As Ohio restricts abortions, 10-year-old girl travels to Indiana for procedure

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On Monday three days after the Supreme Court issued its groundbreaking decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, Dr. Caitlin Bernard, an Indianapolis obstetrician-gynecologist, took a call from a colleague, a child abuse doctor in Ohio.

Hours after the Supreme Court action, the Buckeye state had outlawed any abortion after six weeks. Now this doctor had a 10-year-old patient in the office who was six weeks and three days pregnant.

Could Bernard help?

Indiana lawmakers are poised to further restrict or ban abortion in mere weeks. The Indiana General Assembly will convene in a special session July 25 when it will discuss restrictio ns to abortion policy along with inflation relief.


But for now, the procedure still is legal in Indiana. And so the girl soon was on her way to Indiana to Bernard's care.

Indiana abortion laws unchanged, but effect still felt across state​

While Indiana law did not change last week when the Supreme Court issued its groundbreaking Dobbs decision, abortion providers here have felt an effect, experiencing a dramatic increase in the number of patients coming to their clinics from neighboring states with more restrictive policies.


Since Friday, the abortion clinics where Dr. Katie McHugh, an independent obstetrician-gynecologists works have seen “an insane amount of requests” from pregnant people in Kentucky and Ohio, where it is far more difficult to get an abortion.
A ban on abortions after six weeks took effect on last week in Ohio. Last Friday the two abortion providers in Kentucky shut their doors after that state’s trigger law banning abortions went into effect.
Indiana soon could have similar restrictions.
That pains doctors like Bernard.
“It’s hard to imagine that in just a few short weeks we will have no ability to provide that care,” Bernard said.

For now, Indiana abortion providers have been fielding more calls from neighboring states. Typically about five to eight patients a day might hail from out of state, said McHugh, who works at multiple clinics in central and southern Indiana. Now, the clinics are seeing about 20 such patients a day.

Kentucky patients have been coming to Indiana in higher numbers since earlier this spring when more restrictive laws took effect there, McHugh said.

Indianapolis abortion clinics seeing surge in patients from Ohio, Kentucky​


A similar dynamic is at play at Women’s Med, a medical center that performs abortions in Indianapolis that has a sister center in Dayton, Ohio. In the past week, they have doubled the number of patients they treat for a complete procedure, accepting many referrals from their Ohio counterpart.

More than 100 patients in Dayton had to be scheduled at the Indianapolis facility, a representative for Women’s Med, wrote in an email to IndyStar.

Women and pregnant people are “crying, distraught, desperate, thankful and appreciative,” the representative wrote.

The two centers are working together to route patients to Indianapolis for a termination after a pre-op appointment in Dayton. In recent months, they have also had people from southern states, like Texas, come north for a procedure.

Many patients, particularly from Ohio and Kentucky, are seeking care through Women’s Med while also making multiple appointments in other states so if one state closes down, they will still have some options, the representative wrote.

The center is advising pregnant people with a positive pregnancy test to book an appointment even though prior to the Supreme Court ruling they asked people to wait until their six-week mark to do so.

For years people have traversed state lines for abortions, particularly if a clinic across the border is closer to their home than the nearest in-state facility.

In 2021, 465, or about 5.5% of the more than 8,400 abortions performed, were done on out-of-state residents, according to the Indiana Department of Health's most recent terminated pregnancy report. More than half, 264, lived in Kentucky and 40 in Ohio.

Midwestern residents can also travel to Illinois, where abortion is likely to remain legal even in the wake of the recent Supreme Court ruling but for many Indiana is closer and until the lawmakers pass any measure to the contrary, abortion will be legal here.

Still, it remains murky what the future holds.

Thursday a lower court ruled that abortions could resume, at least for now, in Kentucky. On Wednesday abortion clinics in Ohio filed suit, saying that state’s new ban was unconstitutional.

In Indiana lawmakers have declined to provide specifics of what measures any abortion legislation considered here might contain.

For now, then, abortion providers are doing their best to accommodate all Hoosier patients as well those from neighboring states.

“We are doing the best we can to increase availability and access as long as we can, knowing that this will be a temporary time frame that we can offer that assistance,” McHugh said.
 
