North Carolina doctors and lawyers are attempting to develop guidelines on how to follow a reinstated 49-year-old law that bans abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy except to save the life of a pregnant person.
It has proven difficult to define all the medical emergencies that could potentially result in a pregnant person’s death or serious injury – as well as the punishment for doctors if an abortion is not deemed part of this category.
According to state law, a medical emergency is defined as a complication to the medical condition of a pregnant person that leads to “the immediate abortion of her pregnancy to avert her death or for which a delay will create serious risk of substantial and irreversible physical impairment of a major bodily function.”
UNC Public Policy Professor Rebecca Kreitzer said statutes like North Carolina's use language that might be interpreted in different ways due to their vagueness.
“There's so many different phrases in there that could be unpacked,” she said. “What does a physical impairment of a major bodily function mean? What constitutes a bodily function? How close do you have to be to death?”
Kreitzer also said some hospital legal teams might advise doctors against providing abortions after 20 weeks under circumstances that could be interpreted as unfit under narrow definitions of a medical emergency.
“Even if a patient does fit the bill and fits under these narrow guidelines, it often means that the doctors have to go through a number of steps to really document how close the person is to being sick and how dangerous the situation is, which can add a dangerous amount of time before somebody can get the health care that they need,” she said.
Dr. Amy Bryant, an OB-GYN in Chapel Hill, said she has had to turn away people seeking abortions beyond the 20th week of pregnancy due to the ban.
She said this even included an individual carrying a fetus with a lethal anomaly – a condition that will result in the fetus' death.