Saturday, April 11, 2015

SC Bill H.3851 Threatens Birth Options



While this blog focuses on abortion, we occasionally address other life-related, birth-related, or freedom-related issues. The South Carolina legislature is considering a bill, H.3851, that would add burdensome regulation to birthing centers that provide midwife-assisted deliveries. Below is a legal analysis of this poorly-written bill that has the potential to shut down most independent birthing centers.

This freedom is of great concern to me personally, as our last three births have been attended by our midwife, Cynthia "Sandy" Glenn at Carolina WaterBirth, and we couldn't be happier with the level of care. This photo is of our midwife with our children.

The legal analysis below was provided to Sandy Glenn and is shared with her permission. If you live in SC, please read the analysis and contact your state legislators.


TO: Sandy Glenn, CPM, LM
FROM: Susan M. Jenkins
The Sanchez Law Firm, PC
DATE: April 7, 2015
SUBJECT: Analysis of H. 3851

Although H. 3851 differs in some respects from the draft bill I analyzed in February, it still contains several provisions that are of no benefit to South Carolina birth centers, and some provisions that I would consider harmful for birth centers. In general, the most significant problems are:

1. Accreditation will be required as a qualification for licensing for birth centers, but will not grant deemed status in terms of operations. That is, while you will have to be accredited or to have applied for accreditation in order to be licensed, you will also have to be inspected and comply with all DHEC's rules in order to operate your birth center. That means that you will incur a major financial burden of accreditation fees and costs without gaining any advantage in terms of dealing with DHEC. Accredited birth centers will not be relieved of any of the burdensome DHEC regulations or inspections.

2. No other facility, not even hospitals, surgi-centers, or nursing homes, all of which deal with sick or injured patients, is required to be accredited under SC law. This sends a message that birth centers alone, of all types of licensed facilities, are so dangerous that they must not only be licensed but also must answer to a private regulator, an accrediting body! That birth itself is more dangerous than open heart surgery or laser eye surgery or hospice care with dangerous drugs. Yet birth centers are the safest facilities, with clients who are NOT sick or injured at all, but perfectly healthy, who are experiencing a normal life function, not an
injury or disease.

3. The bill is poorly drafted, with many ambiguous and confusing provisions, including a definition of "licensed midwife" that differs from the definition in the licensed midwife rules.

4. Although the bill repeals some of the stricter provisions of the statute, it permits DHEC to retain those same exact provisions (including the requirement of the consulting physician coming to the birth center to authorize a transfer, that are already in effect. Nothing in this bill tells DHEC to change the regulations that are identical to the provisions of the statute that would be repealed by this bill. That allows DHEC to continue to enforce those rules.

5. The bill requires a physician to sign off on the birth center's policies and guidelines. No doctor will do that. No medical malpractice insurer will allow their covered doctors to do that.

6. The bill confuses the concepts of consultation, collaboration (which it calls "medical management") , and referral (transfers and transports to the consulting physician). The birth center's "on call consultant," when he/she is consulted, can either require "medical management" or a transfer. But sometimes consultation does not require either, but is sought simply to ask a question or check on something.

7. The term "medical management" is not defined in the bill. But the concept of medical management is outside the scope of practice of midwives and also outside the appropriate licensed scope of services of birth centers. The midwife's standard of care should not be supplanted by a medical model just because the midwife asked for a consult. This would, ironically, violate AABC standards and CABC indicators.

Section-by-section:

SECTION 1. Amends section 44-89-30 (definitions):

(1) "accreditation": this is a very confusing and ambiguous definition. Which "board"or "boards" is it talking about? Which "board" is it that "recognizes standards"? It does not make any sense. Read it out loud and you will realize that. Also, why reference the Board of Health and Environmental Control, rather than the Department? Does that Board have any expertise in accreditation, or even in birth centers, rather than DHEC itself?

(2) "Birth center". - this should be amended so that only facilities licensed as birth centers can call themselves birth or birthing centers, not hospital unit.

