Berliner Boersenzeitung - Texas women denied abortions despite health risks sue state

EUR -
AED 4.028134
AFN 75.541432
ALL 98.748074
AMD 426.662058
ANG 1.986858
AOA 1012.250153
ARS 1065.161605
AUD 1.612325
AWG 1.974052
AZN 1.867068
BAM 1.955168
BBD 2.22588
BDT 131.737409
BGN 1.955856
BHD 0.413395
BIF 3198.613784
BMD 1.096695
BND 1.431022
BOB 7.617537
BRL 5.98335
BSD 1.102444
BTN 92.505093
BWP 14.582285
BYN 3.607734
BYR 21495.230494
BZD 2.222082
CAD 1.48957
CDF 3148.612164
CHF 0.940921
CLF 0.036739
CLP 1013.730605
CNY 7.696939
CNH 7.775691
COP 4567.977753
CRC 571.851618
CUC 1.096695
CUP 29.062429
CVE 110.229362
CZK 25.348086
DJF 196.306533
DKK 7.454519
DOP 66.302796
DZD 145.735735
EGP 53.009759
ERN 16.450432
ETB 131.889377
FJD 2.394634
FKP 0.835198
GBP 0.836123
GEL 3.004436
GGP 0.835198
GHS 17.440361
GIP 0.835198
GMD 75.671832
GNF 9518.660323
GTQ 8.530242
GYD 230.635435
HKD 8.51776
HNL 27.412138
HRK 7.456444
HTG 145.361619
HUF 401.465653
IDR 17212.250983
ILS 4.156728
IMP 0.835198
INR 92.082715
IQD 1444.133105
IRR 46176.361194
ISK 148.941921
JEP 0.835198
JMD 174.193682
JOD 0.777233
JPY 162.798402
KES 142.219375
KGS 92.896174
KHR 4474.818489
KMF 492.361743
KPW 987.025268
KRW 1479.694687
KWD 0.335765
KYD 0.918703
KZT 532.40787
LAK 24343.129755
LBP 98720.483217
LKR 323.775322
LRD 212.77673
LSL 19.259673
LTL 3.238257
LVL 0.66338
LYD 5.2573
MAD 10.783014
MDL 19.341747
MGA 5049.367516
MKD 61.620081
MMK 3562.023988
MNT 3726.571033
MOP 8.81575
MRU 43.647272
MUR 51.128217
MVR 16.834624
MWK 1911.581977
MXN 21.094975
MYR 4.690019
MZN 70.068203
NAD 19.259673
NGN 1776.646446
NIO 40.570028
NOK 11.688838
NPR 148.015569
NZD 1.780552
OMR 0.422269
PAB 1.102444
PEN 4.106672
PGK 4.390921
PHP 62.322464
PKR 305.917695
PLN 4.316361
PYG 8593.221772
QAR 4.0195
RON 4.979878
RSD 117.041549
RUB 105.028293
RWF 1493.617107
SAR 4.119572
SBD 9.079227
SCR 15.215504
SDG 659.71276
SEK 11.377288
SGD 1.431193
SHP 0.835198
SLE 25.056533
SLL 22997.149251
SOS 629.996319
SRD 34.227657
STD 22699.381251
SVC 9.645881
SYP 2755.480107
SZL 19.251776
THB 36.721697
TJS 11.74146
TMT 3.849401
TND 3.37231
TOP 2.568574
TRY 37.567944
TTD 7.476583
TWD 35.356392
TZS 2983.011961
UAH 45.386026
UGX 4042.692979
USD 1.096695
UYU 46.108456
UZS 14045.459039
VEF 3972836.82162
VES 40.56592
VND 27250.13978
VUV 130.201885
WST 3.067965
XAF 655.744995
XAG 0.034408
XAU 0.000415
XCD 2.963874
XDR 0.819835
XOF 655.744995
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.503125
ZAR 19.148516
ZMK 9871.576838
ZMW 29.020618
ZWL 353.135482
  • RBGPF

