Current:Home > MarketsTexas mother of two, facing health risks, asks court to allow emergency abortion -TrueNorth Capital Hub
Texas mother of two, facing health risks, asks court to allow emergency abortion
View
Date:2025-04-14 14:36:54
AUSTIN, Texas — A Texas woman on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against the state, asking a county judge to grant her relief from restrictive anti-abortion laws and authorize her to obtain the medically needed procedure.
Kate Cox, of Dallas, is 20 weeks pregnant with an unborn baby who has Edwards' syndrome, a lethal genetic condition that causes severe developmental delay. Doctors advised her to get an abortion because there was "virtually no chance" her baby would survive, and continuing the pregnancy poses grave risks to her health and fertility, according to the court filing.
"I do not want my baby to arrive in this world only to watch her suffer a heart attack or suffocation," Cox said in a news release. "I desperately want the chance to try for another baby and want to access the medical care now that gives me the best chance at another baby.”
In 2021, Texas passed one of the most restrictive state abortion laws, prohibiting the procedure once embryonic cardiac activity could be detected, which is around six weeks. A year later, with the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the state's "trigger law" went into effect, prohibiting abortion from the moment of fertilization with a few exceptions. The restrictions are being contested in multiple courts.
Cox, her husband Justin and her OB-GYN are asking the court to temporarily block Texas' overlapping abortion bans and to authorize the termination of Cox's pregnancy. Texas laws only allow an abortion in cases where "a life-threatening physical condition ... places the woman in danger of death or a serious risk of substantial impairment of a major bodily function."
'My baby was going to die anyway':Texas Supreme Court hears case challenging state's near-total abortion ban
Pregnancy would pose great health risks, doctors said
Cox, who has two children, has been admitted to three different emergency rooms in the past month after experiencing severe cramping and unidentifiable fluid leaks, according to the complaint.
Her pregnancy puts her at increased risk of gestational hypertension, gestational diabetes, uterine rupture from Caesarean section and post-operative infections, among other conditions, and carrying the pregnancy to term would make it less likely that she will be able to carry a third child in the future, Cox's doctors advised her, according to the filing.
Cox said she and her husband are hoping to have more children and were devastated to learn their unborn child has Edwards' syndrome, also called Trisomy 18. More than 95% of fetuses diagnosed with the condition die in the womb, and those who do survive have a high likelihood of dying from congenital heart disease or respiratory failure, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
Texas' has among the strongest abortion restrictions in country
Cox's suit comes a week after the Texas Supreme Court heard oral arguments in another abortion-related case, Zurawski v. Texas, which alleges that vague language and “non-medical terminology” in state laws leave doctors unable or unwilling to administer abortion care, forcing patients to seek treatment out of state or to wait until after their lives are in danger. Cox's physician is a plaintiff in Zurawski v. Texas.
A series of laws passed between 2021 and 2023 in Texas have reduced access to abortion except in cases in which a pregnant patient risks death or “substantial impairment of major bodily function." Physicians who violate the laws face severe penalties, including fines of more than $100,000 and first-degree felony charges, punishable with up to life in prison.
Senate Bill 8 — a 2021 law that banned abortions once embryonic cardiac activity could be detected, generally around the sixth week of gestation, before most women know they are pregnant — skirted federal protections for abortion by relying on private citizens to enforce it through lawsuits against providers and anyone involved in aiding with the procedure.
In December 2021, a state district judge ruled that the law violated the Texas Constitution, but it was allowed to remain in effect while its constitutionality was under review in several court cases.
Post-Roe:Abortions in US rose slightly after restrictions were put in place
veryGood! (217)
Related
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Facebook will examine whether it treats Black users differently
- Transcript: Sen. Mark Kelly on Face the Nation, April 16, 2023
- You can now ask Google to scrub images of minors from its search results
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Netflix employees are staging a walkout as a fired organizer speaks out
- House lawmakers ask Amazon to prove Bezos and other execs didn't lie to Congress
- Their Dad Transformed Video Games In The 1970s — And Passed On His Pioneering Spirit
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Allison Williams and Fiancé Alexander Dreymon Seal Their Oscars Date Night With a Kiss
Ranking
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Memes about COVID-19 helped us cope with life in a pandemic, a new study finds
- All the Ways Everything Everywhere All at Once Made Oscars History
- See Angela Bassett and More Black Panther Stars Marvelously Take Over the 2023 Oscars
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- U.S. indicts 2 men behind major ransomware attacks
- Meet skimpflation: A reason inflation is worse than the government says it is
- Facebook dithered in curbing divisive user content in India
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram suffer worldwide outage
Instagram Is Pausing Its Plan To Develop A Platform For Kids After Criticism
Oscars 2023: Malala Officially Calls a Truce Between Chris Pine and Harry Styles After #Spitgate
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Hunting sunken treasure from a legendary shipwreck
Google Is Appealing A $5 Billion Antitrust Fine In The EU
Russia pulls mothballed Cold War-era tanks out of deep storage as Ukraine war grinds on