Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
So many forced birthers are going to reap the whirlwind, as they should. Unfortunately, so too will many normal people who think women should have rights.
Perhaps there is some misinformation going around
Even if a hospital’s legal team was to say that risking a patient’s life is preferable to the risk of being legally accountable for an abortion, the doctors have taken the Hippocratic oath to do no harm
I wasn’t aware the Hippocratic oath keeps doctors out of prison.
Apparently it does when it involves terminating the life of a baby -- no harm at all!!
The fetus is not their patient. The mother is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
So many forced birthers are going to reap the whirlwind, as they should. Unfortunately, so too will many normal people who think women should have rights.
Perhaps there is some misinformation going around
Even if a hospital’s legal team was to say that risking a patient’s life is preferable to the risk of being legally accountable for an abortion, the doctors have taken the Hippocratic oath to do no harm
I wasn’t aware the Hippocratic oath keeps doctors out of prison.
Apparently it does when it involves terminating the life of a baby -- no harm at all!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
So many forced birthers are going to reap the whirlwind, as they should. Unfortunately, so too will many normal people who think women should have rights.
Perhaps there is some misinformation going around
Even if a hospital’s legal team was to say that risking a patient’s life is preferable to the risk of being legally accountable for an abortion, the doctors have taken the Hippocratic oath to do no harm
I wasn’t aware the Hippocratic oath keeps doctors out of prison.
Apparently it does when it involves terminating the life of a baby -- no harm at all!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
So many forced birthers are going to reap the whirlwind, as they should. Unfortunately, so too will many normal people who think women should have rights.
Perhaps there is some misinformation going around
Even if a hospital’s legal team was to say that risking a patient’s life is preferable to the risk of being legally accountable for an abortion, the doctors have taken the Hippocratic oath to do no harm
I wasn’t aware the Hippocratic oath keeps doctors out of prison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
So many forced birthers are going to reap the whirlwind, as they should. Unfortunately, so too will many normal people who think women should have rights.
Perhaps there is some misinformation going around
Even if a hospital’s legal team was to say that risking a patient’s life is preferable to the risk of being legally accountable for an abortion, the doctors have taken the Hippocratic oath to do no harm
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
So many forced birthers are going to reap the whirlwind, as they should. Unfortunately, so too will many normal people who think women should have rights.
Perhaps there is some misinformation going around
Even if a hospital’s legal team was to say that risking a patient’s life is preferable to the risk of being legally accountable for an abortion, the doctors have taken the Hippocratic oath to do no harm
I wasn’t aware the Hippocratic oath keeps doctors out of prison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
So many forced birthers are going to reap the whirlwind, as they should. Unfortunately, so too will many normal people who think women should have rights.
Perhaps there is some misinformation going around
Even if a hospital’s legal team was to say that risking a patient’s life is preferable to the risk of being legally accountable for an abortion, the doctors have taken the Hippocratic oath to do no harm
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
So many forced birthers are going to reap the whirlwind, as they should. Unfortunately, so too will many normal people who think women should have rights.
Perhaps there is some misinformation going around
Even if a hospital’s legal team was to say that risking a patient’s life is preferable to the risk of being legally accountable for an abortion, the doctors have taken the Hippocratic oath to do no harm
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
So many forced birthers are going to reap the whirlwind, as they should. Unfortunately, so too will many normal people who think women should have rights.
Anonymous wrote:If you aren't a forced birther, you really shouldn't be living in Texas and certain other states right now.