Skip to main content

We need to talk about abortion: Roe v. Wade and its overturn


On June 24, 2022, the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the 1973 case that provided women with a legal basis for a right to get an abortion. (Full text of opinion and dissent here--pay attention to page 148 to the end, the dissent.) This will make it difficult and dangerous for women in states whose legislatures oppose abortion to terminate a pregnancy. Many women, regardless of what state they live in, now believe that it is illegal for them to get an abortion. The amount of misinformation going around regarding this subject has been large, and now it is frustratingly larger.

In the face of all this confusion, I would like to praise the JAMA (Journal of the AMA) for publishing a very nice, straightforward article about how to provide medical abortion in the first 10-11 weeks of pregnancy. By medical, I mean pills. There is a pretty simple combination of a couple of common medications, one to reverse the effects of progesterone and the other to permit the cervix to open to allow passage of the products of conception. The effect is a very heavy period, with cramping and bleeding that can last a few weeks.

But the whole concept of abortion and how it has been treated in the US is fraught with difficulty. Roe v. Wade allowed that abortion was essential and that is should not be substantially regulated by the government in the first trimester and that prior to viability (a moving target, but somewhere toward the end of the second trimester) the government could not regulate it other than to provide for the health of the mother. As a fetus gets more mature, abortion gets more dangerous for the mother, and carries more emotional weight. At 15 weeks, far before it would be able to survive outside the uterus, a fetus is about the size of a small mango and looks like a baby. Having done many ultrasound exams on mothers in their first and second trimesters, I'd have to say that the little critter swimming around in the womb isn't nothing and choosing to end its brief journey would have to be heart wrenching. For both the mother and for the doctor performing the procedure. 

But women are not incubators and shouldn't be treated as that. Carrying a baby is a huge responsibility, changes ones body forever and often completely waylays ones education and life path, even if the mother decides to give up the baby for adoption. And if abortion were murder, which many anti-abortion/pro-life activists assert, does it even make sense that all of the women who decide to terminate a pregnancy and all of their doctors who provide that service are murderers? It just doesn't make sense. Getting an abortion is difficult and painful and women don't actually want to do it. When they do this difficult thing, it is to preserve their future, and in some cases their ability to have children for whom they can create a good home and a happy childhood. I see no reason to believe that state governments are more able to make a correct moral and ethical decision than individual women who are pregnant.

I am living in a state with a "trigger law" banning abortion after Roe v. Wade is overturned. The governor released a message saying that we need to support women more when abortion is no longer legal (which he is happy about), including allowing them time to take care of their babies and children and providing social support systems and family planning (I assume he means birth control.) We always needed that. If we had the ability to support young people in this way after my state bans abortion, why didn't we do it before? Was my state just being vindictive to young women? Encouraging women to get abortions because carrying a baby to term would be really hard?

But back to the JAMA article and more information I have been picking up about medical abortion. The basic facts of the process are that a women who is less than 77 days pregnant can take 200 mg of mifepristone, followed by an 800 microgram tablet of misoprostil, either dissolved in the mouth or in the vagina. These medications are easily available. Misoprostil has been used for years to protect the stomach from the irritating effects of anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen by reducing acid production and bolstering the protective mucus layer in the stomach. It is also commonly used for cervical "ripening" when inducing labor. Mifepristone, initially released as RU 486, in also useful in treating uterine tumors and Cushing's disease.  In states where abortion is legal, these drugs can be prescribed by a patient's doctor and covered by insurance. In states where abortion is prohibited, women can still buy the drugs online, with advice of a doctor, and the cost is not very high. Since the US mail is not regulated by the states, women should maintain the right to use a service like this. This does require that women be very tuned in to their cycles so that they can identify pregnancy early if they need to terminate it.

For now, there are good reasons to believe that this pill option for terminating a pregnancy will remain an option for the vast majority of women. But there is also room for doubt. States could pass laws making it illegal to obtain pills for use in a woman's own home. A congress with a particularly strong desire to control women's lives could pass a law making abortion illegal nationwide. Those are some chilling scenarios.

For now, though, what I see as the biggest impediment to women, especially those who are young or living in poverty, in getting the care they need in early pregnancy is misinformation and unwillingness to talk about these issues. I have hesitated to write about it, because I worried that strong feelings on both sides of the issue would reward me with the internet's version of hate mail. But that nice brief informative article in JAMA gave me courage. Those of us with useful information to share should do that. The shame some people feel associated with activities that result in unintended pregnancy stifles conversation and puts women in grave danger when it comes to protecting themselves from pregnancy complications, sexually transmitted diseases and sexual violence and coercion. We need to talk about these things.

