Manhattan said:
People have a right to life, 18 week fetuses aren't people.
Eggs aren't turtles. But they have a greater right to exist than an unborn human baby.
Manhattan said:
People have a right to life, 18 week fetuses aren't people.
Hammerly High Dive Crips said:DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
Infection_Ag11 said:Hammerly High Dive Crips said:DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
The risk of Down syndrome at age 35 is about 1 in 350. That's pretty high as far as fetal anomalies go. It's about 1 in 100 at age 40. And 35 is by definition a high risk pregnancy.
For reference, it's about 1 in 1500 before age 30.
Hammerly High Dive Crips said:DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
Hammerly High Dive Crips said:Infection_Ag11 said:Hammerly High Dive Crips said:DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
The risk of Down syndrome at age 35 is about 1 in 350. That's pretty high as far as fetal anomalies go. It's about 1 in 100 at age 40. And 35 is by definition a high risk pregnancy.
For reference, it's about 1 in 1500 before age 30.
Yeah I get that it's called a "high risk pregnancy" at 35 and beyond. What about 34? 33? Sorry, I just think it's silly to say 1 in 350 is "high risk" for Downs. That's 0.28%. I get that the medical community has its many quirks though. You're a die hard Fauci guy, for instance, along with almost all doctors. You probably think red meat, salt and butter are very bad like the vast majority of them. And that masks should be the new permanent protocol in every medical facility. It's what you've been taught. Doctors are by nature very good at memorizing, and obeying, without questioning.
God hates hands that shed innocent blood. That's a pretty good argument!Manhattan said:
The only argument against abortion is emotional.
It would seem that anyone who could afford such treatments could afford a short trip to another state for the killing procedure.DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Unfortunately, there will ALWAYS be individual cases that will make ANY law inadequate. This is unavoidable.Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
CanyonAg77 said:Quote:
It took three days at home until I became sick 'enough' that the ethics board at our hospital agreed we could begin medical treatment; three days until my life was considered at risk 'enough' for the inevitable premature delivery of my daughter to be performed; three days until the doctors, nurses, and other healthcare professionals were allowed to do their jobs," she writes in a first-person essay for The Meteor, a media company committed to storytelling around issues of gender equity.
My wife was past 35 when we had most of our kids, so I'm very familiar with the statistics that many laid out above.Hammerly High Dive Crips said:Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.DallasAg 94 said:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
Oh, we're talking about 40 now lol. And 43.Ags4DaWin said:Hammerly High Dive Crips said:DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
Ummm at the age of 25 the risk of a woman having a child with downs is 1 in 2,500. At 40 it goes up to 1 in 100.
While a 1% chance is not huge there is a HUGE difference between a 1 in 2,500 chance and a 1 in 100 chance.
I would call that unacceptably high.
Additionally at 43 it jumps to 1 in 75 and at 45 it jumps to 1 in 17.
You can see how the risks of that increase exponentially after 35.
I am sorry this is an inconvenient fact for you.
Quote:
At 35, she is a high risk for Downs.
Agreed...and THAT is why anything 35+ is called a "high risk" pregnancy. Not because there is a "high" (1 in 350) chance of having a kid with Downs.Ags4DaWin said:
The risks of ecclampsia, gestational diabetes, miscarriage, and ectopic pregnancy also skyrocket after 35.
Additionally the risks of heart defects in the baby, eso****eal malformations, skull malformations, and spontaneous abortions skyrocket as well.
Women over 40 have have a 33% chance of miscarriage. Miscarriages after 20 weeks are almost always caused by chromosomal abnormalities which are usually caused by older eggs.
My argument is that science cannot tell us when life begins (after conception), therefore I will not risk ending an innocent human life. That is very logical, has nothing to do with emotion.Manhattan said:
The only argument against abortion is emotional.
I can't speak for anyone else, as I do not know, I just know that we had them run the tests they recommended and we were going to keep and love the baby no matter what. I don't really have a problem with the term "high risk" for pregnancy at or after 35...although I think "moderate risk" would be a more accurate and less alarming term...I just don't think the risk of Downs at 35 is "high risk" (1 in 350). Maybe my brain isn't working properly, but that just doesn't compute for me.DallasAg 94 said:My wife was past 35 when we had most of our kids, so I'm very familiar with the statistics that many laid out above.Hammerly High Dive Crips said:Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.DallasAg 94 said:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
It is only NOT high risk if you are one of the ones that don't have a Down's baby. Sticking with that, we optioned to NOT have an Amnio as we would NOT have aborted if our baby had indicators.
When the Amnio is done, IIRC, it is used to determine the sex of the baby.
Both of those are reasons people over 35 have abortions. My question for bringing it up is... If Abortion is not an option, the risk of miscarriage from having an Amnio, IMO was more than the benefit of "just knowing early" if the baby was Downs.
