Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Answering Your Questions About the Roe Verdict
Episode Date: July 5, 2022The overturning of Roe has created an astounding number of questions and problems, and the fact is that we don’t know for sure how the landscape will change in the next few years or even months. Thi...s week, Dr. Sydnee uses the best available information to answer listener questions about what the Roe decision means for those seeking medical care related to pregnancy, including the morning after pill, vasectomies as contraception, and ectopic pregnancies.Addendum: There is a prescription form of emergency contraception called Ella that may be more effective in larger bodies. Speak to your primary care physician for more information.Resources:Abortion On Our Own Terms: https://abortiononourownterms.org/https://apiaryps.org/https://www.abortionfinder.org/Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/
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Saw bones is a show about medical history, and nothing the hosts say should be taken as medical advice or opinion.
It's for fun. Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil?
We think you've earned it. Just sit back, relax, and enjoy a moment of distraction from that weird growth.
You're worth it.
that weird growth. You're worth it.
Alright, talk is about books.
One, two, one, two, three, four. Hello everybody and welcome to Saw Bones.
A marital tour of Miscite and Medicine.
I'm your co-host Justin McRoy.
No, I'm Sydney McRoy.
Justin, this is a little different this episode.
And I think we already put out a tweet requesting these questions,
so you probably know what we're talking about today.
In light of the overturning of Roe v Wade, which I think everyone is aware of, which now
removed our national right, our American right, to autonomy over our own bodies and to
reproductive health and turned that over to states to decide individually resulting
in many states now restricting abortion access
in a variety of ways, either completely or based on weeks
or based on methods or they haven't,
but we think they're going to.
So.
If you're not familiar with sort of this history
and you did not listen to that episode,
I would encourage you,
this is sort of a piece, I would say.
There's a lot of like background and context
that we won't necessarily be covering today, I would say. No a lot of like background and context that we won't necessarily be covering
today, I would say.
No, because we did that in that.
We did that like two weeks ago.
So if you want to give that a listen, it might be a good place to start, if you missed it,
and then, you know, come on back and we'll do our best.
Any other sort of like preamble or anything before you deliver it, because this is like
this time period, as you said to me many times is just kind of
defined by by flux and not knowing and shifting and um I think I think one thing to know well first
of all I wanted to do this episode because our listeners started spontaneously sending me these
questions before we requested them I started getting your questions and then I started getting
those questions from my friends and neighbors and colleagues saying, what do you think this looks like right now?
And I'll be honest, the answer to a lot of these questions is gray because there are a lot
of, and I am not a lawyer, but I can tell you that lawyers agree.
There are a lot of legal gray areas right now.
There are a lot of areas that this might be true today, but we don't know what will be true next week.
And so I will say that if you're listening to this show,
anytime other than now, the answers could be different.
So a year from now, everything I'm saying will probably have changed.
And it also varies greatly depending on what state
in the United States you live in.
Yeah.
So I know West Virginia very well.
I will do my best to sort of generalize my answers, but honestly, it's different state
by state.
And obviously we're going to be discussing reproductive health and abortion throughout
this episode.
I know that for some people, those aren't topics you want to engage with all the time.
So just be aware of that.
Hello, I was wondering if there were any other ways to deal with ectopic pregnancies
other than abortion.
Sincerely, a girl who won't be kids
but is not terrified and won't get medical attention
if I need it during pregnancy.
Absolutely.
Well, I got a lot of questions about ectopic pregnancy.
So this may not have been you, your question,
but if you asked one about ectopic pregnancy,
I tried to lump in a lot of answers under one question.
So an ectopic pregnancy is basically when,
are you trying to...
I'm trying to.
You want to answer?
Is it when the zygote implants in the phloetiant tubes?
That is one example of an ectopic pregnancy.
Basically, if it implants somewhere other than inside
the uterus, which is where it
it should. So a fallopian tube is the
most common example, but it can implant
other places like, for instance, old
like C-section scars. They can implant.
So there are lots of places. The point
about an ectopic pregnancy, this will
not develop into a viable fetus.
Because it is implanted in the wrong place, this will, and to put it in very lay terms,
this will never become a baby.
It just won't.
And for a lot of people who undergo this, they may very much desire pregnancy.
Right.
There's a lot of people.
There's a lot of trauma associated with it.
Yes. And so when you find out beyond the risk to the person carrying the baby.
So those are the two things to know.
This is never going to be a viable pregnancy.
It's just not.
