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Pro-Choice
Related: About this forumTexas rule requiring burial or cremation of fetal tissue shames women, suit says
Source: The Guardian
Texas rule requiring burial or cremation of fetal tissue shames women, suit says
Lawsuit filed by Texas womens rights group attempts to block
a new rule it says is a political ploy to stimagise abortions
Tom Dart in Houston
Monday 12 December 2016 21.22 GMT
A womens rights group has filed a lawsuit in an attempt to block a new Texas rule that requires fetal remains to be cremated or buried.
Accusing the state of a politically motivated ploy to make it harder for women to have abortions, the Center for Reproductive Rights launched the legal action on Monday, one week before the regulation is set to take effect on 19 December.
The lawsuit against the Texas department of state health services (DSHS), filed in federal court in Austin, alleges that the regulation has no medical benefits, will pose practical burdens by increasing the cost of healthcare services and is an attempt to stigmatise abortion and heap shame on women seeking the procedure.
Whole Womans Health, an abortion provider, is the lead plaintiff in the suit. It claims that the new regulation burdens women seeking pregnancy-related medical care. It imposes a funeral ritual on women who have a miscarriage management procedure, ectopic pregnancy surgery, or an abortion.
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Lawsuit filed by Texas womens rights group attempts to block
a new rule it says is a political ploy to stimagise abortions
Tom Dart in Houston
Monday 12 December 2016 21.22 GMT
A womens rights group has filed a lawsuit in an attempt to block a new Texas rule that requires fetal remains to be cremated or buried.
Accusing the state of a politically motivated ploy to make it harder for women to have abortions, the Center for Reproductive Rights launched the legal action on Monday, one week before the regulation is set to take effect on 19 December.
The lawsuit against the Texas department of state health services (DSHS), filed in federal court in Austin, alleges that the regulation has no medical benefits, will pose practical burdens by increasing the cost of healthcare services and is an attempt to stigmatise abortion and heap shame on women seeking the procedure.
Whole Womans Health, an abortion provider, is the lead plaintiff in the suit. It claims that the new regulation burdens women seeking pregnancy-related medical care. It imposes a funeral ritual on women who have a miscarriage management procedure, ectopic pregnancy surgery, or an abortion.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/dec/12/texas-fetal-remains-abortion-rights-lawsuit
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Texas rule requiring burial or cremation of fetal tissue shames women, suit says (Original Post)
Eugene
Dec 2016
OP
DURHAM D
(32,835 posts)1. To be fair I guess everything removed from a human should
be buried or cremated. That includes teeth and toenails. We all need a medical waste container on our front porch and a contract with some company to pick it up and thermally reduce it.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)3. Since most spontaneous abortions occur rather quickly
so quickly a woman doesn't realize she's been pregnant, all used sanitary napkins, tampons, and menstrual cup contents should be bagged and sent to one's Republican representative in the state lege along with the request to him/her to examine them and determine whether or not a casket should be ordered for the funeral on their return.
Abortion clinics are off the hook since medical waste is already incinerated.