Pregnancy has its Risks. More Women Will Face Them Without Roe.
Somehow the
physical reality of pregnancy has been ignored in the debate over abortion and
the beginning of human existence. It's not simply a little inconvenience.
Pregnancy puts a load on the body, which can have life-altering or even
life-threatening consequences. It literally weighs down the heart. If the US
Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade case, permitting states to prohibit or
severely restrict abortion, the number of pregnancies carried to term will
increase, as will the number of persons exposed to pregnancy's health concerns.
From
the initial pumping of heart cells to viability, the abortion debate revolves
around foetal development. What happened to the woman is as follows: Her blood
volume begins to rise at four weeks of pregnancy, increasing by 50% by the time
she gives birth. To pump that more blood, the heart beats quicker, with the majority
of it going to the uterus, placenta, and kidneys. The kidneys grow in volume,
size, and filtration.
The
body's way of protecting against bleeding, which has long been a primary cause
of childbirth-related death, blood clotting grows stronger, peaking just before
delivery. Pregnant women, compared to non-pregnant women of reproductive age,
have a five-fold increased risk of deep vein thrombosis, a painful and
sometimes life-threatening clot that generally occurs in the legs. They are
three times as likely to have a stroke, with Black women having an even higher
risk.
In
2020, 861 women will have died as a result of pregnancy-related causes, the
most prevalent of which are cardiovascular events. Approximately 60,000 women
experienced major childbirth-related problems, which do not include severe
prenatal or postpartum disorders. Approximately 7% of women acquire gestational
diabetes, and a similar percentage develop gestational hypertension, both of
which can cause acute and long-term health issues.
Karen Florio was well aware of all of these factors when she became pregnant at the age of 33. She has helped many women negotiate difficult medical conditions as a maternal-fetal medicine doctor in Kansas City, Missouri, who specialises in cardio-obstetrics. She has advised individuals on the option of terminating a pregnancy owing to life-threatening issues on a few occasions. She had no idea, however, that she would soon be lying in a hospital bed, facing her own life-or-death situation.
Florio
had always been the epitome of health. She finished an Ironman triathlon before
becoming pregnant. She was a softball player in college. She has no prior
medical issues. Her blood pressure then rose to 147/97 at 28 weeks of
pregnancy. (A blood pressure of 120/80 or less is considered normal.) She'd
observed that her face was swollen and that her weight gain, despite her strict
diet, seemed excessive. These were symptoms of preeclampsia, or persistently
high blood pressure during pregnancy or after delivery, which affects 5% to 8%
of all newborns. I think I missed all the signals because it never occurred to
me that I could get preeclampsia, she says, despite though it's [a
condition] I'm constantly aware of.
Florio
began to have headaches and specks in her eyesight as her blood pressure
increased to 160/100. Mother and child ended up in separate ICUs after her baby
was delivered by C-section at 31 weeks. Preeclampsia caused posterior
reversible encephalopathy syndrome, or PRES, which is characterised by brain
swelling.
Florio
made a full recovery. She is back to her triathlete routines today, and her
eight-year-old son is OK. But her heart still races now and then, something it
hadn't done previously and which could be a sign of future cardiac problems.
The heart never truly returns to normal, she explains. Because of the
increasing hazards, she opted against having another child.
Her
state, Missouri, has triggered legislation that prohibits all abortions
"save in circumstances of a medical emergency" if Roe is overturned.
It would be the physician's or health provider's legal responsibility to
demonstrate that a person is in danger. Twelve other states have trigger laws
that would prohibit or restrict abortion, and five have pre-Roe bans that would
take effect if Roe were to be reversed. Some "no exception" laws
force women to sustain pregnancies after rape or incest, and some "no
exception" bans prevent women from terminating pregnancies even if they
miscarry.
Delayed
care could generate a new form of pregnancy risk in states with severe
anti-abortion laws. According to a study conducted by academics at Washington
University in St. Louis, states with the most stringent abortion regulations
had higher rates of maternal mortality from 2009 to 2017. The study didn't set
out to find a cause, but the authors hypothesised a few possibilities:
States with fewer restrictions may have greater resources to assist women's
health. People with high-risk pregnancies who are unable to abort them may be
more likely to die from complications in more restricted states.
