Even More Texas Women Are Going To Be Tortured & Die From Abortion Bans -Warning
Deaths of pregnant women have skyrocketed 56% in Texas. Now, the state's Republicans are threatening to make it hard for OBGYNs to get a lifesaving drug
Texas women have been begging Republican lawmakers and the state Supreme Court to make it easier for doctors to provide abortions before they nearly die from miscarriages, and other complications like ectopic pregnancies. But instead of listening to them or doctors, the state legislature could make it even more dangerous to give birth to a baby in the state this year. I spoke with several OBGYNS and lawyers there who are fighting to protect women, and learned that the only way that the suffering and torture will stop is if voters wake up and decide that they donโt want their wives, girlfriends and daughters to die and vote them out. Hereโs whatโs going on.
There are no more ways to fight Texasโ abortion bans through the stateโs court system โ thatโs what Austin Kaplan believes after the last few years of doing exactly that.
Kaplan, an Austin-based civil rights attorney, represented Texas mom Kate Cox when she fought to get an emergency abortion after her non-viable fetus threatened her health and future fertility.
The Republican-dominated Texas Supreme Court ruled that Cox still didnโt have โ in their non-medical expert opinions โ a โlife threatening conditionโ that put her โat risk of deathโ or โsubstantial impairment of a major bodily function.โ That decision forced Cox to travel out of state to receive an abortion.
Kaplan has also led a long-standing legal fight against the Texasโ โbountyโ abortion law (SB 8/the Heartbeat Act), passed in 2021, which two Texas courts ruled to be โunconstitutional,โ but which the state Supreme Court has so far upheld.
SB 8 allows anyone in the country to sue anyone in Texas for $10,000 for aiding and abetting an abortion. That includes the friends and family members of the pregnant woman as well as her medical providers.
Since the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, Texans โno longer have a constitutional right to choice, to reproductive freedom,โ Kaplan said.
โWe have multiple restrictive laws in Texas and the Texas Legislature just convened on Jan. 14 and theyโre going to perhaps make it even more restrictive,โ he warned.
Republican members of the state legislature have introduced more bills seeking to restrict the availability of the abortion medications mifepristone and misoprostol, the latter of which is critical for saving the lives of women hemorrhaging after childbirth, but which is also used for abortion and miscarriage care.
All of this means that if Texans support women regaining their rights, โthe only option is to go to the ballot boxโ and vote out Republican lawmakers, Kaplan said.
โUnfortunately in Texas, we canโt have a statewide citizen-led ballot initiative,โ to enshrine the right to an abortion in the state constitution like voters in other states have done, he said.
The only way to achieve a constitutional amendment in Texas is for the Texas legislature itself to pass a joint House and Senate resolution first, and only then can a special election be held for voters to have their say.
In the time since SB 8 and Texasโ post-Roe total ban on abortion went into effect, at least three young, healthy women have died in Texas hospitals while experiencing miscarriages of much-wanted pregnancies.
ITโS MEDIEVIL THAT WOMEN ARE DYING FROM MISCARRIAGES IN TEXAS
โThese are unnecessary deaths for mothers who were excited to bring kids into their world. This is medieval stuff and shouldnโt be happening,โ Kaplan said.
Two other healthy young women almost died when treatment for their unviable ectopic pregnancies was delayed for days by hospitals fearful of treating them due to Texas abortionโ bans.
Both lost one of their fallopian tubes due to the delays, impairing their future fertility.
In response to Texasโ strict ban that made exceptions nearly impossible to access, Kaplan and the Center for Reproductive Rights filed a lawsuit in which they represented 20 Texas women harmed by the laws.
The case went all the way to the state Supreme Court, where the women begged the Court justices in Zurawski v. Texas to clarify the range of medical exceptions under the ban, so Texas women would no longer need to risk death before being allowed to receive a life-saving procedure.
Amanda Zurawski, the lead plaintiff in the case, almost died from a sepsis infection after her water broke at 18 weeks, long before her baby was viable.
Because her fetus still had a heartbeat, she was forced to wait at home until her fever suddenly soared and she became incoherent before hospital doctors could treat her. But by that point, they had to desperately fight for three days to save her life.
The infection collapsed Zurawskiโs uterus and scarred her fallopian tubes so badly that she can never carry a pregnancy again.
Another plaintiff in the case, Samantha Casiano, didnโt have the financial resources to leave the state after she learned that her fetus had a fatal condition called anencephaly, in which a fetus doesnโt develop part of its brain or skull.
MOM HAD TO HOLD BABY WHILE SHE GASPED FOR AIR & DIED
Because of Texasโ abortion ban, she was forced to carry the doomed pregnancy for months and then watch as her tiny baby daughter โgasped for air for four hoursโ until she died.
โIt was torture,โ Casiano said.
โWhat kind of a modern society does that to someone on purpose,โ asked Kaplan, who was in court for the hearing. โHow can that possibly be right?โ
He said that when Casiano was telling the story about her babyโs birth and death to the Supreme Court justices, she was so upset โliving through that moment again that she vomited on the stand.โ
Nevertheless, the Texas Supreme Court was not moved.
