Kansas Republican bill would require doctors to offer unproven … – The American Independent

Anti-abortion lawmakers have increasingly tried to normalize a practice in recent years that most medical professionals deem unethical and non-scientific.

The Kansas House Health and Human Services Committee approved a bill Monday that would require physicians to notify patients receiving medication abortions that the procedure can be reversed a claim that abortion rights advocates say is misleading.

Kansas House Bill 2439 claimsthat mifepristone, also known as RU-486, is not always effective in ending a pregnancy and if you change your mind and wish to try to continue the pregnancy, you can get immediate help by accessing available resources." It awaits a vote before the full state House of Representatives.

Iman Alsaden, Chief Medical Officer at Planned Parenthood in Great Plains,toldThe Kansas City Starthe concept of reversing the effects of abortion is not even science, its just junk.

I just find it so appalling that this is the way the government thinks people should be treated and isnt willing to trust the experts in the field of medicine, Alsaden told the news outlet.

This is yet another attempt by anti-abortion lawmakers to limit reproductive health care in the state. In 2019, the Legislature attempted to pass a similar bill, but Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed it.

Last year,Kansas citizens votedoverwhelmingly to preserve the right to abortion in the state, but Republicans have continued attempting to unravel reproductive health in the state.

Mifepristone is the first in a two-step medication series that is the most widely used pregnancy termination method in the country. Some anti-abortion lawmakers and physicians insist that abortions can be reversed if patients take a high dose of progesterone after mifepristone and before taking misoprostol, the second drug in the series.

According to theAmerican College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), abortion reversal treatments are not based on science and do not meet clinical standards.

ACOG goes on to say, Unfounded legislative mandates like this one represent dangerous political interference and compromise patient care and safety.

Much of the basis for the abortion reversal theory comes from a study done in 2012 by Dr. George Delgado on seven women who took mifepristone and were then given progesterone. Four of the patients continued with their pregnancies, two had abortions within three days and the result for one patient lacked data,Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health outlined in a 2020 brief.

The study was not scientifically sound, according to ACOG, because it was not supervised by an institutional review board (IRB) or an ethical review committee and was conducted without a control group.

A similar study was conducted in 2019 by researchers from the University of California, Davis. The researchers goal was to enroll 40 women, but only 12 signed up. They were all given mifepristone and then randomly given either a placebo or progesterone.NPR reportedthat the study ended when three of the 12 women were hospitalized after they began hemorrhaging.

Extrapolating a case review and then applying it to a whole population is like a wildfire of misinformation and possible morbidity and mortality,Alsaden said. You just cant make decisions for a whole population based on a handful of people.

Kansas stateRep. Ron Bryce, a Republican, testifiedto the House in early March that his support for the bill is based on his time as a medical resident in Fort Worth, Texas, working in a hospitals neonatal intensive care unit.

Bryce claimed that he found a crying infant whod survived an abortion a popular conservative conspiracy theory used to justify anti-abortion legislation. One such bill is theBorn-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act, which Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives passed in January. The bill is now in the Senate, where it will likely fall short of the votes it needs to pass.

These so-called born alive bills are among a series of tactics by abortion opponents to create a medical issue where one doesnt exist. Doctors are legally and ethically required to provide health care as needed,per Planned Parenthood.Dr. Daniel Grossman, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of California, San Francisco,explained toThe New York Timesthat less than 1% of abortions in the U.S. are performed after 24 weeks.

Dr. Christina Bourne is the medical director of the Trust Women Foundation, an abortion provider in Wichita, Kansas.

This is just frankly something that doesnt happen, Bournetold the Kansas City Star. These bills, which are laughably nonsensical, over time they keep layering and continue to add to the stigma and confusion of what providing abortion care is.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Mifeprex (mifepristone) as safe to use in September 2000, and the medication accounts for 53% of abortions nationwide, according to theGuttmacher Institute.

But mifepristones availability in all U.S. states could be overturned. A federal judge in Texas, appointed by former President Donald Trump in 2019, is consideringa lawsuitto revoke or suspend government approval of the drug.

The Christian conservative group Alliance Defending Freedomfiled the lawsuit against the FDA in November, arguing that the agency overstepped its authority in approving the medication.

ConservativeJudge Matthew Kacsmarykwill make his ruling after hearing arguments from both sides on March 15.

The U.S. Department of Justicewould appealthe decision to outlaw the drugs. The FDA would also likely also seek an emergency injunction pending review of the case.

Published with permission of The American Independent Foundation.

See original here:
Kansas Republican bill would require doctors to offer unproven ... - The American Independent

Related Posts

Comments are closed.