This op-ed was originally published by the Detroit Free Press 08/22/23

By Amanda Mazur 

My husband and I were expecting what we hoped would be our second child in 2017 when a routine ultrasound at 20 weeks revealed potential problems — problems that quickly opened my eyes to a host of Michigan anti-abortion laws that serve no medical purpose but succeed in making access to a common medical procedure needlessly difficult, dangerous and costly. 

After consulting with specialists over the course of a couple weeks, further testing showed major heart defects and other issues so severe there was little chance I’d be able to carry my pregnancy to term, and no possibility my baby would survive if I did manage to give birth.  

The news was shocking, and heartbreaking. I needed to have an abortion. 

The other option would be to simply wait for either a stillbirth, or the birth of a child destined to die quickly. I was already experiencing depression that made it difficult to even get out of bed in the morning, let alone take care of myself or my 2-year-old daughter. I was not emotionally capable of continuing a doomed pregnancy.  

Abortion was the compassionate choice, for both myself, my family, and the child we’d hoped to have. But the clock was ticking quickly. We were forced to schedule an appointment for Christmas Day at the Von Voigtlander Women's Hospital in Ann Arbor, one of only two places in the entire state that would take me as a patient.  

After arranging overnight childcare for our daughter, we made the 160-mile drive through a terrible blizzard to Ann Arbor from our home in western Michigan. We missed opening presents with our 2-year-old on Christmas Day and seeing the joy on her face. That’s how desperate our situation was. The need to stay in a hotel overnight during the two-day procedure only added to our mounting costs. 

Read the Full op-ed on freep.com

Amanda Mazur is a Michigan resident.

Date

Tuesday, August 22, 2023 - 11:30am

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This op-ed originally appeared in Bridge Michigan 08/07/23
In the fall of 2021, we discovered at a routine ultrasound appointment during my  second trimester that our baby had an abnormality called a cystic hygroma, a condition we learned was rarely survivable. It was the second piece of devastating news. A few weeks prior we’d learned that I was pregnant with twins, but the heartbeat of one had already stopped.

I knew there would be many hard moments ahead. What I didn’t anticipate is how much stress we’d have to endure over the cost of my care because of Michigan’s punitive laws regarding abortion and coverage by private insurers.  

At one point, our high-risk obstetrician urged us to hurry our decision-making process because the cost of abortion rises as pregnancy goes on. We were making one of the most personal, consequential, and painful decisions of our lives and simultaneously stressing over the many thousands of dollars the necessary health care might saddle us with. Over the next couple weeks, after many really difficult conversations with our doctors, genetic counselors and each other, we finally decided to seek an abortion via labor induction to end the pregnancy.  

Read full op-ed at Bridgemi.org

Date

Friday, August 11, 2023 - 1:30pm

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clare molnar

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Watch Video: Clare Molnar - My Abortion Story

I Don't Regret My Abortion: Clare Molnar's fight to end the stigma surrounding abortion

Clare Molnar is on a mission. She is intent on dismantling what she calls a “culture of shame and secrecy” that surrounds abortion. And she’s doing it one conversation at a time. Clare speaks firsthand about the devastating impact of restrictive abortion laws and the hidden barriers that hinder access to reproductive healthcare. She sheds light on the damaging effects of mandatory waiting periods, biased information, and parental consent requirements, perpetuating a false narrative stigmatizing a standard medical procedure. In this thought-provoking video, Clare shares how her personal journey with abortion has taught her resilience, self-discovery, and the power of advocacy. Together, let's shift the conversation around abortion and reproductive healthcare and foster a more compassionate and inclusive society.

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