(5). "Consultant on-call physician" - this definition is a problem because it requires the consultant to have admitting privileges at a hospital within 45 miles of the birth center. This will permit hospitals to close down birth centers and/or avoid receiving transports by denying clinical privileges to consulting physicians. Hospitals WILL do this. It gives them a weapon for eliminating a competitor birth center. At present, birth centers may transport to any hospital, but this definition is part of a set of requirements in this bill that will limit birth centers to only transfer to the hospital where the consultant has admitting privileges, and that consultant will have to admit birth center transport patients in his/her name. This gives the local hospitals veto power over birth centers in their area. It also prevents birth centers from opening in areas of the state that lack hospitals. So, counties that are already underserved for maternity care will have even fewer facilities because no birth centers can open there either.

(8) "licensed midwife" - this definition requires LMs who work in birth centers to be CPMs, even though CPM is not required for LM license. Will this statute change the LM rules also? Ask Lesley if that is the intent, because there is no definition of LM in the midwifery law, only in rules. It will bar non-CPM LMs from working in birth centers.

(9) "national standards" - this calls for the "board" [BoardHEC] to "recognize" national standards. What knowledge of National Standards does the Board have?

SECTION 2. This section of the bill amends section 44-89-60 of the birth center law as follows:

(A)(1) This subsection repeals 4 specific requirements for DHEC to include in its rules. DHEC will no longer be required to enforce these as rules. However, it does not PROHIBIT DHEC from having such rules. It leaves it up to DHEC whether to still include these in the rules. Also, DHEC is specifically still required to "receive reports from, regulate, investigate, and inspects all birthing centers and records". DHEC will still have full power to promulgate rules, substantive and procedural.

(A)(2). this section requires new birth centers to include an application for accreditation along with its application for licensure, and it must prove that it is accredited within on year. Note that, despite have to be accredited, the birth center must ALSO "comply with the regulations." Being accredited will not relieve birth centers from also complying with all DHEC regulations.

(B) This new section requires all birth centers to be accredited in order to be licensed and in order to operate. However, it only provides "deemed status" for purposes of licensure, NOT for operations. Accredited birth centers must still "operate in accordance with all applicable statutes and regulations. So, what benefit is there to the birth center in getting accredited? It will still have all the burdens of DHEC regulations and inspection, it will now have to have its practice guidelines signed by a physician, and it will have all the extra expenses and fees of accreditation. !ironically, AABC's national standards and CABC's indicators do NOT require a physician to sign off on the center's practice guidelines, but accredited centers in SC will not be able to take advantage of that less restrictive standard, because they must also comply with this new law and all DHEC rules. So, this bill would enact the worst of both worlds, and none of the benefits.

In contrast, a new birth center law in New Mexico makes accreditation voluntary, but allows accredited birth centers to base RELICENSING on accredited status, meaning that only unaccredited centers would get inspected and have to satisfy the rules to get relicensed. SC should follow the NM example.

(C)(1). This section deals with the so-called "consultant on-call physician," who must "provide consultation regarding medical management". I have NO IDEA what that is supposed to mean. How can this physician consult on Medical management" when birth centers are not supposed to provide the medical standard of care? A birth center that provides the medical model rather than midwifery model,would be acting outside its licensed scope of services and would violate AABC's National Standards, and thus violate accreditation standards. So, it places accredited birth centers in an impossible position. This bill must define what is meant by medical management (inducing labor using pitocin or cytotec? Administering drugs or anesthesia? Using electronic fetal monitoring? Cutting episiotomies? Using forceps? Forcing Vaginal exams? Timing based on Friedman's curve? Forceps delivery?

How can LMs provide any of these in a birth center? Why even use this term?

This section also requires the consultant physician "to accept transfers of mothers and babies who require care outside of the scope of the birth center." This essentially means that all transfers of care must go through the consultant physician, and be admitted by the consultant, rather than directly to the hospital from the birth center. This is contrary to standard birth center practice, including AABC National Standards and CABC indicators, which allow transport to ant hospital so long as in accordance with the center's policies and procedures. Now, the consultant will also have to accept and admit all transfers, which will discourage nearly all physicians from acting as consultants. Even worse, the consultant must SIGN ("provide written approval of") the birth centers policies and procedures. Neither AABC nor CABC require this, but being accredited will not changed this requirement. This provision will kill birth centers in SC because no physician will do these things.

