Abortion bans fuel a rise in high-risk patients heading to Illinois hospitals

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Abortion bans fuel a rise in high-risk patients heading to Illinois hospitals
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When she was around 22 weeks pregnant, the patient found out that the son she was carrying didn't have kidneys and his lungs wouldn't develop. If he survived the birth, he would struggle to breathe and die within hours.

The patient had a crushing decision to make: continue the pregnancy—which could be a risk to her health and her ability to have children in the future—or have an"I don't think I stopped crying for an entire two weeks," she said."The whole world felt heavy. … It's not something anybody should have to go through. It's not easy losing somebody you love."

The patient had to leave Missouri and cross the border to Illinois, which has become a legal haven forSince the Dobbs decision overturned Roe v. Wade on June 24, 2022, determining who can get an abortion and where has been complicated by medically ambiguous language in new state laws that ban or restrict abortion. Doctors in those states fear they could lose their medical licenses or wind up in jail.

Hospitals are a"black box" for abortion-related data, according to Rachel Jones, a longtime researcher at the nonprofit Guttmacher Institute. The patient from Missouri made her way to Laura Laursen, an OB-GYN at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, in May. The number of out-of-state abortions at Rush has quadrupled since Roe was overturned, Laursen said.

"I'm constantly hearing stories from my partners across the country of trying to figure out what counts as imminent danger," Laursen said."We're trying to prevent danger. We're not trying to get to the point where someone's an emergency."Jennifer McIntosh is an OB-GYN in Milwaukee who specializes in high-risk patients. Because of Wisconsin's abortion ban, she's referring more patients out of state.

"Am I worried that someone might think that it doesn't satisfy that?" McIntosh said."Absolutely, that terrifies me." "I know that some number of those women are not going to make it through birth and postpartum," Fleisher said."More than the stress of somebody who's actually making it to see me, that's the thing that causes me more stress."

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