There is no way, because this was other questions, there is no way to implant that embryo into
the uterus.
There is no way to do that.
That's not medically possible.
Several states put laws in the books. Have tried to put laws on the books. I don't know if any of them ever passed to say that we have no way to do that. That's not medically possible. Several states put laws in the books.
Have tried to put laws on the books. I don't know if any of ever passed to say that we
have to attempt to do that. It would be like saying you have to attempt to fly. You can't
like, you just can't. This is not something we can do. And that's for some people, they wish
we could. In that moment, they wish we could do that because they desired that pregnancy.
So one, this will never become a viable pregnancy.
Two, it is a medical emergency that it be dealt with.
Maybe not in that exact moment.
Maybe the person presenting with an ectopic pregnancy does not need medical attention within
the next five minutes or something terrible will happen, but it absolutely has to be managed
immediately.
Because if you allow that to continue to develop,
it will rupture whatever structure,
the tube, most commonly it's in,
and that will be, in that case, fatal
to the person carrying that pregnancy.
So it has to be managed.
It is absolutely a medical emergency.
It has to be diagnosed and treated
or else the person will likely die.
So when we manage those, we actually don't, I think that's an area a lot of people are
confused about.
We actually don't perform on what we would call an abortion in that case.
So there are two ways to manage it.
If it's early enough and small enough, you can take a medication. It's actually a shot that they give you there, all on site, that will induce basically a
miscarriage, which we can use that term or an abortion, an induced abortion.
But it's different because this isn't a viable pregnancy.
So we can treat an ectopic pregnancy.
That's how I would say it.
We're treating the ectopic pregnancy that way with a medication. It's called methotrexate, which I know some people do take it
by mouth for other things. This is a shot. It's different. It works differently. Or secondly,
a surgical approach. And it really depends on exactly where it is and how far along
to determine which one is most appropriate for that patient. When it is a surgical approach,
there's always a risk because basically,
especially let's take a tube, for example,
they may be able to just remove the ectopic pregnancy,
but often they end up having to remove the whole tube,
not always, but that is a risk,
which can put future fertility
if you desire fertility at risk as well.
So these are serious emergencies that have to be dealt with medically.
If you are concerned, if you, you know, please do not hesitate in seeking care in light of
this new law.
And that is the bullet point I want to get across.
Do seek care.
I see no reason right now that a physician in that position would delay your care or deny
you care in that circumstance.
Now, I know there are a lot of doctors talking because I'm part of these conversations about
could that is that something you could get sued for in the future?
Is that something I could be prosecuted for?
Could you make a case that I should have waited longer until the person was more unstable?
All of that, right now, the reality is,
if you have a concern for that, please go seek care immediately.
There is no reason that you should be denied care.
This is a different procedure.
It's coded differently.
This is not the same as what Roe v Wade was talking about.
So please seek care for these things.
They are different.
Hello, Sydney and Justin.
My question is, does this mean now that miscarriages can be penalized?
If so, does that include past miscarriages?
Are reported in a miscarriage to my OBGYN that happened before my most recent pregnancy?
And I'm worried that could be used against me somehow.
Thank you, Aaron.
Right now, I see no way, again, that a miscarriage could be penalized because that's a different.
It's different.
I think a lot of this has to do with how we code things.
A lot of times in, well, what I would say as a physician, what would be recorded in your
records would be a spontaneous abortion.
I think our language is what gets confusing about this.
A miscarriage is the sort of colloquial term for what we would call medically a spontaneous
abortion.
Okay.
That would not be the same.
And again, there's no reason that if you disclose that to me, it would be, you'd be
criminalized in any way for that.
Because I have no duty in this answer.
There's a lot of other questions.
I have no duty to report that.
The only thing is a physician I would ever violate your confidentiality for is if you
told me you were going to go murder someone.
That's really the only reason I can ever break that privacy, that confidentiality, is if
I know someone else is going to die because of what you just told me, then I have a duty
to report that, to save that other person's life.
If you told me that in the past,
you had a miscarriage, you had an abortion.
I have no duty to tell anyone that,
and in fact, I can't.
Right, it's protected.
Please still be honest with your medical providers
and discuss these things with them.
And if they violate your privacy and do report that,
they are breaking patient confidentiality.
So at this point again, it's important
that we recognize the reality and also dispel
dangerous myths that would lead us
to make decisions that could harm us, right?
Like not telling people or not seeking care
and that kind of thing.
Right now, these are situations
that there should be no problem disclosing.
