Law Amber Thurman First Named 'Preventable' Abortion Death Since Bans - A Georgia woman died after not receiving timely medical care due to the state's restrictive abortion law, investigative journalism site ProPublica reports.

  • 🔧 Actively working on site again.
article
archive

Published Sep 17, 2024 at 7:25 AM EDT Updated Sep 17, 2024 at 11:36 AM EDT
By Khaleda Rahman
National Correspondent

A Georgia woman died after not receiving timely medical care due to the state's restrictive abortion law, investigative journalism site ProPublica reports.

Amber Nicole Thurman, 28, experienced a rare complication after taking abortion pills and died during emergency surgery in August 2022, according to medical reports obtained by the site.

Newsweek has contacted the hospital where she died for comment via email.

ProPublica said the case marks the first incident of an abortion-related death that an official state committee deemed "preventable" has been made public. It said it will soon publish details of a second case.


Georgia law banning most abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy, labeled the LIFE Act, took effect on July 20, 2022. Thurman's pregnancy had recently passed that mark when she discovered she was pregnant, records shared with ProPublica showed.

The new law also made performing a dilation and curettage (D&C), a procedure to remove tissue from the uterus following an abortion or miscarriage, a felony offense with medical exceptions—but doctors had warned the law's language is too vague.

Thurman discovered she was pregnant with twins in the summer of 2022, soon after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, prompting bans and restrictions on abortions in now 22 states.

The otherwise healthy medical assistant and single mother to a 6-year-old boy made the decision to terminate to preserve her family stability, according to her best friend Ricaria Baker. She had moved out of her family's home into a gated apartment complex and had plans to enroll in nursing school.

Thurman had wanted a surgical abortion in her home state and hoped Georgia's ban would be paused in court, but at nine weeks she sought care at a clinic in North Carolina.

On the day of her appointment, Baker said they hit traffic and the clinic could not hold her spot for longer than 15 minutes. Instead, Thurman was given a medication abortion with mifepristone and misoprostol, a regimen approved by the U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Abortion using medication is the most common way to end a pregnancy in the U.S., and deaths from complications are extremely rare—only 32 deaths were reported to the FDA through 2022 out of almost 6 million who have used mifepristone to terminate a pregnancy, regardless of whether the drug played a role.

After taking the pills, Thurman experienced cramping, but her condition worsened over several days with vomiting and heavy bleeding, according to the report.

She was transported to Piedmont Henry Hospital in Stockbridge, Georgia, on the evening of August 18, where doctors discovered she had not expelled all the fetal tissue from her body.

She was diagnosed with "acute severe sepsis" the following morning, but even then, a D&C was not done. ProPublica reported that doctors continued to gather information and dispense medicine instead of performing the procedure even as Thurman was breathing rapidly and at risk of bleeding out.


At 12:05 p.m. that day, more than 17 hours after Thurman arrived at the hospital, a doctor who specializes in intensive care notified the OB-GYN that her condition was deteriorating. She was taken to an operating room two hours later.

By that stage, the situation was so dire it required open abdominal surgery. The doctor performed the D&C and found a hysterectomy was also required. During the procedure, Thurman's heart stopped.

Georgia's maternal mortality review committee, which includes 10 doctors, concluded that there was a "good chance" that Thurman's death could likely have been prevented if the D&C had been provided earlier.

While official reviews of individual patient cases are not made public, ProPublica said it had obtained reports confirming at least one other woman had died after being unable to access legal abortions and timely medical care in their state. There are almost certainly others, it said.


A judge in Atlanta later blocked Georgia's updated abortion law, but the state's supreme court ruled in 2023 that it could remain. The law allows abortion up to 20 weeks of pregnancy in cases of rape and incest and if one is necessary to prevent a patient's death or substantial physical impairment of a major bodily function.

Kamala Harris: 'Exactly What We Feared'

Twenty-two states have banned or restricted abortion since Roe v. Wade was overturned in June 2022. Since then, voters in seven states—California, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana, Ohio and Vermont—siding with abortion rights supporters on ballot measures.

Vice President Kamala Harris, who is campaigning on defending abortion rights, responded to ProPublica's report, saying Thurman's case "was exactly what we feared when Roe was struck down" and blamed her opponent, former President Donald Trump.

"This young mother should be alive, raising her son, and pursuing her dream of attending nursing school," she said.

"In more than 20 states, Trump Abortion Bans are preventing doctors from providing basic medical care. 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 said she wants to pass legislation to "restore reproductive freedom," while saying that Trump wants a national abortion ban. She warned "these horrific realities will multiply" if he wins the presidential election in November.

Trump announced in April that he wants abortion rights legislation left to individual states.


Reproductive rights groups also expressed outrage after ProPublica's report was published on Monday.

"Amber would be alive right now if it wasn't for Donald Trump & [Georgia Governor] Brian Kemp's abortion ban," Mini Timmaraju, president of Reproductive Freedom for All, wrote on X. "They have blood on their hands."

Pregnancy Justice wrote on X: "This is absolutely devastating. Amber Thurman waited 20 hours for doctors to finally operate on her spreading infection, sinking blood pressure, and failing organs. By then, it was too late. If she had access to timely care, she would still be here. Abortion bans kill people."

Garrison Douglas, a spokesperson for Kemp, said in a statement to Newsweek: "It is self-evident that dangerous misinformation places patients' lives at risk, which is why getting the facts right is vitally important.


"Georgia's LIFE Act not only expanded support for expectant mothers but also established clear exceptions, including providing necessary care in the event of a medical emergency. In Georgia, we will always fight for and protect the lives of the most vulnerable among us."