(D)(1) to (4) These subparagraphs, and the entire bill, for that matter, use the terms "guidelines," "policies," "procedures," or "practice guidelines" interchangeably without ever defining any of the terms or explaining which ones the consultant must pre-approve and sign. This is another sloppy, badly drafted, and, as a result, ambiguous aspect of this bill.

(E) This subsection also contains terms that raise warning signals. It speaks of "consultant on all physicians" in the plural, as if you are expected to have many, and it also requires the birth center to invite physicians and administrators to participate in these biannual meetings. It uses confusing terms, such as referring to hospitals as a "transferring facility," although the hospital is the RECEIVING facility. It invites the nearest competitors to get deeply involved in the details of running the birth center. Surgi centers and nursing homes transfer to hospitals but do not have to comply with anything like these restrictive anticompetitive requirements.

(F) This subsection is a complete disaster, representing terrible policy choices as well as being poorly written. It is obviously intended to provide an exemption from vicarious liability for consultant physicians, but it doesn't. These are the problems with this subsection:
- it exempts the physician from liability for his/her OWN acts or omissions, AFTER the transfer, but does not exempt him or her from vicarious liability for the midwife's or birth center's acts or omissions.
- it is completely unheard of, inappropriate, and very poor policy to give the physician a complete exemption for what he or she does wrong. NO states do this. This is not how to write this types of exemption. Usually in these laws, you protect the physician from liability for any acts or omissions that occurred before the transfer, but hold him/her responsible for his/her own actions after accepting the patient. This provision is entirely too broad.

This provision also puts all the liability on the birth center, even for what the physician does. If the birth center doesn't have much insurance, the patient will have no recourse, even if the injury was 100% the physician's fault.

The other problem with this subsection is that it only protects the consultant physician, who gets off Scott-free, but not the hospital, not any other physicians or staff involved in post-transfer care. The state Trial Lawyers Association will freak out when they see this, and can be expected to oppose it. The hospitals, on the other hand, won't like being left out.

(G) This subsection requires birth centers to share confidential patient information with hospitals and physicians who may not ever have provided care for the patients whose records they will see. Again, there is no reason why birth centers should be considered so dangerous, such risky facilities that would justify extreme provisions such as these. No other facilities are forced to do things like this. What is so intrinsically less safe about birth centers - compared to facilities that provide major surgery, treatment of life-threatening illness, administration of dangerous drugs - that birth centers should have to go to these ridiculous extremes to maintain a license? No other state requires all these "protections."

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Wesley Wilson is the President of Let Me Live, a nonprofit dedicated to saving babies by showing the beauty and value of life to women considering abortion. Please learn more about the Let Me Live pro-life billboard campaign. Donations are tax deductible. Please connect with us on Facebook or Twitter.

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Abortion Restrictions, Maternal Death, and Abortion Rates. Do Abortion Laws Make A Difference?



Abortion advocates insist that restriction of abortion (1) will kill women and (2) won't reduce abortion. Both claims are false.

I will ignore the inflammatory nonsense that laws restricting abortion access have the malicious purpose of killing women. But do they have that unintended side effect? How could you tell? You could look at maternal death rates before and after significant changes in abortion regulation. But that could be inconclusive if changes in medical technology or practice occurred at the same time.

So let's do a simple comparison. Take the 10 states with the most restrictive abortion laws, and the 10 states with the least restrictive abortion laws, and compare maternal death rates. There could be other factors of course, but it's a starting point. NARAL already grades states by their abortion laws, so using their guidance we will pick LA, ND, MS, SD, KS, UT, ID, MO, NE, and KY as the 10 most restrictive, in that order, and CA, WA, CT, HI, MD, OR, ME, VT, NJ, and NY as the 10 least restrictive, in that order.

