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The NY Times has an audio feature in the opinion section detailing why a doctor is leaving South Carolina for fear of criminal prosecution. My Patients Are Children. Dobbs Forced Me To Leave Them Behind.

(Full access gift link) In the wake of the Dobbs decision, South Carolina banned abortion after around six weeks of pregnancy. The law does have a few exceptions, including for rape and incest. Dr.



Kristl Tomlin, a pediatric and adolescent gynecologist, saw what those exceptions look like in practice for young victims of rape — and she decided to leave the state. In this episode, Dr. Tomlin describes how having to involve the sheriff’s department and lawyers in her work hurt her patients, and pushed her to leave the community she loved.

The audio recording is about 24 minutes long; you can also read a transcript at the link if you’d prefer. There’s a related opinion story: Abortion Stories in Post-Roe America. (Full access gift link) What does it really mean to live in a country where abortion is no longer a constitutional right? Since 2022, when the Supreme Court overturned Roe v.

Wade, many states have made it all but impossible to get abortion care within their borders, and have done their best to isolate people facing unwanted or complicated pregnancies, making them afraid to reach out to medical providers or even to friends and loved ones who might help them. New laws have forced doctors to delay care in life-threatening situations and made women afraid to seek i.

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