Medical
professionals have been warning about an increase in cardiovascular issues even
before the draught US Supreme Court judgement that might overturn Roe became
available. Because the physical strain of pregnancy might disclose
heart-related issues with long-term consequences, it is often referred to as
"nature's stress test." In 2021, a Lancet panel on women and
cardiovascular disease identified a number of under-appreciated dangers,
including peripartum cardiomyopathy, a type of heart failure that develops late
in pregnancy or after delivery. "Heart disease is the No. 1 killer of new
parents," according to the American Heart Association's "Go Red for
Women" campaign.
Strokes
can strike quickly and without warning. After delivery, some people's blood
pressure rises, posing a silent threat at a time when women are less inclined
to follow up on their medical treatment. (And they may have lost insurance;
despite government incentives, 12 states have failed to expand Medicaid to
cover the postpartum year.)
Stroke
isn't common—it affects roughly 45 per 100,000 pregnant or postpartum women—but
it's also not uncommon. Approximately half of the instances result in long-term
disability. "It may be terrible," says Louise D. McCullough, chief of
neurology at Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston and a stroke expert. These
are young women, says the narrator. It has a big impact on the family whether
they become incapacitated or die.
For
McCullough, one recent case stands out: After an unremarkable first pregnancy,
a 26-year-old lady got a severe headache a few weeks after giving birth. She
suffered a major brain haemorrhage from a clot, known as cerebral vein
thrombosis, by the time she arrived at the hospital. Her life was saved
temporarily by clot-busting medication, but she died of complications a few
months later. Monitoring blood pressure, even postpartum, and intervening
quickly when a problem emerges, according to McCullough, can make a
life-changing difference. "It's critical to understand that pregnancy can
be a risky time for women," she says.
Why
does pregnancy so frequently result in major health problems? The nuMoM2b trial
is tracking roughly 4,500 moms for years after their pregnancies to gain some
insight into cardiovascular repercussions. The study, which was carried out at
eight medical institutions across the United States and was supported by the
National Institutes of Health, looked at the link between "adverse
pregnancy outcomes," such as gestational hypertension or preterm birth,
and the mother's future cardiovascular health. (This is analogous to the
well-known Framingham Heart Study, which has been going on since 1948 and has
led to new insights into cardiovascular risks.) Higher triglycerides,
high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, and blood glucose levels were linked to
hypertension two to seven years after delivery, according to research.
To
better understand the risks of maternal death, Eugene Declercq, a maternal
health researcher at Boston University School of Public Health, has been
tracking severe maternal morbidity—serious complications of pregnancy. It's a
major issue: Half of all pregnancy-associated deaths occur within a year after
birth, when they may not even be recognised as being related to the pregnancy.
And, according to Declercq, medical incidents that occur outside of the
hospital require additional attention. "At the hospital, the rate of
maternal mortality has decreased," he says. "The ongoing rise is
being driven by community deaths, both prenatal and postpartum."
It's
difficult to say how many more people would die after Roe if they were forced
to carry their pregnancies to term because they couldn't get an abortion, but a
sociologist at the University of Colorado, Boulder, estimates that maternal
deaths will rise by 21%—and by 33% for Black women, who are the most
vulnerable. Unplanned pregnancies, on average, result in poorer results for
moms and newborns, owing to delays in prenatal treatment. Even with present
abortion limitations in place in the United States, about 40% of births are
unexpected or undesired, a figure that will undoubtedly climb if states are
allowed to prohibit abortions.
"I'd
want to see those states who are so eager to impose limitations say, 'And by
the way, we're going to significantly strengthen care for pregnant
women,'" Declercq says. He is pessimistic. Seven of the 12 states that
haven't expanded Medicaid coverage to more low-income adults have trigger laws
or past abortion prohibitions that will take effect immediately if Roe is
overturned. State legislators in other states have promised to impose a ban or
tighter limits. Boosting women's health, pregnant or not, isn't part of their
post-Roe strategy.