So what are the expected effects of the decision
on medical training?
What happens if a prospective doctor's can't,
you know, they're in an area where there's bands
and they can't get the real-world experience
like what happens, that's from CJ.
Okay, this is a great question because here's what I'll tell you.
I never received any information or training
about how any of this happens.
Nor did I.
In my medical school training,
and of course I was a family physician,
so I did not go through an OBGYN residency,
but a lot of programs don't aren't able to train
their residents in these things
because they don't perform
them at the hospital where the residents are being trained.
There aren't, I mean, this is already a problem, I would say.
Now, will this problem become worse?
Certainly, I think it will, because there are going to be states like ours in West Virginia
where we only had one place where you could receive an abortion in the entire state and
it is no longer performing abortions.
So if you want, if I wanted to go train in the state, the one place where I could go train
is now closed.
Now, some of these procedures are the same, and I'll get into that.
What a DNC is and why it's the same procedure, whatever the indication is.
So all OBGYNs are trained in those, I mean, for the most part, generally speaking.
It's a DNC.
Dialation and curitage, which is the same sort of procedure that we use for an abortion
or for other reasons for having menstrual bleeding could be a reason you might get a DNC.
For after a miscarriage, if they're still concerned, they're still products inside the uterus,
you might get a DNC.
So there are other reasons you would get these.
So physicians are already trained in those.
Am I concerned that we will see less
of this training nationwide because of these bands,
certainly, and I mean, I was never taught
about the medications.
I taught myself about, I learned myself,
and we'll get into medication abortion,
but I had to read those articles by myself.
No one ever told us about that.
Hi, sobans. With this decision, very young people, 11, 12, 13 years old will be forced to
carry pregnancy, term, and give birth. What specific complications or issues would result
from having very young and not fully developed people carry a pregnancy and give birth?
So, this is an area of grave concern. All of this is of grave concern.
Of course. It's kind of like ranking the worst crap.
Right. I know. It is.
The least worst bad.
And that is why the American Academy of Pediatrics specifically came out to condemn
forcing children to give birth because you shouldn't force anyone to give birth.
But beyond that, specifically young people whose bodies aren't fully developed can have
trouble with delivery.
We're getting into very gruesome, how wide is the pelvis?
Can the baby fit through these sorts of issues.
And so you're at higher risk for complications during the delivery or a higher risk for needing
C-sections beyond the every bit as important, emotional, and psychological effects of being
forced to give birth as a child, which already being forced to give birth has trauma associated with it.
And then if you add to that, someone who is still developmentally early when it comes to
emotional development and cognitive development.
So that they're there are absolutely even more negative health consequences in this age
group than when we look at adults who are being forced to give birth, who are also going to suffer negative health consequences in this age group then when we look at adults who are being forced to give birth
who are also going to suffer negative health consequences.
Hi, sobans.
How does the abortion pill work?
How late in impregnancy can it be used?
What does it feel like to go through a medically-adoose abortion?
And if it comes down and you need to do this at home
with that doctor supervision, how do you know it worked
or if you're having complications
that need medical attention, thanks again, Erica.
Okay, so the abortion pill
is an important thing to talk about.
It's Mepha Pressdoner.
Are you 486?
Is what everybody called it
when it first came out?
I mean, that's still an accurate term,
but I remember that being widely
publicized in 2000,
back when it was first approved.
You can use this up to day 77, 11 weeks.
So, you gotta get really specific
when it comes to pregnancy and dates.
There are time frames and you can look at these specific windows where like week seven
to eight, it is slightly more effective, weeks eight to nine, it gets a little, you know,
I mean, still though we're talking up over 90% effective at inducing an abortion. So very
effective pill. It is something, and again, anytime you're considering it, it's like any other medical
decision, which is why this should be made between a patient and their provider.
Whether a medication induced abortion or a surgical abortion is right for you is a conversation
between you and your doctor.
And no one else needs to be involved in that conversation.
You will, I mean, you will feel cramping.
I have had, and I encourage you to read
abortion stories. I encourage, there are people out there abortion storytellers who specifically
share their experiences so that people will know what, why they made the decisions they made,
who want to share that. And no one should have to, but there are people who do that. And I encourage
you to seek out those stories. To learn more, what is this like? I've never taken this medication. So I can't tell you exactly what it feels like
from personal experience. I can tell you that we counsel patients. There will be cramping
and bleeding associated with it. It can take longer than a surgical abortion. So for some
people, they opt the surgical route just because it's a quicker procedure. And in some ways,
the recovery then can be faster
because you can immediately start recovering
while this would be a longer process.
