• Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    I’ve already quoted from that exact link.

    From link you were talking about:

    “At the time of the discussion, Farmer was medically stable, with some vaginal bleeding that was not heavy. “Therefore contrary to the most appropriate management based (sic) my medical opinion, due to the legal language of MO law, we are unable to offer induction of labor at this time,” the report quotes the specialist as saying.”

    Again, she was stable at the time. The law required that they not perform an abortion.

    A political official saying something is not the law. Filling a lawsuit is not the law.

      • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        The doctors said she wasn’t in immediate danger.

        You presented it as a law being broken. The only law broken would have been if doctors performed the abortion early because she voted to make it illegal.

        • the_toast_is_gone@lemmy.world
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          14 hours ago

          From her lawsuit:

          According to the lawsuit, doctors told Farmer that she was at risk of infection, severe blood loss, the loss of her uterus and death.

          This is immediate danger. The law would not have been broken had the procedure been performed…

          • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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            13 hours ago

            “At risk” isn’t an immediate threat. Having high blood pressure makes you, “at risk.” That’s not the same as having a heart attack which is an immediate threat to your life.

            The law only allows abortion under immediate threat.

            She wanted an early abortion because it was the safe option. But the law precludes proactive healthcare.

            • the_toast_is_gone@lemmy.world
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              13 hours ago

              If your water breaks at 16 weeks, that is an emergency. According to the lawsuit, they knew this quite well:

              By the time Ms. Farmer arrived at TUKH, she had been evaluated and it was clear that she had lost all her amniotic fluid, and her pregnancy—which she had dreamed of and longed for—was no longer viable. And unless she received immediate medical intervention to end the pregnancy in a medical setting, she was at risk of severe blood loss, sepsis, loss of fertility, and death.

              It could not be a more obvious example of a medical error. When the law says this is allowed, the law is not at fault.

              Not sure why you replied with the same remark to two different comments, but whatever.