 


Comments

herbert said…
This has brought up a lot of 'energy' that I'd mostly carried quietly. I lived "off the grid" for 12 years, and provided unassisted midwife service to my wife for 4 children, at home... all of who are alive today. This is a post to my Facebook page this A.M.
*******
Some theory here: It's my belief that Morality is derived from "the Maternal Instinct", and doesn't rely on 'commandments' or edicts handed down from some Deity. It's a quality found throughout Mammalian species.
Okay... from that position I want to consider the difference between the male & female response to pregnancy and the resulting offspring.
For males- especially in our culture- pregnancy is "something for WOMEN to deal with"; and while some males may feel some twinge of responsibility (often depending upon their feelings for the impregnated female) there's very little to compel any sense of providing a responsible reaction to an impregnation.
For women, being pregnant offers a future of a painful future event, followed by a very demanding period of several years attending to this new human presence... and compound inconveniences, both physical, emotional, & economic. It will alter plans & dreams. It will provide TWO bodies- & futures- to plan for (& worry about.)
Given modern technologies, it would be possible to identify the male partner of this "new human" event. If there were any 'justice' it would make sense to determine paternity, in those cases where there was no mutual interest in the people involved establishing a partnership, a household, marriage, etc... and having legal means to establish some kind of support of the new human involved. But, in a society where rape case evidence may sit for YEARS unexamined, it's not very likely that this kind of egalitarian response would be forthcoming. (OK... just a guess.. but an 'educated' guess)
*******
I strongly agree with you, that if 'we' were going to be prepared to support the poor, the single mom, etc, as soon as abortion became illegal, well, WHY DID 'WE' WAIT? ^..^
Anonymous said…
Thank you for your post and mentioning the JAMA article. As a nurse educator, battling misinformation is critical.
Anonymous said…
I’m glad to hear your take on it. Thanks for your courage! ~jen

Popular posts from this blog

How to make your own ultrasound gel (which is also sterile and edible and environmentally friendly) **UPDATED--NEW RECIPE**

I have been doing lots of bedside ultrasound lately and realized how useful it would be in areas far off the beaten track like Haiti, for instance. With a bedside ultrasound (mine fits in my pocket) I could diagnose heart disease, kidney and gallbladder problems, various cancers as well as lung and intestinal diseases. Then I realized that I would have to take a whole bunch of ultrasound gel with me which would mean that I would have to check luggage, which is a real pain when traveling light to a place where luggage disappears. I heard that you can use water, or spit, in a pinch, or even lotion, though oil based coupling media apparently break down the surface of the transducer. Or, of course, you can just use ultrasound gel. Ultrasound requires an aqueous interface between the transducer and the skin or else all you see is black. Ultrasound gel is a clear goo, looks like hair gel or aloe vera, and is made by several companies out of various combinations of propylene glycol, glyce

Ivermectin for Covid--Does it work? We don't know.

  Lately there has been quite a heated controversy about whether to use ivermectin for Covid-19.  The FDA , a US federal agency responsible for providing unbiased information to protect people from harmful drugs, foods, even tobacco products, has said that there is not good evidence of ivermectin's safety and effectiveness in treating Covid 19, and that just about sums up what we truly know about ivermectin in the context of Covid. The CDC, Centers for Disease Control, a branch of the department of Health and Human Services, tasked with preventing and treating disease and injury, also recently warned  people not to use ivermectin to treat Covid outside of actual clinical trials. Certain highly qualified physicians, including ones who practice critical care medicine and manage many patients with severe Covid infections in the intensive care unit vocally support the use of ivermectin to treat Covid and have published dosing schedules and reviews of the literature supporting it for tr

Old Fangak, South Sudan--Bedside Ultrasound and other stuff

I just got back from a couple of weeks in Old Fangak, a community of people living by the Zaraf River in South Sudan. It's normally a small community, with an open market and people who live by raising cows, trading on the river, fishing and gardening. Now there are tens of thousands of people there, still displaced from their homes by the civil war which has gone on intermittently for decades. There are even more people now than there were last year. There is a hospital in Old Fangak, which is run by Jill Seaman, one of the founders of Sudan Medical relief and a fierce advocate for treatment of various horrible and neglected tropical diseases, along with some very skilled and committed local clinical officers and nurses and a contingent of doctors, nurses and support staff from Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders, also known as MSF) who have been helping out for a little over a year. The hospital attempts to do a lot with a little, and treats all who present ther