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Republican Kat Cammack's Pregnancy Care Issues Blamed On The Left
Republican Kat Cammack's Pregnancy Care Issues Blamed On The Left

Buzz Feed

time25-06-2025

  • Health
  • Buzz Feed

Republican Kat Cammack's Pregnancy Care Issues Blamed On The Left

Republican Congressperson Kat Cammack is making headlines for blaming her doctors' reluctance to end her life-threatening pregnancy on Democrats. Yes, you read that correctly. In a new interview with the Wall Street Journal, Kat recalled experiencing an ectopic pregnancy last year, shortly after Florida's six-week abortion ban went into effect. She was about five weeks pregnant, the embryo had no heartbeat, and a doctor told her she could die. Even so, Kat says the hospital staff hesitated to expel the pregnancy as they were afraid of prosecution. She argued for hours and even tried calling Governor Ron DeSantis's office; in the end, they agreed to give her the shot of methotrexate she needed. In a remarkable display of cognitive dissonance, the lawmaker blamed liberal "fearmongering" for her issues at the hospital, suggesting the left's messaging around abortion bans ultimately made doctors paranoid (but apparently not the heavy consequences that come with breaking the abortion bans). The fall of Roe v. Wade paved the way for abortion bans and restrictions in states throughout the US, with disastrous consequences. According to the Center of Reproductive Rights, people are experiencing delayed or denied care because providers fear severe penalties. In Florida, doctors can face felony charges, five years in prison, and up to a $5K fine for performing the procedure. In Texas, it's even harsher, with doctors facing felony charges, life in prison, and a $100K fine. In both states, they can also lose their medical licenses. Amber Thurman. Josseli Barnica. Nevaeh Crain. These are the names of some of the women who've died in red states due to delayed care under abortion bans in recent years. I'm obviously not a doctor, but it seems like their deaths might've been prevented if not for the criminalization of abortion care. Amber's doctors waited 19 hours. Josseli's waited 40. Nevaeh visited the emergency room three times. To think that we had the knowledge and technology to save these women, but the doctors felt their hands were tied by the state. As a woman who lives in Texas, I'm always heartbroken by the news of any person dying due to the draconian abortion laws here. According to the Gender Equity Policy Institute, Texas has the highest number of maternal deaths in the US (and the rates are significantly worse for Black women). Before any conservatives ask if that's simply because Texas is the second-most populated state, California has the largest population but the lowest maternal mortality rate in the country. I wonder why. In addition to horrific loss of life, abortion bans have impacted healthcare in myriad other ways. Some OB-GYNs have left red states altogether. The number of med school graduates applying for OB-GYN residencies in states with abortion bans has decreased. Abortion bans are also worsening maternity care deserts. So, I struggle to sympathize with Kat Cammack. Instead of empathizing with all people who might want or need abortions, she remains a co-chair of the House Pro-Life Caucus. "How can that be?" you might ask. Well, in true Republican fashion, she decided that her situation was special. Kat told the Wall Street Journal, "There will be some comments like, 'Well, thank God we have abortion services,' even though what I went through wasn't an abortion." I don't care if she insists on calling the procedure any other name. The fact of the matter is Kat needed to end her pregnancy — just like so many other people do in this country, for any number of reasons — and an abortion ban interfered with her care. It's astounding to me that she's chosen to fight only for people "experiencing a miscarriage and an ectopic" like she did rather than criticizing the abortion bans themselves. Until she decides to fight for all people's abortion rights, I find her words as outrageous and reprehensible as this administration. Do better, Kat.

People in states with abortion bans are twice as likely to die during pregnancy
People in states with abortion bans are twice as likely to die during pregnancy