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“Now this doctor had a 10-year-old patient in the office who was six weeks and three days pregnant.”

Just fucking lie and do it, then.

“When did this happen?”
“The 23rd.”
“Okay, sounds good…” writes 28 on paperwork.

For a bunch of people holding themselves out as a beleaguered underground resistance to The Handmaid’s Tale Taliban, you sure seem averse to taking risks.
 
"Ten year old girl" is not identifying information. There is absolutely zero chance of the child being identified from that.

There are a lot of ten year old girls, and a non-trivial number of them are rape victims.

She was EXACTLY six weeks pregnant at the day of the ruling.

The good news is that the girl in question doesn’t actually exist. The bad news is fraud is being created in real time.
 
Question: How does a 10 year old even know they are pregnant that early? Who tests regularly ten year olds or was this after the abuse was reported and they decided to test her then? If that's the case, I hope they know who did it and get a dna test to confirm. Then time to go pedo lynching.
 
Then why aren't there exceptions written into the law for cases like this so child rape victims don't have to travel out of state?
I don't think she needed to travel out of state. Either exception below would apply to an underage girl. But politicians being idiots and needing to update laws they half-assed is hardly anything new.
The law bans abortions in Ohio after six weeks of gestation. It is called the "Heartbeat Protection Act" because physicians are required to determine if there is a detectable fetal heartbeat before conducting an abortion. If there is, the procedure cannot move forward.​

The law does provide two exceptions, however. An abortion can be conducted after the six-week mark if a physician finds the procedure "necessary to prevent the death of the pregnant woman or to prevent a serious risk of the substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function of the pregnant woman." It can also be conducted if there is no fetal heartbeat.​
 
I don't think she needed to travel out of state. Either exception below would apply to an underage girl. But politicians being idiots and needing to update laws they half-assed is hardly anything new.
The law bans abortions in Ohio after six weeks of gestation. It is called the "Heartbeat Protection Act" because physicians are required to determine if there is a detectable fetal heartbeat before conducting an abortion. If there is, the procedure cannot move forward.​

The law does provide two exceptions, however. An abortion can be conducted after the six-week mark if a physician finds the procedure "necessary to prevent the death of the pregnant woman or to prevent a serious risk of the substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function of the pregnant woman." It can also be conducted if there is no fetal heartbeat.​
None of these laws accounted to children being raped. Or adults having the sense TO enact action against ... children being raped.
 
She was EXACTLY six weeks pregnant at the day of the ruling.

The good news is that the girl in question doesn’t actually exist. The bad news is fraud is being created in real time.
Lots of women discover they're pregnant at six weeks due to a missed period. Kids get raped, girls get pregnant as the result of rape.

I get that some people are gonna believe what they want to believe come Hell or high water, but this notion that life is an Encyclopedia Brown story where a single convenient fact disproves an entire story is just goofy as fuck. You're not being clever.
 
I would think "necessary to prevent the death of the pregnant woman or to prevent a serious risk of the substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function of the pregnant woman" would cover a pregnant 10 year old.

That's way too young even by hillbilly standards.
I remember one pregnant girl in my Jr. High (this would have been late 80's early 90's). She would have been between 13-14 provided she never repeated a grade.
 
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I would think "necessary to prevent the death of the pregnant woman or to prevent a serious risk of the substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function of the pregnant woman" would cover a pregnant 10 year old.

That's way to young even by hillbilly standards.
I remember one pregnant girl in my Jr. High (this would have been late 80's early 90's). She would have been between 13-14 provided she never repeated a grade.
Not in hillbilly country.
 
I was just saying I grew up in hillbilly country and remember exactly 1 pregnant 13-14 year old. The universal opinion of everyone at the time was "That's fucked up." That was at least 30 years ago.

That sort of thing was only common amongst the project dwellers.
There was a story on the local news where a mother (might have been a grand mother) brought a 12 year old relative in and asked the Doc to check her out and see if she was ready to "start breeding" as the guardian put it.
He contacted all the people who should step in and none of them seemed to have much interest in it.

The poor girls in the projects were bred like farm animals becase more kids means more benefits.
 
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