If abortion advocates are right that laws restricting abortion access kill women, we would expect a significantly higher maternal death rate in the states with restrictive abortion laws. What does the data show? No correlation.


State NARAL grade NARAL State Rank Maternal Mortality Rate Maternal Mortality State Rank Abortion Rate
Most restrictive abortion laws LA F 50 17.9 44 16.1
ND F 49 10.3 25 11.2
MS F 48 19 47 4.6
SD F 47 9 17 5.6
KS F 46 7.1 9 19.2
UT F 45 9.9 21 6.7
ID F 44 15 39 6
MO F 43 12.7 36 6.3
NE F 42 9 17 8.1
KY F 41 8.1 14 5.1
Median – restrictive F 45 9.9 21 6.3







Least restrictive abortion laws NY A- 10 18.9 46 37.6
NJ A- 9 16.5 41 31.3
VT A 8 2.6 2 12.5
ME A 7 1.2 1 11.2
OR A 6 6.5 8 17.3
MD A 5 18.7 45 29
HI A 4 13.9 37 22.6
CT A 3 7.5 11 24.6
WA A+ 2 9 17 18.3
CA A+ 1 12.5 35 27.6
Median – permissive A 5 9 17 22.6








US Overall D N/A 12.1 N/A 19.6







NARAL grades from http://www.prochoiceamerica.org/assets/download-files/2013-who-decides-report-card.pdf
Maternal Mortality Rates (2001-2006) per 100,000 live births from http://hrc.nwlc.org/status-indicators/maternal-mortality-rate-100000
Abortion Rate per 1,000 women aged 15 to 44 (2008 data) from http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0103.pdf

In fact both the restrictive states' median maternal mortality rate and the permissive states' median maternal mortality rate are below the national average. Maternal mortality rates are higher among African-Americans, so states with higher African-American populations have higher maternal mortality rates, regardless of abortion restrictions. Laws restricting abortion access don't kill women. There is no correlation.

What about abortion rates? Do abortion restrictions decrease the number of abortions? Look at the abortion rate column. Yes, there is a correlation between abortion restrictions and abortion rates. The 10 least restrictive states have a median abortion rate nearly 4 times the median abortion rate of the 10 most restrictive states.

In conclusion, restrictive abortion laws make no difference in maternal death rates, but they make a significant impact on abortion rates, just as pro-life activists have long believed.

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Wesley Wilson is the President of Let Me Live, a nonprofit dedicated to saving babies by showing the beauty and value of life to women considering abortion. Please learn more about the Let Me Live pro-life billboard campaign. Donations are tax deductible. Please connect with us on Facebook or Twitter.

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Why "Pro-Choice" Men Support a "Woman's Right To Choose"

Ben Sherman of Burnt Orange Report (which claims to be "Texas' largest group political blog, written from a progressive/liberal/Democratic standpoint") is stunningly honest when he writes about How #HB2 Hurts Texas Men Who Like Women.

HB2 is the hotly-debated abortion bill that would regulate many Texas abortion facilities out of business if they don't have hospital admission privileges to protect their patients' lives.

For those of us guys who like girls -- you know, like them like them -- and want to have relationships with them that may last anywhere from a few minutes to many years, we need to think about how this bill, by curtailing the bodily autonomy and sexual freedom of women, hurts us, too. We need to stand with women in their fight to control their own bodies.
A few minutes to many years? Sounds like he's more interested in his freedom to control a woman's body than in defending her "bodily autonomy."

Sherman continues:
You want to decide when and if to have kids. This bill will force thousands of Texas men into unplanned fatherhood by making it impossible for women to access an abortion in the event of an unplanned pregnancy. Even if you want to have kids, you probably don't want an accident to make you a father before you're psychologically ready and able to care for a child.
If you're not "psychologically ready" for a child, maybe you're not psychologically ready for a sexual relationship. And then we get to Sherman's main need for accessible, legal abortion.
Your sex life is at stake. Can you think of anything that kills the vibe faster than a woman fearing a back-alley abortion? Making abortion essentially inaccessible in Texas will add an anxiety to sex that will drastically undercut its joys. And don't be surprised if casual sex outside of relationships becomes far more difficult to come by.
So abortion must be easy to get, because it's harder to have casual sex without establishing a relationship first. (Remember, Sherman's relationships might last only a few minutes. Does this mean he will have to at least buy her dinner before he takes her to bed? I'm feeling sorry for this poor oppressed man already!)