    58.9400

    58.94

    +100%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    138.9

    +0.44%

  • SCS

    0.3500

    12.97

    +2.7%

  • NGG

    -0.4700

    66.5

    -0.71%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.7

    -0.16%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    9.66

    -0.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    6.98

    0%

  • RIO

    -0.1300

    69.7

    -0.19%

  • RELX

    -0.3200

    46.29

    -0.69%

  • AZN

    -0.4600

    77.47

    -0.59%

  • BTI

    0.1800

    35.29

    +0.51%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.28

    -0.15%

  • GSK

    0.4500

    38.82

    +1.16%

  • BP

    0.4200

    32.88

    +1.28%

  • CMSD

    -0.0770

    24.813

    -0.31%

  • BCE

    -0.1300

    33.71

    -0.39%

Texas women denied abortions despite health risks sue state
Texas women denied abortions despite health risks sue state / Photo: SUZANNE CORDEIRO - AFP

Texas women denied abortions despite health risks sue state

Amanda Zurawski's water broke at 17 weeks, far too early for the fetus to survive, but doctors in Texas initially refused to terminate her pregnancy, causing the woman to end up in an ICU with an infection and lose a fallopian tube.

Text size:

"I cannot adequately put into words the trauma and despair that comes with waiting to either lose your own life, your child's life or both," the 35-year-old said.

Zurawski and several other women who sued the conservative US state after they were denied abortions despite serious health complications voiced their grief and trauma Tuesday, as they sought clarity on the new laws

The lawsuit, filed late Monday, is the first such complaint filed by women who have been denied terminations since the US Supreme Court overturned abortion rights in June, according to the Center for Reproductive Rights, which represents them.

It "includes devastating, first-hand accounts of women's lives almost lost after they were denied the health care they needed," said Vice President Kamala Harris, who gave them her support in a statement Tuesday.

The women wanted to carry their pregnancies to term but discovered during medical examinations that their fetuses were not viable.

In their complaint, they claim that their doctors refused to perform abortions despite the risks of hemorrhage and infection.

In Zurawski's case, medics finally performed an abortion three days later, after she had developed an infection and had to have one of her fallopian tubes removed.

"I needed an abortion to protect my life and to protect the lives of my future babies that I dream and hope I can still have," she said.

The women blame those refusals on the various laws prohibiting abortions in conservative Texas, one of which provides for up to 99 years in prison for doctors who defy the ban.

These laws allow for limited exceptions in case of medical emergencies, such as the threat of death or serious disability to the mother -- but the plaintiffs say they are too vague and ask the courts to "clarify the scope of the exception."

- 'Unbearable' -

Another plaintiff, Lauren Miller, was pregnant with twins when she learned that one of the two fetuses was not viable.

Despite the risks to her own health and to the development of the other fetus, medical staff would not perform an abortion on the nonviable fetus.

"It was like they were afraid that they would be arrested just for saying the word abortion out loud," she said at the press conference.

She had to travel to Colorado, at her own expense, to get the procedure. "I just wanted to curl up and cry and mourn but I couldn't because we had to scramble to make plans to travel out of state for an abortion to give baby A and myself the best chance of surviving this pregnancy."

Still pregnant, she is due at the end of the month.

Anna Zargarian said she also was told her water had broken early.

"My heart broke into a million pieces," the 33-year-old told the press conference.

Like Miller, she had to travel to Colorado to receive care. The flight, she said, was "one of the most terrifying experiences of my life. It was like Russian roulette, knowing I was a risk of infection, hemorrhaging or going into labor at any moment."

At 18 weeks of pregnancy, Lauren Hall discovered that her fetus had no skull and would not survive. She had to travel to Seattle to have the pregnancy terminated.

The trip, she said at the press conference, was a "complete blur. But I remember protesters calling us killers, waving posters with pictures of dead babies at us."

She is pregnant again now, she said -- but she fears everything.

"While I was calm during my previous pregnancy I now compulsively look up every ache and pain, terrified that I will find myself in this unbearable situation," the 28-year-old said.

"It kills me that my own state does not seem to care if I live or die."

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called the details "shameful and unacceptable."

"Horrifying details of needless pain," the spokeswoman for Democratic President Joe Biden said in a statement. "All because of extreme efforts by Republican officials to take away a woman's right to choose."

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)