You can do this at home without a doctor supervision.
Self-administered medical abortion
is a thing that people have been doing all over the world
for a while now in countries and places
where this has been restricted,
where they already have abortion bands in place.
So there are a couple different resources
that I wanted to put out there.
There's one organization abortion on our own terms
and there was someone who reached out,
they didn't specifically say I could mention their name.
So I don't wanna mention someone's name
if they don't want me to,
who sent us an email with some resources,
abortion on our own terms can tell you about self-managed abortion and how that works.
This is something that people do.
There is a safe way to do it.
You can talk to people via telemedicine if you need to be admitted and be mailed the pills
or you can go somewhere and receive them depending on where you are and do this at home.
And there is a process.
There are two medications that you take.
First, the mephapristone followed by mesoprostal and there's a process. There are two medications that you take. First, the mefapristone, followed by meoproposal,
and there's a process for all of this.
There is a way to do it with meoproposal alone,
as well, which is a process.
But I would highly recommend
that you check out that resource abortion on our own terms.
If, when, how can talk to you, those are lawyers
who can talk to you about issues related to this as well.
And there's also, we testify, which are abortion storytellers.
This is a network of people who will tell you about their experience and that can help
you understand exactly.
When you have that question, what does this feel like?
Someone who's experienced it is the best person to answer that for you.
People seem to think you can get in trouble for traveling to get an abortion.
Would HIPAA not protect you if you went to a different state for a procedure?
Currently, I don't know of any way the law could be used to prevent you.
I know that there's been a lot of talk that there are states who want to do that.
Like make you get a pregnancy test before you leave the state and then a pregnancy test
when you get back.
I just don't.
And then prove that you had a miss.
Things could always get worse, but I don't right now I don't we can't restrict interstate travel in that way.
Like that's outside of yeah, that's outside of anything to do with reproductive rights.
That's just the law.
The law.
And so I don't see if anyway that could be restricted at this time.
And in fact, traveling out of state is going to be essential for a lot of people who are seeking this care right now.
And finding ways to help those people travel out of state is going to be essential.
I recently saw that IUDs and plan B are technically illegal in Missouri now. Do you think this could happen in other states?
in other states, should I avoid getting an IUD now? I'm an American living in Canada until 2024.
On the chance that I get prosecuted for it
in five years when I needed to take it out
to things and Adley.
So I will say that there are,
I don't know about Missouri state law myself.
I know that in West Virginia currently,
those things are legal, but we are concerned,
those of us who are concerned about such things, a lot
of us in West Virginia are concerned that this could be become illegal in our state as
well. And there are, I think, up to 20 states who will probably, possibly ban Plan B at
least in the next month or two. So I definitely think that Plan B is something we should be
concerned about going away, state
by state, of course.
And then IUDs, I don't know, that's a little, it is a form of contraception, but Plan B
is as well.
So I think it determines on the, it's going to depend on how the law is written in your
state.
If they start talking about when life begins, if there are laws written about conception
being the moment life begins,
then I think that these things become a risk because even though plan B cannot abort a pregnancy,
it still is a contraception that prevents a pregnancy.
Same with an IUD, because there is this possibility that somewhere in that time frame something
gets fertilized, I don't know.
I can see these being court cases.
What it'll be, it'll be a case. But I see no way that you could get prosecuted for something
you did when it was legal. I will say that is a concern I had for people with IUDs. If it's
banned in the state, I don't see any reason we couldn't remove them, but getting a new one
put in place you'd have to travel for. But I don't see any reason we couldn't remove them, but getting a new one put in place you'd
have to travel for.
But I don't see any reason that presenting to a medical provider and saying, I've had
this IUD in place, it's time for me to get a new one.
They may now be banned from putting a new one in, but there would be no part of the ban
that would prevent them from removing it, which you need to do for your own safety once
your time, you know, once it's been in there a certain amount of time.
We have more questions.
I think we'll try to get through them a little faster after
it so we can get to as many as possible. But we will answer as many of those as we can
or after the break.
The medicines, the medicines that escalate my car before the mouth.
Um, hi, I'm looking for a movie. Oh, I got you. There's that new foreign film with the time travel. There's an amazing documentary about queer history on streaming.
Have I told you about this classic word giant robot's fight?
Or there's that one that most critics hated, but I thought was actually pretty good.
Ooh, I know.
