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POLITICS
Abortion
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GEORGIA’S ABORTION BAN LINKED TO AMBER THURMAN'S DEATH IN PROPUBLICA
INVESTIGATION: WHAT TO KNOW

Mary Walrath-Holdridge
USA TODAY


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This story was updated to add new information.

Vice president and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris will visit
Atlanta Friday to respond to the deaths of two Georgia women linked to the
state’s abortion ban, according to a ProPublica investigation released this
week.

Amber Thurman, 28, a nursing assistant and mother of a 6-year-old son died after
doctors delayed necessary care due to Georgia's six-week abortion ban, says the
story reported by Kavitha Surana. Medical providers stalled to provide care to
treat the effects of a medication abortion, also known as a medical abortion,
the investigation says.

After sharing Thurman's death, Surana reported a second story on another Georgia
woman named Candi Miller who died as a result of not seeking medical care “due
to the current legislation on pregnancies and abortions.”



To tell their stories, ProPublica reviewed medical documents, autopsies and
official state committee reports, interviewed family and loved ones, spoke with
government officials and consulted medical experts, doctors from across the
state and U.S. and people inside hospitals.

Here's what the ProPublica investigation found and what to know about Georgia's
abortion law.




PROPUBLICA: AMBER THURMAN, CANDI MILLER DIE UNDER GEORGIA'S ABORTION LAW

ProPublica's investigation explores the stories of two women who died after
Georgia's strict abortion law went into effect in July 2022. The law bans
abortions after six week of pregnancy with few exceptions.

According to ProPublica, Thurman became pregnant with twins unexpectedly in 2022
and faced roadblocks to receiving reproductive care due to the state's ban. She
went to North Carolina for a medication abortion but experienced rare
complications after taking the prescribed abortion pills.



Thurman became septic in the hospital due to excess tissue in her uterus that
did not shed from her body, causing a serious infection. Thurman needed a
dilation and curettage, or D&C, a procedure in which tissue is removed from
inside the uterus. However, Georgia's ban considers a D&C a felony if performed
outside of specific circumstances and could land doctors behind bars for up to
10 years.

Thurman's health deteriorated for 20 hours before doctors finally took her to
surgery. By then, it was too late, ProPublica's reporting says. Her heart
stopped on the table.

Thurman's death was "preventable," according to Georgia’s maternal mortality
review committee, which said the hospital's delay in providing the D&C due to
state law "had a large impact on her fatal outcome," ProPublica reports.





Candi Miller was a 41-year-old Georgia woman with chronic health issues
including lupus and hypertension that made carrying a pregnancy
life-threatening.

Already a mother of three, Miller became pregnant in the fall of 2022. Fearing
for her life, she did not want to keep the pregnancy. But she found that the
exceptions to the Georgia abortion ban only applied to imminent and acute
life-threatening emergencies and did not extend to chronic health conditions,
even those that can become lethal in pregnancy, ProPublica reports.



Unwilling to wait until things became more dire, she opted out of going to a
doctor's office for fear of legal repercussions and instead underwent abortion
on her own, ordering pills online. She suffered a rare complication but was
reticent to seek medical care, her family later told officials. She was found
unresponsive on Nov. 12 at home.

An autopsy found fetal tissue in her uterus as a result of the incomplete
abortion as well as a combination of pain pills. Her family said she had avoided
seeking medical care “due to the current legislation on pregnancies and
abortions.” The state committee also deemed her death “preventable,” reports
ProPublica.




WHAT DOES GEORGIA'S ABORTION LAW SAY?

In Georgia, abortion is banned after six weeks with some exceptions. Georgia
passed the six-week ban in November 2022, and it was upheld by the state supreme
court in 2023.

The ban has some exceptions for rape, incest and the health of the mother up to
20 weeks. Critics say six weeks is too soon because studies have shown that
women generally don't discover they are pregnant until they've at least missed
one period, around five to six weeks into gestation. Some experts and healthcare
workers have criticized the law as having vague, difficult-to-interpret language
and restrictive stipulations around what qualifies as an "exception."

Some of the specific language that impacted Thurman's case is explored in-depth
in ProPublica's report.

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Supporters commend the legislation for correcting what they saw as
unconstitutional laws under Roe v. Wade. Some believe life begins at conception,
meaning they feel they are protecting the life of a baby in the womb. Other
supporters say that abortion was too widely and loosely used before the law went
into place or that their religious beliefs compel them to support restrictions.
Supporters also maintain that the exceptions outlined in the bill are ample to
protect the health of mothers and babies.



The "heartbeat" law, known as the LIFE Act, has been the subject of some
back-and-forth in state courts, having initially been blocked by Fulton County
Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney who previously ruled the ban "unequivocally
unconstitutional" on the grounds it was introduced in 2019 before
the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

The higher court, however, determined in October of last year that the new
precedent set by the reversal is now the standard by which to judge
abortion-related matters in a 6-1 decision.


RESPONSES TO PROPUBLICA'S INVESTIGATION

Some organizations issued statements in response to ProPublica's reporting.

Nancy Northup, President & CEO at the Center for Reproductive Rights said, in
part: “Amber Thurman should be alive today. Her death was preventable—her
doctors knew how to perform the very basic medical procedure needed to save her
life, but felt their hands were tied because of the state’s abortion ban. The
Georgia lawmakers who passed this ban are ultimately responsible for her death,
and the Supreme Court justices who voted to overturn Roe v. Wade."



Dr. Christina Francis, CEO of the American Association of Pro-Life OBGYNs
(AAPLOG) said, in part: "Amber Thurman’s tragic death, recently covered by
multiple news organizations, was caused by side effects of legal abortion
drugs and medical negligence, not pro-life laws. Despite taking the drugs as she
was instructed and seeking timely care when she experienced complications, she
still died."


WHAT HAS KAMALA HARRIS SAID ABOUT ABORTION BANS?

Presidential candidate Kamala Harris responded to the ProPublica piece with a
statement on social media Tuesday:

“A young mother from Georgia should be alive today, raising her son and pursuing
her dream of attending nursing school," she said of Thurman. "Women are bleeding
out in parking lots, turned away from emergency rooms, losing their ability to
ever have children again. Survivors of rape and incest are being told they
cannot make decisions about what happens next to their bodies. And now women are
dying. These are the consequences of Donald Trump’s actions."

Harris will also be addressing abortion bans in a planned speech in Atlanta on
Friday.




WHAT HAS DONALD TRUMP SAID ABOUT ABORTION BANS?

"President Trump has always supported exceptions for rape, incest, and the life
of the mother, which Georgia's law provides," the Trump campaign told USA TODAY
in response to the death of Thurman. "With those exceptions in place, it’s
unclear why doctors did not swiftly act to protect Amber Thurman’s life.”



Trump has often said he believes the issue should be left up to the states.

In late August, the former president criticized Florida's ban on abortions after
six weeks of pregnancy in an interview with NBC, saying "I think the six-week is
too short; it has to be more time." A day later, however, he announced he would
vote against a ballot measure in his home state of Florida that would overturn
the ban, citing concerns it would result in "ninth-month" abortions.








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