If she was Pro-Abortion and she had an Amnio... I'd be interested to know if it caused an issue with this pregnancy. I'm also curious if the Baby had indicators of Downs and/or if they found out the sex of the baby.
Not a judgment on her in any way, just a curiosity on my part.
I'm curious if any of your friends over 35 had an Amnio if you don't think it is High Risk.
If he says this about little ones, imagine how he views those who are passionate about their wholesale slaughter...andy griffith said:God hates hands that shed innocent blood. That's a pretty good argument!Manhattan said:
The only argument against abortion is emotional.
Quote:
Mark 9:42
42 "And if anyone causes one of these little ones who believe in me to stumble, it would be better for him to be thrown into the sea with a large millstone tied around his neck.
Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
Actually the fringe cases are rape and incest used by the left. Babies are being murdered for those 1% of abortionsManhattan said:
The only fringe cases are abortions after viability, which was <1% of abortions.
Women are being punished for 1% of abortions that were already illegal.
Manhattan said:
People have a right to life, 18 week fetuses aren't people.
I've lost a tremendous amount of respect for our medical community based on the past couple years. I'm hoping it was Politicians usurping their titles and demanding "The Science is Settled" and "Trust the Science."Hammerly High Dive Crips said:
I can't speak for anyone else, as I do not know, I just know that we had them run the tests they recommended and we were going to keep and love the baby no matter what. I don't really have a problem with the term "high risk" for pregnancy at or after 35...although I think "moderate risk" would be a more accurate and less alarming term...I just don't think the risk of Downs at 35 is "high risk" (1 in 350). Maybe my brain isn't working properly, but that just doesn't compute for me.
To be fair, I have become heavily jaded against doctors and the medical community in general over the past few years. There are a few good apples though. Maybe that is clouding my judgment.
We will ALL be judged accordingly .ChemEAg08 said:Manhattan said:
People have a right to life, 18 week fetuses aren't people.
You will be judged harshly on judgement day for opting to feed children to moloch.
Manhattan said:
People have a right to life, 18 week fetuses aren't people.
That isn't a republican problem, that is an ethics board at that hospital problem. And probably a lawyer problem as well as they are all so risk adverse that they hamstring themselves and those around them.rgvag11 said:
The "medical emergency" exemption needs to be improved.
"It took three days at home until I became sick 'enough' that the ethics board at our hospital agreed we could begin medical treatment; three days until my life was considered at risk 'enough' for the inevitable premature delivery of my daughter to be performed; three days until the doctors, nurses, and other healthcare professionals were allowed to do their jobs,"
Republicans ignore this problem at their own peril.
Change the subject from downs to something else....say dying in a plane crash.Hammerly High Dive Crips said:Infection_Ag11 said:Hammerly High Dive Crips said:DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
The risk of Down syndrome at age 35 is about 1 in 350. That's pretty high as far as fetal anomalies go. It's about 1 in 100 at age 40. And 35 is by definition a high risk pregnancy.
For reference, it's about 1 in 1500 before age 30.
Yeah I get that it's called a "high risk pregnancy" at 35 and beyond. What about 34? 33? Sorry, I just think it's silly to say 1 in 350 is "high risk" for Downs. That's 0.28%. I get that the medical community has its many quirks though. You're a die hard Fauci guy, for instance, along with almost all doctors. You probably think red meat, salt and butter are very bad like the vast majority of them. And that masks should be the new permanent protocol in every medical facility. It's what you've been taught. Doctors are by nature very good at memorizing, and obeying, without questioning.
Science tells us when life begins in every other aspect except with people, because people are stupid and you have commies like Manhattan that think it's perfectly OK to kill a baby right up to the point it is about to be born.doubledog said:My argument is that science cannot tell us when life begins (after conception), therefore I will not risk ending an innocent human life. That is very logical, has nothing to do with emotion.Manhattan said:
The only argument against abortion is emotional.
"Just a collection of cells"Manhattan said:
People have a right to life, 18 week fetuses aren't people.
Pretty simple - she's in enough danger when her doctor considers her to be.Tanya 93 said:DevilD77 said:
The Texas law allows for abortion if the hwalth of the mother is threatened so I call BS.
I think much of the argument is about when is she considered in enough danger to allow it.
If odds of dying in a plane crash were even 1 in 5,000, we'd be losing planes all the time and people would be terrified to fly. Apples to oranges imo.schmellba99 said:Change the subject from downs to something else....say dying in a plane crash.Hammerly High Dive Crips said:Infection_Ag11 said:Hammerly High Dive Crips said:DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
The risk of Down syndrome at age 35 is about 1 in 350. That's pretty high as far as fetal anomalies go. It's about 1 in 100 at age 40. And 35 is by definition a high risk pregnancy.
For reference, it's about 1 in 1500 before age 30.