Yahoo

time23-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

People in states with abortion bans are twice as likely to die during pregnancy

Pregnant people living in states with abortion bans are almost twice as likely to die during pregnancy or soon after giving birth, a report released Wednesday found. The risk is greatest for Black women in states with bans, who are 3.3 times more likely to die than White women in those same states. The Gender Equity Policy Institute, a nonprofit research and policy organization that put out the report, found that pregnancy-related death rates have increased in states with abortion bans since Roe v. Wade was overturned; meanwhile, death rates have declined in states that protect abortion access. The report found that pregnant Black women, White women and Latinas are all at greater risk of death in states with abortion bans than they would be if they lived in states that protect abortion rights. 'There are two Americas for reproductive-aged women and people who can become pregnant in the United States,' said Nancy Cohen, founder of the Gender Equity Policy Institute. 'One America, where you're at serious risk of major health complications or death if you become pregnant, and one where you're most likely to have a positive birth experience, a healthy pregnancy and a healthy child.' Researchers compared pregnancy-related deaths in states where abortion is almost completely banned and where it is protected. (The World Health Organization defines pregnancy-related deaths as ones experienced while pregnant or within 42 days of the pregnancy ending, and only if the death was 'from any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management.') The report relies on data from the federal government's National Vital Statistics Section, analyzing pregnancy-related deaths from 2019 through 2023. The data focused on people who identified as 'mother' and did not specifically study pregnancy-related deaths for transgender and nonbinary people. Health care providers have warned for years that abortion bans pose risks to pregnant patients' lives. Though these laws have narrow exceptions if the abortion is necessary to save a pregnant person's life, doctors have reported that their language is vague and confusing. As a result, many have said they have had to wait until a patient is approaching death before they can intervene, at which point it may be too late. Even before the end of Roe, many states with more restrictions on the procedure had higher pregnancy-related death rates, including Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi. But the report suggests that the divides between states have only grown since the loss of federal abortion protections. In Texas, the largest state to ban abortion, the trend is most pronounced: In 2022, the first full year Texas had outlawed most abortions, pregnancy-related deaths went up by 56 percent, the report found — a much larger jump than the national increase of 11 percent. In states with abortion protections, the report found pregnancy-related deaths declined by 21 percent since the end of Roe. The impact in Texas was most visible among White women, who typically have far lower rates of pregnancy-related deaths — but who, in 2022, saw a 95 percent increase in deaths. In 2023, the report found, White women and Latinas in Texas were 1.7 times more likely to die because of their pregnancy compared to their peers in states with laws protecting abortion rights. This is especially stark when compared to pregnant people in California, which has the lowest rate of pregnancy-related death: Latinas in Texas were three times more likely to die, and White women were twice as likely. 'The spike in White maternal mortality in Texas is a canary in the coal mine, because White women typically have far lower rates of maternal mortality,' Cohen said. 'We know from some of the reporting of individual cases in Texas that these are women with insurance, they're middle class. And what it suggests is the breadth of the potential impact of abortion bans.' Still, giving birth in Texas remains most perilous for Black women — who in 2023 were 2.5 times more likely to die because of pregnancy compared to White women in the state. Nationally, Black women in states with abortion bans are at the greatest risk of pregnancy-related death; the analysis found that among Black women, 60.9 die for every 100,000 live births, compared to 18.2 White women and 18.2 Latinas. That inequality is not new — systemic inequalities in the reproductive health system, including implicit bias among health providers, have meant that Black and Native American women have for years faced far higher rates of pregnancy-related death. But the data underscores that the risks are even greater in states with abortion restrictions. Black women were 1.45 times more likely in those states to die as a result of pregnancy than their peers in states with protections. Black women disproportionately live in states that have banned abortion. It's not necessarily clear if or how abortion bans themselves have played a role. Since abortion bans took effect in 2022, the rate of pregnancy-related deaths has increased for Black women in restrictive states, but the growth was not statistically significant. That could be because the populations analyzed were increasingly specific, making it difficult to conduct analysis. It could also be because Black women already faced substantially higher rates of pregnancy-related death. But the report's broader findings suggest abortion bans are likely amplifying the crisis, Cohen argued. 'What we do see is it's worse for Black women in banned states compared both to their counterparts within the state and compared to Black women's outcomes in supportive states,' she said. 'It gives strong evidence that this public policy choice is leading to terrible outcomes.' The post People in states with abortion bans are twice as likely to die during pregnancy appeared first on The 19th. 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Husband says Texas abortion law led to pregnant wife's death
Husband says Texas abortion law led to pregnant wife's death

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Husband says Texas abortion law led to pregnant wife's death