The one with the huge car chase, and then there's that scene where the car jumps over the submarine.
Wow, who are you eclectic movie experts?
Well, I'm Evie Wattieway.
I'm Drake Clark.
And I'm Alonso D'Aralde.
And together, we host the movie podcast Maximum Film.
New episodes every week on MaximumFun.org.
And you actually just walked into our recording booth.
Oh, weird.
Sorry.
I thought this was a video store.
You seem like a lady with a lot of problems.
BELL RINGS
Carrie is it?
Oh, yes, hi, I'm Carrie.
I am psychic Ross, and I will be reading you this evening.
Oh, interesting.
Well, okay, I co-host a podcast.
It's called Oh No Rossing Carrie is.
Yes, I'm sensing that.
The spirits are telling me it is a show about
little. Well, it's about like fringe science and spirituality and things of the paranormal.
And you knew that. You do research online. But more importantly, like we do in-person
investigations. You need a person to investigate as well. Oh my god, that's amazing. See?
Me and my friend, this is so weird, my friend Ross, same name as you. Weird. He and I just go and
try them all out and actually we've gone to a number of psychics.
And to be honest with you, it's a lot like this.
It's called Ono Ross and Kerry.
They confided at Maximumfund.org.
I could have told you that.
I could have told you that.
Joyce asks, are there old-time remedies for abortion that are safe?
Please.
I wanted to highlight this because I have seen a lot of very well-intentioned people
offering like herbal.
Much the same way, the baby formula debacle
has sprung out, I guess, an answer to anything, right?
I mean, we used to get by,
and I think that's always the thing to remember.
When you started thinking about...
You'll let that kill the ancient wisdom.
Yes, we used to get by without modern methods of abortion.
Can't we do that again?
Well, we didn't, we didn't do very well.
That's why we have these modern methods is because there was still huge risk and people
died.
So I would not turn to any sort of unregulated old-time remedies for any of this, just like
we would never recommend somebody do a surgical procedure in their own home.
Right.
Please don't do that.
Please seek care.
Please continue to.
There will be organizations and we'll mention some more that can help you find safe services.
Please do that.
Don't turn to any home remedies.
We have a question here about things that people who
can't get pregnant can do.
And this person is actually asking if they should have
their sons get bisectamies in high school.
So.
OK, first of all, I don't, I do not.
Is it reversible?
Right.
Well, technically, I do not believe any providers would do this. I can't see that happening
like for that purpose because it's not currently like the doing it with the intention of reversing
it someday when you're ready. It's still certain. Yeah. It's it. There is no, there is no like
indication for it in that way. If you tell, if you you told your doctor that you intend to get it reversed,
he wouldn't have done it. Is my thought. Will that change in the future? I don't know. But right
now, the problem is that even though technically it's reversible, I mean, things can, there are
complications. It's surgery. There's a risk. There's a chance that your specifically is not
reversible. So I've seen a lot of that sort of language and rhetoric being used, like, let's
force everybody to get a vasectomy who can.
I listen, I'm doing my part.
I would not, I think everyone should have the right to control their own
reproductive health, whatever parts they have, whether they can carry a
pregnancy or whether they carry
sperm needed to fertilize an egg.
I think that that cannot be the answer.
Now if you were an adult who is, would like of a septomy because you don't want to have
any more children, but certainly seek that out.
Just like if you're an adult who has ovaries or tubes or uterus or all of the above,
and would like to seek some sort of surgical procedure
to ensure that you never have children.
I think that's fine. I think that's all fine.
But doing it with thought like someday I'll reverse this,
I would not do bisectamines in that way.
No one would recommend that.
We have a question about weight limits and the morning after pill, the plan B.
Plan B. And it's also asking timing pregnancy, like if I miss my period and my pregnancy test comes right positive,
I'm actually four weeks pregnant. Like when is the is the the time restart? I guess would be the question. So first of all, this is a great point about
plan B or my way. They're numerous brands of emergency contraception and it's Livo nor gestural
is the generic medication. And they are less effective. Specifically 165 pounds has been the cutoff.
I actually looked and there's like a little wiggle room
between like 165 and 172 or something
where it may or may not be less effective
and then there is a weight past that
where it is definitely less effective.
And there are, I could not find easily accessible higher doses
because taking two won't fix that.
I looked into that, we'll take two fix it now.
So that is a problem and it's a gap in our care.
Which is so weird, by the way.
Metis is so weird that there's like,
this is a gap in care.