The plaintiffs were not asking for the abortion bans to be declared unlawful, just to give clearer guidance to doctors about whether they could intervene to preserve the health of the mother before she was close to death.
The court refused to clarify the abortion banโs โmedical emergencyโ exception language, insisting that the language of the law was clear enough.
Multiple doctors who Courier Texas spoke to disagree with the courtโs assertion that the law is clear, and stressed that the lawโs lack of clarity plus the severity of the punishments for physicians who break it โ up to 99 years in prison, the loss of their medical licenses, and a $100,000 fine โ have created a climate of fear for medical professionals who care for pregnant women.
โThere is so much grey zoneโ about the abortion law still, said Dr. Emily Briggs, a family physician who provides obstetric care in Central Texas.
โDoctors feel just really under threat,โ added Leah Stewart, an Austin-based health care attorney who advises doctors. โ[They ask] what happens if Attorney General Ken Paxton comes after them and I canโt tell them that wonโt happen. I canโt give them any sort of magical protection โฆ Theyโre virtually all considering that they may have to leave.โ
The state legislature did finally add some language to the abortion ban statute in 2023, allowing doctors to step in and perform a procedure for women like Zurawski, whose waters break too early, rendering the fetus unviable.
They also added an exception for some ectopic pregnancies โ but not all. Still, doctors who perform abortions on patients who have premature rupture of membranes (PROM) or ectopic pregnancies can still be charged with the stateโs full scope of punishments.
The legislature has only given these doctors a right to defend themselves โ called an affirmative defense โ if they can demonstrate that they used โreasonable medical judgementโ in performing an abortion under the circumstances.
Dr. Nancy Binford, an Austin-based OBGYN points out, however, that sadly lawmakers have done nothing to address the confusion around the legality of care for miscarriages.
DOCTORS TERRIFIED THEYโLL BE PROSECUTED
OB-GYNs in Texas hospitals are often still so terrified that theyโll be prosecuted by Paxton that they wonโt treat women bleeding heavily from miscarriages quickly enough to save their lives.
Portia Negumezi, 35, a Houston mom of two, died just 10 hours after arriving at Houston Methodist Sugarland Hospital, while bleeding so profusely that she was passing blood clots the size of grapefruits and required two blood transfusions.
Before Texas passed its abortion bans, doctors could promptly do a quick standard procedure called a D&C (dilation & curettage) to empty the uterus of the pregnancy remains which would stop the hemorrhaging, according to Dr. Binford.
But now, โif you decide to do a surgical procedure (like a D&C), then all these red flags go up,โ she said.
Thatโs why OB-GYNs like Dr. Todd Ivey, who is Houston-based, pray that doctors can convince Republican lawmakers to โlet us help them make common sense lawsโ around abortion restrictions.
โI donโt think they are malicious people,โ he said. โBut lawmakers donโt go to medical school and they donโt always understand these things. And just because youโre a physician in the Texas legislature doesnโt mean you understand womenโs healthcare.โ
Republican legislators havenโt been at all deterred so far in their quest to restrict womenโs health care procedures and medications, despite a huge 56% spike in maternal mortality in Texas from 2019 to 2022.
For example, Republican lawmaker Pat Curry from Waco has proposed House Bill 1339, which would classify misoprostol and mifepristone as โcontrolled substances.โ That means they would have to be kept in a passcode-protected storage lockers outside of labor and delivery rooms.
โItโs dangerous and it puts women at unnecessary risk,โ said Dr. Ivey, who explains that misoprostol is essential to stop women from bleeding to death in less than 15 minutes if they hemorrhage after childbirth.
Thatโs why, Dr. Ivey insisted, the medication needs to be easily accessible to OB-GYNS during childbirth deliveries.
DO TEXAS LAWMAKERS EVEN CARE THAT WOMEN ARE DYING
Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, who oversees the Republican-dominated Senate, planted a seed of hope for Texans who fear for the lives of pregnant women when he said last month, that he thought lawmakers โneed to clarify any language so that doctors are not in fear of being penalized if they think the life of the mother is at risk.โ
Stewart, the Austin-based attorney, thinks Patrickโs words are โmeaningfulโ but she doesnโt know whether he will prioritize getting the law clarified this session.
Kaplan isnโt buying what Patrick said, though.
โThis issue was not on his priorities list. That said, I hope he proves me wrong and takes action to stop this unnecessary danger.โ
Kaplan doesnโt believe that anti-abortion Republican lawmakers care if more women die, despite warnings from 111 Texas OB-GYNs who sent a letter urging state lawmakers to change the law.
โThe law is obviously, as a practical matter, not working, because doctors canโt provide the care,โ he said. โThe doctors are clearly telling the legislature this. We filed multiple lawsuits to alert the public to this.โ
โIf the legislature passed a law that caused oil field operators to cap all their wells and stop drilling, you better believe there would be a special session called to fix that law because the law is not working as intended,โ Kaplan added.
Since the Texas courts and lawmakers wonโt make any major change to the law, the only way for Texans to stop women from dying from pregnancy complications is to โvote the legislators out,โ reiterated Kaplan.
โUnfortunately we did not see that [in November].โ
To those of you especially women, Republicans are fine with women suffering and dying.
Whit women votes to die evidently.