But wait! I thought abortion isn't used for birth control. That's what the left likes to tell us. Mr. Sherman thinks abortion is birth control, and he has the statistics to prove it.
Almost half of all pregnancies are unplanned and unintended. Of those, over 40% currently end in abortion. What happens to those 40% if this law passes?
What happens to those 40% of unplanned babies if abortion isn't legal? Most of them get to live! And their mothers don't grieve the rest of their lives over a decision they were pushed into by their uncommitted, I-want-a-relationship-that-lasts-as-long-as-my-next-orgasm so-called boyfriend who was unprepared to be a man but too much of an animal to keep it in his pants!

Men like Mr. Sherman who don't value women except for their own personal pleasure want abortion legal so they can play around with a woman's body, and if she gets pregnant, leave unsupported with no choice but abortion. And they have the nerve to say they are "pro-choice."

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Wesley Wilson is the President of Let Me Live, a nonprofit dedicated to saving babies by showing the beauty and value of life to women considering abortion. Please learn more about the Let Me Live pro-life billboard campaign. Donations are tax deductible. Please connect with us on Facebook.

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Thursday, February 4, 2010

SC Right to Life Act (Personhood) is Dead in House

I attended the Constitutional Laws subcommittee hearing on the state House version of the Personhood bill (H. 3526) in Columbia, S.C., today.

The subcommittee, chaired by Rep. Greg Delleney, will almost certainly not recommend the bill to the next stage.

I had hoped to speak in support of the bill, but the two members of the public who spoke took the entire hour, including the time they spent responding to questions and comments from the subcommittee. Several others also had hoped to speak. I was surprised there was no time limit which would have allowed more members of the public to have a say.

Rep. Delleney made it clear that he wants to save babies' lives, but he did not see a convincing case that the definition of the right to life beginning at fertilization would save a single life. He said he is pushing two bills that will save lives immediately (Born-Alive Protection and 24-Hour Waiting Period) and he isn't going to jepoardize these bills by also pushing the personhood bill, which he views as merely symbolic.

One speaker, Steve Lefemine, advanced a weak argument (the law is a schoolmaster, therefore this definition will lead people to value life more and abort less) to suggest the bill would save lives. The other speaker focused on the fact that the representatives would have to give account to God for the way they vote on this bill, so they must vote as they believe Jesus would.

Rep. Delleney is right that this bill would not save any babies at first, because it does not specifically address abortion. I see it as more than symbolism because it sets the principle forth so that a later abortion ban could be backed up by our state law. An abortion ban could be successful under only two scenarios: the Supreme Court upholds it (requiring a change in the composition of the Court); or South Carolina declares abortion law to be a power reserved to the states under the 10th amendment, and defies the federal government. Lefemine hinted at the latter possibility.

The possibility of a conservative shift on the Supreme Court prior to 2013 seems remote at best. And it is just as hard to imagine a scenario where a majority of state lawmakers and the governor would be willing to defy the federal government or Supreme Court--especially over abortion.

Of course Congress (if the makeup changes dramatically in November) could remove jurisdiction of abortion law from the Supreme Court, but that opens up constitutional issues we have not yet encountered. Again, having such a law signed into law before 2013 would be impossible.

I am disappointed in the subcommittee's decision, because the right to life should be declared to vest at fertilization, whether we can make meaningful policy changes yet or not. I hope to see the state senate go farther with their version (S. 450). (Rep. Delleney pledged to pass it through the state house if the senate passes it first.)

But regardless of the success of a personhood bill, abortion will remain legal for at least a few years. For now we must save as many lives as possible through prayer, education, intervention, pregnancy centers, sidewalk counseling, and legislative restrictions such as Delleney is currently fighting for.