This is definitely a place where I have concerns
because it was really easy for me to thinking about
this law being passed and like my patient population,
the people I take care of, could I go and buy some plan B or something like this, generic form of this, to stock at my clinic, to
have available should people need it for free.
And I didn't have an easy solution for okay, but what if they don't fall within that weight
range.
So I don't have a great answer for this right now and that is definitely a big problem.
The second thing about timing of pregnancy and periods, I think this is really important
for us to all understand because a lot of people who make laws do not understand this.
So the earliest you could ever find out you were pregnant is when you've missed a period.
Unless you're just testing yourself, I guess in that sense,
you could just test yourself every single day
because there are pregnancy tests
that can identify, you've seen the commercials,
can identify it up to five days before your missed period.
Sure.
So technically, if you are checking yourself
every single day, you could identify it even earlier.
But generally speaking, the earliest you're ever gonna notice
is, uh-oh, I should have started my period today.
I didn't start it.
I'll take a pregnancy test.
I took it at that point.
You're at least four weeks pregnant.
And if there's some cycle variability, I mean, most people don't know their
pregnant until five or six weeks.
That's just the truth.
Or later, um, you know, if you're, if you're someone like me who never knows
when their periods are going to happen, it
may be later for me, because I wouldn't think anything of it if I went eight weeks without
a period.
And that's true for a lot of people.
So I think knowing that is really important because the idea that you could restrict abortion
to six weeks, and that would still give people a reasonable time frame to make an informed
decision about their healthcare, is totally ridiculous.
Most people wouldn't even know they were pregnant.
So you don't have six weeks. At that point, you would have at best two weeks and most people
wouldn't have two weeks. So I think that's important. It also highlights the fact that we're technically
pregnant for 10 months, not nine, which is a weird thing we'd never talk about.
There's a question from Hannah about what doctors are planning to do.
I guess what the discussions are in your community right now with those are all going.
I think that's a great question because I hope that people will find this comforting.
The vast majority of physicians that I either know personally or associate with your groups or organizations are working to try to find ways to continue to provide care to patients all the full spectrum of reproductive health care to patients.
While not breaking the law, I will say that that is a concern of mine too and I know that that I know I try to be an activist and that doesn't sound very active-istic.
But at the same time, if I don't have a medical license,
I can't take care of anyone.
And I think that that is a concern of all of us
is we want to operate within the bounds of the law
so that we can continue to take care of people,
but at the same time, we don't want people
to go without the care they need.
So the efforts that I have been involved in is one,
making sure that for patients that it's appropriate
plan B and there are organizations like in our state,
for instance, in West Virginia,
Holler Health Justice is a wonderful organization
that helps to get emergency contraception to you for free.
So if you're in West Virginia,
Holler Health Justice is a great place to go,
go to their website and you can find out how to get
free emergency contraception.
So that is one effort that we have been involved in,
especially locally, like with some of the organizations I work with,
how can we get a hold of that and have it available to patients for free
so that they can access it.
Other things we've talked about are because we do not want people attempting to use
herbal or self-induced abortions
without any sort of medication help or anything,
how can we transport people to places
where they can access safe care?
In our state, and this is true,
this is something to think about,
and I think there are other questions about this,
telemedicine has been asked a lot. Can you just call, like for
instance, where in West Virginia where it's now effectively illegal? The law we're operating
under is from 1882. It's currently being challenged and courted by the ACLU. There was also
this other injunction that was passed in 1975 Everything is sort of up in the air
But if you live in West Virginia, you can't have a doctor
Let's say in Maryland where it's legal. You can't have a doctor
Prescribe you me for press stone over the phone through telemedicine it that is illegal
You cannot do that in this state.
I think about 13 states have rulings like that in place,
where you actually physically have to see the provider
to get it, and then of course, if it's banned, it's banned.
So that workaround of telemedicine,
that physician in that other state,
if they prescribe the abortion pill in a state
where it's illegal, will lose their license.
So that's not gonna be a workaround.
So it's going to be about getting patients to the places they need.
We're going to have to create networks and there are already something that exists depending
on where you live to transport people, to put people up in hotels as needed during recovery
to have people, if they're available, to help them to be their sort of abortion
dolas. That is that is a position that exists to help them through that process, to help guide
them to appropriate clinics and partnerships with providers outside of our state. That's
going to be key. And we are all having these conversations, not just me and West Virginia,
but all over the country. I guarantee people are having these conversations.