Yeah I get that it's called a "high risk pregnancy" at 35 and beyond. What about 34? 33? Sorry, I just think it's silly to say 1 in 350 is "high risk" for Downs. That's 0.28%. I get that the medical community has its many quirks though. You're a die hard Fauci guy, for instance, along with almost all doctors. You probably think red meat, salt and butter are very bad like the vast majority of them. And that masks should be the new permanent protocol in every medical facility. It's what you've been taught. Doctors are by nature very good at memorizing, and obeying, without questioning.
I bet if the odds were 1:350, you'd think long and hard about jumping on an airplane to go on vacation.
Odds at 1:2500 or 1:1500 though....probably won't give it much thought.
The pointHammerly High Dive Crips said:If odds of dying in a plane crash were even 1 in 5,000, we'd be losing planes all the time and people would be terrified to fly. Apples to oranges imo.schmellba99 said:Change the subject from downs to something else....say dying in a plane crash.Hammerly High Dive Crips said:Infection_Ag11 said:Hammerly High Dive Crips said:DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
The risk of Down syndrome at age 35 is about 1 in 350. That's pretty high as far as fetal anomalies go. It's about 1 in 100 at age 40. And 35 is by definition a high risk pregnancy.
For reference, it's about 1 in 1500 before age 30.
Yeah I get that it's called a "high risk pregnancy" at 35 and beyond. What about 34? 33? Sorry, I just think it's silly to say 1 in 350 is "high risk" for Downs. That's 0.28%. I get that the medical community has its many quirks though. You're a die hard Fauci guy, for instance, along with almost all doctors. You probably think red meat, salt and butter are very bad like the vast majority of them. And that masks should be the new permanent protocol in every medical facility. It's what you've been taught. Doctors are by nature very good at memorizing, and obeying, without questioning.
I bet if the odds were 1:350, you'd think long and hard about jumping on an airplane to go on vacation.
Odds at 1:2500 or 1:1500 though....probably won't give it much thought.
Quintessential End of Thread post.Sarge 91 said:
That is a flat out lie.The law has a medical emergency exception.Quote:
Sec.A171.205.AAEXCEPTION FOR MEDICAL EMERGENCY; RECORDS. (a)AASections 171.203 and 171.204 do not apply if a physician believes a medical emergency exists that prevents compliance with this subchapter
Yet if some piece of **** shoots the mom in the stomach and the BABY dies, they are charged with murder. Weird.Manhattan said:
People have a right to life, 18 week fetuses aren't people.
schmellba99 said:The pointHammerly High Dive Crips said:If odds of dying in a plane crash were even 1 in 5,000, we'd be losing planes all the time and people would be terrified to fly. Apples to oranges imo.schmellba99 said:Change the subject from downs to something else....say dying in a plane crash.Hammerly High Dive Crips said:Infection_Ag11 said:Hammerly High Dive Crips said:DallasAg 94 said:You and the story is very disingenuous... SURPRISE...Manhattan said:
https://people.com/health/texas-woman-nearly-loses-her-life-after-doctors-cannot-legally-perform-abortion/
This is why you don't put an arbitrary date on abortion like 0 or 15 weeks. This lady was 18 weeks pregnant and could not get an abortion even though she was not going to have a living baby.
Now she may not be able to have kids, because Republicans and probably hospital lawyers dictated that she could not get her the treatment she needed.
From the article:Whether the Abortion Law was changed or not... it'd have had nothing to do with her ability to have children. At 35, she is a high risk for Downs. If it took her 18 months of fertility... it could very well take 12 months for her body to recover... and another 18 months of fertility to conceive. She'd be VERY high risk.Quote:
It was devastating for Amanda, 35, and her husband Josh, 35, who had been through 18 months of fertility treatments before they were able to conceive their baby girl.
The Law change and her medical situation likely has no bearing on her ability to have children. Certainly not more than her age.
Sorry but 35 is not "high risk" for downs. I agree with your point though.
As a 41 year old, the vast majority of my peers were still having children at or after 35. But per the stats, 40 is not even close to "high risk". "Slightly higher than extremely extremely low" yes.
The risk of Down syndrome at age 35 is about 1 in 350. That's pretty high as far as fetal anomalies go. It's about 1 in 100 at age 40. And 35 is by definition a high risk pregnancy.
For reference, it's about 1 in 1500 before age 30.
Yeah I get that it's called a "high risk pregnancy" at 35 and beyond. What about 34? 33? Sorry, I just think it's silly to say 1 in 350 is "high risk" for Downs. That's 0.28%. I get that the medical community has its many quirks though. You're a die hard Fauci guy, for instance, along with almost all doctors. You probably think red meat, salt and butter are very bad like the vast majority of them. And that masks should be the new permanent protocol in every medical facility. It's what you've been taught. Doctors are by nature very good at memorizing, and obeying, without questioning.
I bet if the odds were 1:350, you'd think long and hard about jumping on an airplane to go on vacation.
Odds at 1:2500 or 1:1500 though....probably won't give it much thought.
Your head