Texans need non-abortive ways to achieve healthier pregnancy outcomes
Texas Senate Bill 8 stands as a groundbreaking and polarizing
piece of legislation, effectively prohibiting nearly all abortions in Texas.
While supporters applaud its stringency, opponents decry its lack of
exceptions, such as in cases of rape or fetal anomalies — exceptions that
are supported by a majority of Americans.
Gov. Greg Abbott has quixotically remarked that the rape exception
won’t be necessary if Texas can
“eliminate all rapists”; more accomplishable is a reduction of
pregnancies affected by anomalies.
Terminations for fetal anomalies are common, with 1 in 8 abortions
attributed to fetal health concerns. A familiar pregnancy refrain is
“we don’t care if we’re having a boy or girl, as long as it’s healthy.” While such a view can
stigmatize disability, the fear and compassion underneath this
desire is understandable, as the heartache of parenting a newborn through a
painful, debilitating and terminal illness is daunting for the most resilient
of people.
In many cases, fetal anomalies are the result of genetic risk
factors. Frighteningly, this genetic risk is often unrecognized until a
pregnancy is found to have a problem, because nearly 90
percent of children born with inherited disorders have no similarly affected
relatives.
As an OB/GYN, I cared for a couple who had watched their first
child suffer for his only year of life before dying from an unexpected genetic
skin condition. When their child would cry out in pain from the blisters
covering his body, they couldn’t even pick him up without causing the blisters
to rip open and worsening his pain. They watched helplessly as their baby
suffered and died.
Whether abortion would have been a morally acceptable way for my
patients to avoid this suffering is a matter of fierce debate. Everyone should
agree, however, that Texans now need a non-abortive method to achieve healthier
family-building outcomes. Fortunately, such a method is already available for
many genetic issues; it is called genetic carrier screening. This screening
simply needs to be made more readily available and with greater public
awareness.
Genetic carrier screening is based upon the notion that everyone
carries some problematic genetic variants. While these variants cause us no
harm, they confer a 1 in 4 chance of severe disease in our children if we get
pregnant with someone carrying a variant in the same gene. Familiar examples of
such genetic conditions include cystic fibrosis and Tay-Sachs disease, but
there are hundreds of recognized genetic disorders that cause profound
disability and death. Genetic carrier screening is simply the lab test to
identify these genetic variants before a
family is affected with a sick child.
Many medical organizations support genetic
screening of couples before conception to help them understand
their risk of a genetically abnormal pregnancy, allowing for informed
family-building. Armed with this knowledge, a couple doesn’t have to “just take
their chances”; rather, they can choose to avoid pregnancy, to adopt, or to
have a baby via IVF with embryonic diagnosis, a preventive intervention offered
at fertility clinics across Texas.
In reality, however, most women do not obtain this genetic
information until after they are
pregnant. This leaves an at-risk couple with the limited options of acceptance
or termination of a pregnancy with a severe health issue.
In the era of S.B. 8, this needs to change. Implicitly, couples
and physicians have been counting on abortion as a “backup plan” in the event
of an abnormal pregnancy. That backup plan is now gone. In its absence, Texans
need to make universal preconception genetic carrier screening our new standard
of care.
Couples should ask their physicians for genetic screening before
they get pregnant. Primary care doctors and OB/GYNs should take the time to
discuss this with their young patients. Legislators should mandate insurance
coverage of this test before pregnancy; such a move would simultaneously help
Texans gain a measure of reproductive choice and signal a commitment to
reducing abortion.
Texans deserve to be empowered to make informed reproductive
decisions. With the implementation of S.B. 8, we need to look to non-abortive
strategies, such as preconception genetic screening, to accomplish this goal.
Reproductive choice is about more than abortion, and reducing abortion requires
more than legal barriers. With broader adoption of genetic screening, Texans on
both sides of the abortion debate can move closer to their goals around
reproduction.
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