My sister-in-law is very worried because she used IVF for her first child, but now it's
uncertain if that's going to continue to be an option in some states, given how it is
done through McKenzie.
I think that, again, while right now, there's nothing that would inherently prohibit that,
I think that these are going to be restrictions we will see happen because
that is a fertilized, I mean, that is an embryo now. And I don't, you know, the embryos
you don't implant in IVF are traditionally stored or destroyed. I don't know what, I don't
know what the future. I think that this is a legal
question. I would say right now I would continue to if that is care you're seeking continue
to go to your doctor. There is no law that's going to criminalize. Please don't stop seeking
care right now. I think that's an underlying of all of these. Please don't stop seeking
care right now. There may be things that change in the future. I hope they don't, but right now I would continue to,
if there is a provider who's doing IVF,
continue to do that.
There is no reason to think all the sudden
we're gonna say, ha ha, we caught you, you're going to jail.
Straight to the point, I was wondering
what the best long-term birth control options
are for transmasculine people,
especially those on testosterone.
Thank you, Noah.
That's a great question.
So, there's a lot of concern, there's been a lot of concern and there's not enough research.
And this is true for trans healthcare in general. There's never enough research or evidence
to tell us all of the answers. But there is always concern if you're already on testosterone
and then you take an oral contraceptive that has estrogen in it, is that, you know, are you sort of,
is that going to counteract what you're trying to do
with the testosterone to begin with, right?
So one, there are progesterone only oral contraceptives.
If that's something you desire, some people prefer a pill,
there are progesterone only that should not,
will not in any way interfere with the testosterone.
That's one option.
Probably better for most
people is something longer acting like there's the Deppar Povera shot, which is progesterone.
There are the implants like Nexplanon, which are progesterone. There are IUDs, which contain
progesterone, and there is the copper IUD, which doesn't contain any hormones whatsoever.
Those are all options that would not in any way interact with test
off-steroen and would be incredibly appropriate for a transmasculine person to
seek out. The implant in the arm, the next plan on or an IUD, those can those
both last a lot longer. So if you're looking for something long-acting, those
are probably your best long-acting options.
This is a question, looks like this is another question about the the legality of the male order abortions asking Biden protected those the USPS or.
This okay, so there is a there's a question right now where the FDA has approved these pills.
So and specifically Mississippi is being their their law is being challenged. Like, if this is approved for a medical indication, how can you stop it?
Yeah.
I don't know how that flies because abortion is approved for a medical indication period.
So, but in terms of male order pills, this is a thing about the abortion pills.
If you, again, you can't order them from a state where it's legal. A doctor
would be prescribing it. They're not allowed to do that. It is not legal to order them from overseas,
from other countries. People do that with medications all the time, though. We know that,
but it is not legal. That is happening. I mean, if you read about it, it is happening but it is not legal. Okay. That is happening.
I mean, if you read about it, like it is happening, it is not legal to do that.
But it is happening.
But it is.
I mean, but not just with me for press down and me is pro stole with lots of medication.
This person wants to know the difference between D and E and D and C abortion, which I know
you touched on a second ago.
When are those methods used?
So again, this has to do with how far along the pregnancy is, as to which method of abortion
you can use, whether it's pill or DNC dilation curitage, which, again, we use for other indications.
It is not solely used for abortion.
But that is when you would dilate the cervix and you can either use a suction
like a vacuum to basically evacuate the contents of the uterus or you can remove with instruments.
And that is where we get into the dilation and extraction. You would use more instruments
in the process. And it has to do with how far along the pregnancy is. That is the only difference
between these two procedures is how far along and which procedure is most appropriate at that
stage of pregnancy. These are also the same procedures that are used if a spontaneous abortion
or locally miscarriage has occurred in order to ensure if it does not pass on its own,
you have to make sure all the products of conception
are gone because it can be life-threatening
to the patient otherwise.
I just saw a Twitter thread where someone said
their S.O.'s rheumatologist was taking on their patients
who could potentially get pregnant,
off of meds with terror, terror-tigenic risks,
in case of miscarriage.
I... terror, terror, terror, tigenic risks in case of miscarriage. I, um, what is that and should, should patients be concerned their treatments for auto
immune conditions will be taken away too?
I don't know of any, I, I'm not saying, I mean, obviously someone is saying this is happening
and I'm, I don't know this person or the situation.
So I'm not going to dispute a Twitter thread that I haven't read.
I don't know the person. I don't know of any physicians, certainly, personally, that are taking patients forcibly off their
medications.