Update 9/17/24, 8:45 a.m. ET: A statement from Kamala Harris has been added.

Update 9/17/24, 9:25 a.m. ET: A statement from Garrison Douglas has been added.

Update 9/17/24, 9:53 a.m. ET: Further context on abortion legislation has been included.




Other articles about this:
 
Child killer ended up executing themselves, excellent result.
hiiiii.gif
 
Last edited:
Amber Nicole Thurman, 28, experienced a rare complication after taking abortion pills

Thurman discovered she was pregnant with twins in the summer of 2022

The otherwise healthy medical assistant and single mother to a 6-year-old boy made the decision to terminate to preserve her family stability
So she died in the process of murdering her twins. Which she got knocked up with because she was out fucking randos while her six year old son sat waiting for her at home.

Bye.

edit: pic

1726596548317.png
 
Two years and they can find one "preventable death"? For all the hand-wringing over how this is bad for women, doesn't that kind of prove that this isn't a big deal after all?
Surely there has been a veritable holocaust of women who died during childbirth because they were forced to carry the pregnancy to term by cishet white conservative Christian men though, right?
 
Amber Nicole Thurman, 28, experienced a rare complication after taking abortion pills and died during emergency surgery in August 2022, according to medical reports obtained by the site.
So she was given abortion pills and not medically supervised while taking them. This is WHY they shouldn’t be OTC or given outside of medical supervision. There is a push for these pills to be be seen as safe when they’re actually not at all. You’re supposed to be told that you may experience heavy bleeding but that anything past a certain point, or fever or certain symptoms is ER time. She left it several days, and ended up septic.
Make sure you quote this case the next time some idiot is telling you that this combo should be available OTC becasue it’s safe.
 
This is why you shouldn't be able to just pick up a rX to terminate a pregnancy, because shit can happen. As for why a D&C wasn't preformed, there probably wasn't anyone in the hospital that could preform one (a lot of hospitals have had to close maternity wards and care towards new moms and newborns).

I'm of an opinion that all abortions shouldn't be done in out patients clinics because serious complications can arise but people in this day and age treat it like it's a root canal.
 
We've had a similar thing in Poland. A young girl dying of sepsis because her doctor refused to abort an ectopic pregnancy or something like that. What happened is that women mobilized full-force and gave a push to change the ruling government. Price of everything going up? I sleep. Young industrious people have to sell themselves into slavery by taking a 30 year mortgage to afford a home? I sleep. Abortion restrictions? REAL SHIT.

It's going to happen in the US, too. For some reason abortion is the most important issue among women despite them not having any plans to raise children. Fuck if I know why, but what I know is that blacks were the biggest recipents of free abortion and all the right in the US accomplished is generating circa ebout 200k new Democrat voters per year. You are made of STUPID.
 
So she was given abortion pills and not medically supervised while taking them. This is WHY they shouldn’t be OTC or given outside of medical supervision. There is a push for these pills to be be seen as safe when they’re actually not at all. You’re supposed to be told that you may experience heavy bleeding but that anything past a certain point, or fever or certain symptoms is ER time. She left it several days, and ended up septic.
Make sure you quote this case the next time some idiot is telling you that this combo should be available OTC becasue it’s safe.
Oh and don't forget, she was a nigger and on Nigger People Time, so she COULD'VE had her abortion at any time, and even had one scheduled. But because being on time is fucking racist, she ded.
 
If only their was some method to prevent pregnancy in the first place.

On the day of her appointment, Baker said they hit traffic and the clinic could not hold her spot for longer than 15 minutes

Yeah. Sounds more like the abortion provider being the issue here. Not abortion but have similar doctor visits where "Oh you didn't make it in the 15 min window. We are canceling your appointment, by the way if you did make it enjoy sitting in the waiting room for a fucking hour before someone sees you to start the paperwork"
 
So a woman who had access to having an abortion died due to taking pills that pro-choice people heavily advocated for being available over the counter by mail and for use without medical supervision.....and the pro-life people are at fault?

I'm pretty ambivalent on this topic and let other people fight it out. But how is this supposed to convince me of anything.
 
I'm of an opinion that all abortions shouldn't be done in out patients clinics because serious complications can arise but people in this day and age treat it like it's a root canal.
women feel bad about going to medical centers for medical procedures because it reminds them that they're performing a serious action with possible serious consequences. if they go to a "clinic" in the bad part of town sandwiched between a Subway and a nail salon it feels less like a medical procedure so then they feel better about themselves

plus, Planned Parenthood is an activist organization that won't say no to their request. if they had to go to an actual medical provider that had standards they might be told no or have stipulations for their abortion, which also makes them feel bad

women can't stand feeling like they're going to suffer consequences for any of their actions, so here we are
 
So if abortion had been more illegal and she hadn't been allowed to do this out of state, she'd still be alive?

How interesting that this is the case they'd choose. Almost like there aren't thousands of women dying from complications due to abortions denied, so they have to start actually going to complications from abortions granted.

The fact that they went with this specific case indicates that they want AWFLs with secret racist thoughts to think that the life of twins born to a black single mom isn't really worth living because there's probably not enough money for sports travel teams and international vacations.
 
If only their was some method to prevent pregnancy in the first place.



Yeah. Sounds more like the abortion provider being the issue here. Not abortion but have similar doctor visits where "Oh you didn't make it in the 15 min window. We are canceling your appointment, by the way if you did make it enjoy sitting in the waiting room for a fucking hour before someone sees you to start the paperwork"
Realistically, how fucking hard is it to make it on time to a medical appointment like that? Fuck bureaucracy and all that but I don't buy that she was late because of traffic. You don't show up to the airport on time, you show up an hour or two early.
 
Back