Hope Ngumezi still can't believe he had to bury his wife after he took her to a Texas hospital for a miscarriage when she was 11 weeks pregnant. "I blame the doctors, I blame the hospital, and I blame the state of Texas," Ngumezi said. In 2021, Texas lawmakers passed a near-total abortion ban. The Texas Heartbeat Act allows an exception only if a pregnant woman's life is in danger or faces a serious risk — but doctors told CBS News the law lacks clarity around how danger and serious risk are defined. "I feel like the law is very dangerous," Ngumezi said. Porsha Ngumezi wasn't given a D&C, a surgical procedure that can be used when a miscarriage isn't complete and the patient is bleeding excessively — as Ngumezi was at the time. It's the same procedure used for many abortions, but doctors told CBS News their colleagues hesitate to perform them, fearing the state's criminal penalties. Ngumezi believes that's what happened in his wife's situation. She eventually went into cardiac arrest and died. "I just felt like the doctor turned his back on us. You know, 'I don't want to go to jail. I don't want to lose my license or get fined, so the best course is for me to protect myself,'" Ngumezi said. The Texas law may be impacting the maternal mortality rate. Between 2019 and 2022, that rate increased by 56% after the state outlawed abortions, according to Gender Equity Policy Institute. During the same period, the rate increased by just 11% on a national scale. Maternal mortality is defined as the death of a woman during or within 42 days of the end of pregnancy from causes related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management, but excluding accidental or incidental causes. State Sen. Bryan Hughes, who authored the legislation banning most abortions in Texas, said, "Most hospitals are getting this right, but some are not." In response to doctors' concerns about the ramifications, Hughes said, "I hear that. And I can show you the definition of abortion in Texas and it says removal of a miscarriage is not an abortion." Hughes said the legislature is working on clarifying the language, but the law has yet to be amended. As for Ngumezi, he's doing the best he can as a single dad of two boys. "We're not supposed to be worried about, man if I have a complication, am I gonna lose my life? Would a doctor give me the proper care?" Ngumezi said. It's critical care he worries is guided by the fear of prosecution, rather than saving mothers' lives. Sneak peek: The Puzzling Death of Susann Sills Inside Trump's call with Vladimir Putin DOGE evicts U.S. Institute of Peace board members

Grieving husband says "reckless" Texas abortion law led to pregnant wife's death
Grieving husband says "reckless" Texas abortion law led to pregnant wife's death

CBS News

time19-03-2025

  • Health
  • CBS News

Grieving husband says "reckless" Texas abortion law led to pregnant wife's death

Hope Ngumezi still can't believe he had to bury his wife after he took her to a Texas hospital for a miscarriage when she was 11 weeks pregnant. "I blame the doctors, I blame the hospital, and I blame the state of Texas," Ngumezi said. In 2021, Texas lawmakers passed a near-total abortion ban . The Texas Heartbeat Act allows an exception only if a pregnant woman's life is in danger or faces a serious risk — but doctors told CBS News the law lacks clarity around how danger and serious risk are defined. "I feel like the law is very dangerous," Ngumezi said. Porsha Ngumezi wasn't given a D&C, a surgical procedure that can be used when a miscarriage isn't complete and the patient is bleeding excessively — as Ngumezi was at the time. It's the same procedure used for many abortions, but doctors told CBS News their colleagues hesitate to perform them , fearing the state's criminal penalties. Ngumezi believes that's what happened in his wife's situation. She eventually went into cardiac arrest and died. "I just felt like the doctor turned his back on us. You know, 'I don't want to go to jail. I don't want to lose my license or get fined, so the best course is for me to protect myself,'" Ngumezi said. The Texas law may be impacting the maternal mortality rate. Between 2019 and 2022, that rate increased by 56% after the state outlawed abortions, according to Gender Equity Policy Institute. During the same period, the rate increased by just 11% on a national scale. Maternal mortality is defined as the death of a woman during or within 42 days of the end of pregnancy from causes related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management, but excluding accidental or incidental causes. State Sen. Bryan Hughes, who authored the legislation banning most abortions in Texas, said, "Most hospitals are getting this right, but some are not." In response to doctors' concerns about the ramifications , Hughes said, "I hear that. And I can show you the definition of abortion in Texas and it says removal of a miscarriage is not an abortion." Hughes said the legislature is working on clarifying the language, but the law has yet to be amended. As for Ngumezi, he's doing the best he can as a single dad of two boys. "We're not supposed to be worried about, man if I have a complication, am I gonna lose my life? Would a doctor give me the proper care?" Ngumezi said. It's critical care he worries is guided by the fear of prosecution, rather than saving mothers' lives.

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