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Wesley Wilson is the President of Let Her Live, a nonprofit dedicated to saving babies by showing the beauty and value of life to women considering abortion. Please learn more about the Let Her Live pro-life billboard campaign. Donations are tax deductible.

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Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Personhood -- Back on the Table in SC

On Thursday morning, a S.C. House subcommittee is scheduled to hold a public hearing on the personhood legislation in our state, the Right to Life Act of South Carolina, H.3526. It states that legal personhood vests at fertilization.

We know that medically and scientifically, human life begins at fertilization. From that moment, this brand new life is genetically 100% human. It is time that our state and nation declared that we will protect all human life from fertilization on.

This legislation does not repeal the abortion laws of our state. It will not prevent a single abortion by itself. It does not put that principle in the context of abortion or any other specific area of law. It is more a statement of principle than policy. But as such it does lay the groundwork for an abortion ban at some later date that could stand up to scrutiny from the Supreme Court.

With this statement of principle in place, if enough state legislators get the courage to ban abortion outright, without exceptions based on the circumstances of conception, the ban could be upheld under portions of the reasoning of Roe vs. Wade.

While the Roe vs. Wade decision made up a right to privacy that included the right to abortion out of whole cloth, the justices made a valid point when they criticized the Texas abortion ban currently in place. You can't logically say that all human life is sacred and deserves protection--unless that life began with the crime of rape. Either human life is sacred or it isn't.

The Roe decision includes this statement: "If this suggestion of personhood is established, the appellant's case, of course, collapses, for the fetus' right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [Fourteenth] Amendment."

Of course the court decided that there was no clear definition of a child in the womb as a person under the law. The Right to Life Act currently under consideration provides just such a definition.

Recognizing the personhood of the unborn does not automatically satisfy Roe vs. Wade, however, as some believe. The decision went on to say: "[W]e do not agree that, by adopting one theory of life, Texas may override the rights of the pregnant woman that are at stake."

They then make it a balancing act between the right to have an abortion, the state's interest in protecting the mother's health, and the state's interest in protecting what they call "potential life," which in our day is of course recognized scientifically as very real and existing human life. The Planned Parenthood vs. Casey decision further affirmed a right to an abortion prior to "viability."

Roe vs. Wade is an evil and poorly reasoned decision, especially when it extends the right to privacy from government intrusion to include a right to kill a child in the womb.

The S.C. attorney general issued an opinion on this personhood bill indicating that it would probably be upheld as constitutional by the courts, however, it would be held to not apply to abortion, because (1) it doesn't specifically mention abortion, and (2) the courts would interpret it so as to make it conformable to the Roe vs. Wade and Casey decisions.

The personhood of the unborn should be declared, and it provides an important step in supporting a case to prohibit abortion, but it too is subject to judicial interpretation.

So after enacting personhood legislation, we can ban abortion and either wait for the courts to decide whether they will allow it, or we as a state stand up for our laws and assert that the state has the power to ban abortion reserved under the 10th Amendment (as a power not specifically given to the federal government).

The latter course would take courage on the part of our legislators--and probably our governor as well. And courage seems to be lacking among most politicians these days. It might also require some sacrifice on the part of the state's citizens, as federal funding for roads and education might be held back, but that sacrifice would be a very small price to pay in order to stop the killing of over 7,000 babies in South Carolina.

Personhood is a logical and necessary statement that flows from under the Declaration of Independence (“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness”). This declaration of personhood also follows from the medical knowledge we have today of life before birth. It follows from the biblical statements about life in the womb. And it follows the constitutional guarantee against depriving anyone of life without due process of law.

This is only the first step down a road that our legislators must commit to with courage--or get out of the way and let real statesmen take their place.

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Wesley Wilson is the President of Let Her Live, a nonprofit dedicated to saving babies by showing the beauty and value of life to women considering abortion. Please learn more about the Let Her Live pro-life billboard campaign. Donations are tax deductible.

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