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Doctors who want to defy abortion laws say it's too risky


Doctors who want to defy abortion laws say it's too risky - NPR

In states with abortion bans, doctors may hesitate to provide abortion care in a medical emergency. Some ethicists argue doctors should ...

Doctors who would like to defy abortion laws say it's too risky - NPR

Doctors in states with abortion bans can face prison time and lose their licenses if they violate the laws. Some are calling on doctors to ...

Doctors who would like to defy abortion laws say it's too risky

It's been five months since Roe v. Wade was overturned, and now 13 states have laws banning abortion with limited exceptions for medical emergencies.

Doctors who want to defy abortion laws say it's too risky - WNYC

In states with abortion bans, doctors may hesitate to provide abortion care in a medical emergency. Some ethicists argue doctors ...

Doctors who want to defy abortion laws say it's too risky

Doctors who want to defy abortion laws say it's too risky ... Since Roe v. Wade was overturned, 13 states have banned abortion except in the case ...

Emergency doctors grapple with abortion bans - AAMC

In Texas, for example, a doctor deemed to have performed an illegal abortion faces up to 99 years in prison. “ED staff sometimes are afraid to ...

Doctors fear Texas' strict abortion laws put pregnant women in danger

Tonight, you will hear from doctors who say, in Texas, the laws designed to stop abortions are creating unintended consequences – hurting women ...

Bans on abortion and transgender care have criminalized medicine ...

Caitlin Bernard, MD, and Michael Haller, MD, say new state laws have created confusion about what's legal, leaving patients untreated and ...

Future doctors say they're discouraged from working in states with ...

There was a drop in residency applications where bans are in place, data shows. ... The new law replaces the state's 15-week ban, which is ...

Abortion Bans Are Driving Off Doctors and Putting Basic Health Care ...

Many physicians say they are reluctant to practice in states with abortion bans, harming access to regular exams and screenings.

Doctors face tough decision to leave states with abortion bans

In interviews with ABC News, physicians in Texas, North Carolina, Ohio and Florida said they decided to leave their states due, at least largely ...

Doctors worry abortion laws will hinder treatment of patients in life-or ...

Wade, doctors in states with abortion bans have struggled to figure out how to care for patients with high-risk pregnancies, including ...

What Abortion Bans Do to Doctors - The Atlantic

Idaho's law threatens to revoke the license of any health-care professional who assists in an abortion. He came to feel that there was no good ...

The doctors leaving anti-abortion states: 'I couldn't do my job at all'

“If you can't do a termination, who will support these kids after the birth? Who will pay the bills they will need for medical care? Nobody. We ...

Doctors' duty to provide abortion information - PMC - PubMed Central

“Where abortion is illegal or highly restricted, women resort to unsafe means to end unwanted pregnancies, including self-inflicted abdominal and bodily trauma, ...

Texas Supreme Court rejects abortion ban challenge - BBC

The Texas Supreme Court has unanimously rejected a challenge from 20 women who said they were denied medically necessary abortions under the state's near-total ...

Doctors say strict abortion laws in Texas put pregnant ... - YouTube

... Like “60 Minutes” on Facebook: http ... Doctors say strict abortion laws in Texas put pregnant women and their physicians at serious risk.

Who Decides When a Patient Qualifies for an Abortion Ban ... - KFF

The risk to doctors is so high that many doctors are hesitant to provide life-saving abortion care unless the threat to life is imminent. The ...

Abortion bans are repelling the nation's future doctors

Good morning. I'm Julie Rovner, chief Washington correspondent at KFF Health News and host of its weekly news podcast, “What the Health?

Texas court dims hope of timely abortion care for high-risk patients

In addition to fearing severe criminal penalties from Texas abortion law, doctors and hospitals also lack the safety net of federal protections.