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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums"I'm an Ohio emergency care resident. My ability to provide abortions has saved lives."
https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2024/04/17/im-an-ohio-emergency-care-resident-my-ability-to-provide-abortion-care-has-saved-lives/Im an emergency care medical resident working at a busy one-level urban trauma center in Ohio. My days are never short of surprises. But as the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to hear oral arguments in a case that could roll back reproductive rights by decades, one days surprises keep replaying in my mind. Two patients I saw in the course of one shift remind me how imperative it is that we trust our medical providers to give patients the care they need without restricting their access to life-saving treatment like an abortion.
Before I opened the door, I could already tell the patient in room 11 was in excruciating pain. I find her in tears, doubled over in a fetal position. Her triage notes tell me shes here for abdominal pain and vaginal bleeding. The notes also indicate a positive pregnancy test. I can see the fear in her face as I explain that we need to perform an ultrasound in order to rule out an ectopic pregnancy. An hour later, ultrasound results confirm my suspicions but the pregnancy has begun to rupture before I can deliver the news. I rush back in to find the patient keeling off her chair, pale and hypotensive. Other nurses rush to my aid as we try to stabilize her. She will need an immediate laparoscopic surgery to survive.
Next door, the patient in room 10 also requires an ultrasound. And it must be a full moon because her results also indicate an ectopic pregnancy. Our OB/GYN recommends giving her an abortion pill here in the emergency department and then discharging her home with close follow-up. As I step inside the room to ask if the patient has any questions, I again recognize that same fear etched across her face. Quietly she asks:
Am I going to get in trouble?
Ever since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June of 2022, its been harrowing to see the same fear on my patients faces when they realize that giving them appropriate medical care could mean performing an abortion.
*snip*
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"I'm an Ohio emergency care resident. My ability to provide abortions has saved lives." (Original Post)
Nevilledog
Apr 18
OP
orleans
(34,198 posts)1. k&r and a big fuck you to all of those assholes who helped to make someone so concerned over their
status of breaking a fucking law in order to survive--in order for them to LIVE!-- that they have to ask: "am i going to get in trouble?"
just heartbreaking!
Nevilledog
(51,808 posts)3. I gasped when I read that part. The cruelty......
Irish_Dem
(50,294 posts)2. For women a life threatening medical emergency could mean prison.
What the hell kind of country have we become?
John Farmer
(110 posts)4. MAGAs made a misteak
when they tried to take away reproductive freedom without also taking away women's right to vote.