There are lots of medications that have risks to, if you become pregnant while you're on
the medication, it could either cause problems for the developing fetus or put you at higher
risk of miscarriage. Both of those things that has always been true with different medications.
Certainly, I think you're going to have a lot more conversations about that
because of the implications now. For instance, if you should become pregnant and
you find out that there is some sort of life-threatening condition with the developing fetus, your options may now
be limited as to how you can approach that depending on where you live.
So I think that there are going to be a lot of conversations, but this, in my mind, would
all fall under informed consent.
I would be having that conversation with every single patient, not just blanket forcing everybody off a medication
for that risk.
Again, if you are prescribing a medication
for a rheumatologic condition to a patient
and that patient happens to get pregnant
and that pregnancy happens to end in a spontaneous abortion,
no crime has been committed.
There is no law that criminalizes anything I just said.
And so I see no reason
that patient should be forced off the medication. Obviously we're going to have to have a lot
more of these conversations though. Just for the patient to make the best decision for
their own body.
So that is the questions. Do you want to talk about this this last?
A couple people, like I said, I already referenced one listener who reached out with information and I named a couple organizations.
They recommended someone else reached out that runs an organization, this is from Marissa,
runs an organization that builds tools and resources for practical support, for organizations
that are helping people travel.
This listener, their organization is, and let me spell it, api, aryps.org.
So that could help.
And then there's also abortion finder, which is just abortion finder.org,
where you can find verified providers so that you ensure where you're going is a place
where you will receive appropriate, medically indicated, safe services.
So that's a great resource just to find a place.
One thing that this listener pointed out is that
euphemisms are not necessarily helpful. I think a lot of, and this is where there's a lot
of well-intentioned like, hey, you can always
come camping in my state kind of thing.
I think that right now we need to be really
open and honest with what we're talking about. I think that will help because also there
are a lot more people who agree that we need to fight back. We need to push for federal
legislation that will protect our reproductive health. And we need to do it openly.
It doesn't have to be something we do quietly. We can't push abortion back into the shadows.
It has to still be something we talk about openly
and help patients access openly so that they know they can come to me.
And I might say, we don't have a place in West Virginia,
but here are 10 different resources that I can help you access.
So you can go somewhere where you can get a safe, legal abortion in the
United States.
And hopefully, we can have federal legislation that will change that so that every state
has those options.
But in the meantime, I think it's really important that we talk openly about this.
Please do not tell people like, tell people privately. Hey, if you want an abortion my friend
You can come stay with me in my state where it's legal. I would not publicize that
One, it's it's really hard to know you may be I'm sure you are a wonderful well-meaning person
How in the world would anyone else know that to now we know where people go to stay when they're
having abortions. And that's I think I think the less of that the better, but forming grassroots
working with grassroots organizations are already doing this. Like in our state, you know,
there's holler health justice, West Virginia free and plan parenthood have both been working in
our state for a long time and in a lot of states there,
sister organizations, brother organizations, sibling organizations, I should say, partner organizations that do these same sorts of things
to help people access safely, will abortion care to get transportation, to get lodging, to get access to medications, to get access to surgical abortions, all of those things.
medications to get access to surgical abortions, all of those things. Work with those organizations and no resources in your community so that if somebody calls
you and says, I'm scared, I just got this positive pregnancy test I don't know what to do,
you can be a good friend and advocate by knowing how to help them access those resources.
Okay.
Thank you so much for listening to our podcast.
I'm so sorry about everything, which is going to be my new sign-off, I think, for the
foreseeable future.
Thank you, the taxpayers, for the use of their song Medicines is the intro and outro
of our program.
Don't just all of these grassroots efforts to help people access care are essential
right now.
And as a physician, that's a lot of what I find myself immediately trying to do.
But we can't give up the greater goal, which is there needs to be legislation passed that
protects our reproductive rights.
That has to happen on a federal level.
And voting, of course, is part of that, but voting is not enough.
We need to be calling our representatives, we need to be vocal about what our values are
and what we want out of our representatives and what we expect them to do for us.
Because the majority of people in this country believe in a full access to reproductive
health care for everyone. The majority believe in that and our Congress should be reflecting that with
legislation that protects it. That is going to do it for us for this week.
Be sure to join us again next week for Saban to tell them my name is Justin McRoy.
I'm Cindy McRoy. And as always, don't drill a hole in your head. Alright! Yeah! Maximumfun.org Comedy and culture
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