BY MIKKI KENDALL
Friday, February 17, 2012
A woman almost died in an emergency room because the "pro-life "doctor on call refused to perform an abortion
There’s this lawmaker out of Kansas, Rep. Peter DeGraaf, who has a lot to say about abortion. He’s currently best known for saying that . And I could spend a lot of time discussing the flaws in his logic, or even hashing out when life begins, but what I’m really concerned about is the idea that anyone besides a pregnant woman should have a say in what she does with her body after finding out she’s pregnant.I’m a mom, and I love my sons more than anything. And it is because I love them that I had an abortion at 20 weeks. It was my fifth pregnancy (I’d had two earlier miscarriages), and, as it turned out, my last. There was trouble from the beginning; I didn’t experience any of the normal indicators of pregnancy, so I was already ten weeks along when I found out. I hadn’t so much as missed a period; in fact, I was seeing an OB/GYN because of the increased heaviness in my cycle. When we found out, I talked it over with my husband and we debated an abortion before deciding we’d try to make it work. My doctor told me that my pregnancy was very high risk and that she wasn’t sure of a good outcome. Per her instructions, I took it very easy because I wanted to give the baby the best possible chance. But I kept having intermittent bleeding and I knew there was a good chance I wouldn’t be able to carry to term.I was taking an afternoon nap when the hemorrhaging started while my toddler napped in his room when I woke up to find blood gushing upward from my body. Though I didn’t know it at the time, I was experiencing a placental abruption, a complication my doctor had told me was a possibility. My husband was at work, so I had to do my best to take care of me and my toddler on my own. I managed to get to the phone and make arrangements for both of my children before going to a Chicago hospital.Everyone knew the pregnancy wasn’t viable, that it couldn’t be viable given the amount of blood I was losing, but it still took hours for anyone at the hospital to do anything. The doctor on call didn’t do abortions. At all. Ever. In fact, no one on call that night did. Meanwhile, an ignorant batch of medical students had gathered to study me — one actually showed me the ultrasound of our dying child while asking me if it was a planned pregnancy. Several wanted to examine me while I lay there bleeding and in pain. No one gave me anything for the pain or even respected my request to close the door even though I was on the labor and delivery floor listening to other women have healthy babies as the baby I had been trying to save died in my womb.A very kind nurse risked her job to call a doctor from the Reproductive Health Clinic who was not on call, and asked her to come in to save my life. Fortunately she was home, and got there relatively quickly. By the time she arrived, I was in bad shape. The blood loss had rendered me nearly incoherent, but she still moved me to a different wing and got me the painkillers no one else had during the screaming hours I’d spent in the hospital. After she checked my lab tests, she told us I would need two bags of blood before she could perform the procedure. Her team (a cadre of wonderful students who should all go on to run their own clinics) took turns checking on me and my husband. They all kept assuring me that soon it would be over, and I would feel much better. My husband had to sign the consent for surgery (I was clearly not competent enough to make decisions), and they took me away along with a third bag of blood to be administered during the procedure.Later I found out that the doctor had taken my husband aside as they brought me into surgery. She promised him she would do her best to save me, but she warned him there was a distinct possibility that she would fail. The doctor who didn’t do abortions was supposed to have contacted her (or someone else who would perform the procedure) immediately. He didn’t. Neither did his students. Supposedly there was a communication breakdown and they thought she had been notified, but I doubt it. I don’t know if his objections were religious or not; all I know is that when a bleeding woman was brought to him for treatment he refused to do the only thing that could stop the bleeding. Because he didn’t do abortions. Ever.My two kids at home almost lost their mother because someone decided that my life was worth less than that of a fetus that was going to die anyway. My husband had told them exactly what my regular doctor said, and the ER doctor had already warned us what would have to happen. Yet none of this mattered when confronted by the idea that no one needs an abortion. You shouldn’t need to know the details of why a woman aborts to trust her to make the best decision for herself. I don’t regret my abortion, but I would also never use my situation to suggest that the only time another woman should have the procedure is when her life is at stake. After my family found out I’d had an abortion, I got a phone call from a cousin who felt the need to tell me I was wrong to have interfered with God’s plan. And in that moment I understood exactly what kind of people judge a woman’s reproductive choices.
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I hope you sued....
ReplyDeleteThe doctor who refused to perform the abortion in abruption of a placenta should lose his license. The relative who talked of interfering with God's plan should be put on some desert island without medical attention for any of the countless woes humanity has suffered. I could, with equal claims to truth, assert that insulin and antibiotics aren't part of God's plan. Unless of course only punishing women is God's plan. If that is the case, then say to God, "You're fired!" (Only I don't think God is so malicious as some fundies do - he is subtle, but not malicious)
ReplyDeleteI suspect you have the basis for a lawsuit against the hospital system for reckless endangerment. An ER doctor who fails to provide life saving measures in the circumstances you describe is a danger to all patients, and a liability to the hospital.
ReplyDeleteWell, if God has a plan, why do we even need doctors? If you have a heart attack or cancer, isn't that part of God's plan? If you receive life saving medical treatment for those conditions, aren't you altering God's plan for you?
ReplyDeleteI'm pro-choice, though I am not entirely in favor of abortion. I do think many people rely on it as a backup form of birth control and I find that disturbing for many reasons -- not the least of which is that you are subjecting yourself to a surgical procedure which carries a lot of risk. I believe it is much better to be responsible and prevent an unwanted pregnancy from occuring in the first place. But that requires education and available and affordable birth control which many pro-life people are also against.
But what offends me the most is that most pro-lifers ONLY care about life inside the womb. Once you are out, you are on you're own. Or, if you are in the womb of some woman in a foreign country that we are currently bombing to smithereens ... that life doesn't count either. Everyone is equal, but some are more equal than others, I guess.
Miki, dear:
ReplyDelete20 weeks is 5 mos. in a pregnancy.
Since Ancient Times, this has been recognized as permissible to abort a fetus.
That is NOT the abortions that are being objected to. Nor are those where the woman is in danger or has been raped or had intercourse with a male family member, against her will.
The abortions that should be illegal on ALL grounds are the late abortions, 8 mos or even 9 mos. - almost at the time of birth.
Yet, THESE are the very ones that are being allowed and done. And very often, for the sake of what society thinks, or because the child is unwanted. Yet, the woman or girl has had a "party" and had sex for the fun of it, and the consequences is a pregnancy. Then their solution is to get rid of the baby. How convenient!!!
NO. a woman or girl, has NO right to do late term abortions - the ultimate crime against innocent Human Beings.
Ms. Kendall, please accept my deepest sympathy for your terrible ordeal. I would like to point out that abortion is nature's way. For tens of thousands of years, when a pregnant woman was sick, or starving, if the fetus's life was more important than the mother's, then the woman should fall into a coma while her fetus battens on her dying corpse, to grow to term at her expense. But this is not what happens. If a pregnant woman is sick, or starving, or if the fetus is nonvioable, she has a miscarriage. Thus, God was the first abortionist.
ReplyDeleteYeah... Sure.
ReplyDelete