designed to help fill common gaps and to support kids' growing bodies. With unique ingredients like Omega-3s, Methylfolate, and Methylcobalamin, SmartyPants goes beyond the basics, offering a high-quality product including nutrients that are backed by science and easiest for the body to recognize and absorb. They are also Certified Free-From the 9 major allergens and a Clean Label Project® Purity Award winner. And the best part? Kids actually love the taste, making it one of the simplest, most stress-free ways to help support their wellness and brain health all school year long. Snack smarter for back to school season and beyond Getting kids out the door in the morning can feel like a mini adventure all on its own. Between lost shoes, forgotten permission slips, and getting lunches packed, parents are always looking for snacks that are quick, reliable, and something their kids will actually eat! That's why they love Zbar energy snack bars. This back-to-school season, Zbar is teaming up with Moana to help parents get their little explorers ready to bravely take on all the unknowns and adventures of the new school year. Designed to provide parents with fuel their kids will love, Zbar energy snack bars are non-GMO and USDA Organic certified, with 11 to 13 grams of whole grains per bar. And the kids love the flavors— especially the Iced Oatmeal Cookie, Chocolate Chip, and Chocolate Brownie flavors. There's even a new limited-edition flavor, Chocolate Chip Banana Bread Zbar, available exclusively at Walmart. And here's something fun— families can enter the Zbar back-to-school sweepstakes for a chance to win a trip to explore a Hawaiian island and give their child the chance to chart their own adventure! Managing costs for back to school shopping doesn't have to be a burden Parents know how important it is to stick to a budget while still checking off all those must-haves. That's where Affirm comes in. It lets you pay over time, responsibly, with no late or hidden fees. Whether you're stocking up on school supplies, dorm gear, or those pricey athletic shoes, Affirm gives you the flexibility to pay in a way that works for your family. You can shop with Affirm at top retailers like Amazon, DICK'S Sporting Goods, Newegg, and more. Download the Affirm app or select Affirm at checkout; enter a few pieces of information to confirm eligibility and shop almost anywhere. It's a great way to stay on top of spending— and keep everyone happy, from grade school to college! For more information, see lending terms at Subject to eligibility. For more information, visit †Iodine, Riboflavin, Biotin, and Vitamins B6, B12, and C Support Brain Health* *These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. About YourUpdateTV:YourUpdateTV is a property of D S Simon Media. The video included and release was part of a media tour that was produced by D S Simon Media on behalf of Dante MuccigrossoDirector of Media Integration & Client ReportingE: dantem@ 973.524.0104 A video accompanying this announcement is available at in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store