Nevaeh Crain & Josseli Barnica should be alive. Politicians and journalists put pregnant women & preborn children at risk by misrepresenting the law.
View this email in your browser ([link removed])
John,
You probably heard about two pregnant women who tragically passed away in Texas after medical professionals refused to provide critical care.
Colin Allred, Kamala Harris, and their allies in the media claim that Texas’ abortion ban caused these young mothers to die, hoping their heartbreaking stories would give Democrats an edge in the election today.
Here’s the truth.
Nevaeh Crain and Josseli Barnica should be alive today. Politicians and journalists put pregnant women and preborn children at risk by misrepresenting the law.
[link removed]
The women showed up to the emergency room with serious conditions, but doctors didn’t treat them because they believed the media’s claims that they could be sued for an illegal abortion if they delivered the baby early in order to save the mom.
Doctors should have immediately done a C-section or induction, for example, to try to save both the mother and baby, even if the child wouldn’t survive. State law explicitly allows intervention in medical emergencies.
>> Miscarriage treatment is NOT an abortion. That’s written directly in Texas law. Abortion ends a preborn life. Miscarriage treatment removes a child who has already passed away. No law protecting preborn babies from abortion prevents intervention for tragic cases of miscarriage.
*Texas Health and Safety Code, Chapter 245 ([link removed])
>> Every Texas Pro-Life law contains a medical emergency exception and definition. If a pregnancy seriously threatens a mother’s life or major bodily function, Texas law lets doctors step in right away. The “medical emergency” exception in Texas’ policies allows life-saving treatment that might look like an abortion, but the intent is to protect the mother’s life—not to end the life of the unborn child.
*Texas Health and Safety Code, Chapter 171 ([link removed])
Despite the narrative, monthly data from the Health and Human Services Commission ([link removed]) reveals most doctors in Texas are continuing to treat pregnant women and preborn children without interruption. They know they have a special opportunity to care for two lives at once.
Still, physicians, like those you hear about in the news, have been misled by the media and then abandoned by medical attorneys who are supposed to advise them. Doctors aren’t expected to be legal experts, but the experts and organizations that usually educate physicians on state law neglected their jobs. Mixed messages and blatant political activism from medical groups have muddied the water for many doctors on the front lines.
[link removed]
Texas Right to Life worked with the Texas Medical Board ([link removed]) to provide guidelines for physicians: State law permits intervention whenever a mother faces a life-threatening condition; doctors don’t have to wait until she is on “death’s door,” as Democrats claim.
The loss of Nevaeh Crain, Josseli Barnica, and their children were preventable tragedies. By exploiting their deaths for a pro-abortion agenda, Democrats and journalists made political props out of mothers who should be alive today. Media outlets have created confusion in the last three years in order to erase the impact of Pro-Life laws: tens of thousands of babies saved from abortion.
Please pray for the Crain and Barnica families, and for the conversion of reporters and politicians who seek to legalize abortion again. Help us spread the truth about Pro-Life laws by forwarding this email. YOU can also set the record straight by sharing our article on social media ([link removed]) .
For Life,
Texas Right to Life
============================================================
** GIVE NOW ([link removed])
Copyright © 2024 Texas Right to Life, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website.
Our mailing address is:
Texas Right to Life
4500 Bissonnet St.
Suite 305
Bellaire, TX 77401
USA
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.