Tag Archives: Obstetrics and gynaecology

Mississippi abortion doctor pens article: Going to Mississippi: If I Don’t, Who Will?


BY: Dr. Willie J. Parker

When abortion is legal, women remain healthy, and when it is not they die.

In referring to reproductive rights, military metaphors are often used to describe the dynamics between those who support and those who would constrain women. If abortion access is “war”, then the state of Mississippi is the frontline, with the recent attempt of the state to implement requirements that abortions be performed by board certified/board eligible physicians in obstetrics and gynecology (OB-Gyn), and who hold hospital admitting privileges at a facility nearby.

These regulations would shut down the remaining abortion clinic in the state, effectively denying women their constitutionally-protected right to abortion simply because they live in the state of Mississippi. Proponents of such an action argue that they are “protecting” the health of women, but the truth would suggest otherwise.

The late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan once said, “Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own facts.” Reproductively speaking, the facts of Mississippi are: high teen and unintended pregnancy rates, high infant mortality, high maternal mortality, and astronomical poverty, accompanied by abortion access barriers of mandatory waiting periods, parental notification laws, biased state-mandated counseling, public scorn, and extremely aggressive protesters. These realities confront every woman in the state with an undesired pregnancy, or a wanted-but fatally flawed one. Their need for safe, compassionate, medical care, in this instance abortion, calls compellingly to anyone who would listen. We know world-wide that when abortion is legal and accessible, women remain healthy, and when it is not they die, often in populations with profiles similar to what I describe for Mississippi. Cognizant of this, I recently obtained a medical license and began travel to this great state to provide care. Now, invariably, I field two questions regarding that decision: why are you doing this, and what about your safety? I will address the second question first.

Agreeing with the notion that to ‘know is to become responsible’, my decision to become one of two physicians traveling to Mississippi to provide abortion care, largely due to doctors who live there quitting after being harassed, intimidated and ostracized, was prompted by my sense that women there experience the circumstances that make abortion necessary in the first place. These include limited access to or dysfunctional use of contraception, chaotic life circumstances, and serious health issues for a woman or the pregnancy that she carries. After growing increasingly uncomfortable turning women away who needed abortion due to my feeling religiously-conflicted about providing them during my first 12 years as an ob-gyn, a sermon by Dr. Martin Luther King challenged me to a deeper spiritual understanding where compassion moved me to action on behalf of my patients. Similar to the defining quality of the Good Samaritan in Dr. King’s narrative of what made the Samaritan “good”, where the Samaritan reversed the question of concern to care more about the well-being of the person needing help than about what might happen to him for stopping to do so, my concern about women when there are no abortion services became more important to me than what might happen to me for providing the services.

In response to a query of why I choose to help women in Mississippi, the fact is that the women most at risk to be harmed by the loss of abortion services there are Black and poor. Twenty percent of all Mississippians live below the Federal poverty line, but 48% of Blacks there do, making it the poorest state in the country, a fact that exacerbates if not causes the life circumstances that lead to abortion. This observation is not to racialize the impending loss of abortion access for all women in the state, but rather indicates that my personal commitment to address the provider shortage there stems in part from my lived experience of growing up as a poor Black child in the south (Alabama) and knowing first-hand the dire circumstances that converge to create desperation for women with unintended or fatally flawed pregnancies. During my clinic days there recently, I counseled a pregnant woman with 5 kids, the youngest who had just died a year ago from cancer, who indicated that she could not care for another child financially or emotionally. She, along with others had traveled from various distances in the state for their first state-mandated counseling visit ,or were returning for their procedure following a second trip from hours away, often complicated by childcare/work considerations and doubled travel costs. They typify the hardships that Mississippi women endure due to the present laws.

In an oversimplification of the decisions facing the women that I saw, those opposed to abortion often opine that “women can simply place a baby that they don’t want for adoption”. I submit that for Black women that decision is more complex. The foster care system in this country is filled with Black babies that no one adopts, 80% of children in foster care being African American. For black women the decision to continue an unplanned pregnancy becomes one of bearing a child and struggling to meet its basic needs, or to not bring it into the world at all, as opposed to having a baby to be placed in a system where no one wants it, the few high profile trans-racial adoptions by celebrities non-withstanding. Hence, the more complex reproductive dilemmas that the women in Mississippi face compelled me to meet their need, being a son of the South and sharing heritage with the people most vulnerable to policies that when enacted only exacerbate their suffering.

In closing, to the question of why I go to Mississippi, the answer is, I want for women there what I want for myself: a life of dignity, health, self-determination, and the opportunity to excel and contribute. We know that when women have access to abortion, contraception, and medically accurate sex education, they thrive. It should be no different for the women of Mississippi.

Willie J. Parker, MD, MPH, MSc is a board-certified obstetrician gynecologist who provides abortions. He serves on the board of Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health (PRCH) and The Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC).

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Filed under Abortion, health, Mississippi, Opinion, Politics, Public Safety, State Government

Breaking: Judge Jordan allows Mississippi abortion clinic to remain open as it attempts to comply with new “Admitting Privileges” law


A federal judge says Mississippi’s only abortion clinic can remain open as it tries to comply with a new law.

U.S. District Judge Daniel P. Jordan III gave the clinic and the state each a partial victory with his ruling Friday. He upheld the law but said the clinic can’t face criminal or civil punishment as it tries to meet the requirements.

The law requires anyone who does abortions at the clinic to be an OB-GYN with privileges to admit patients to a local hospital. The clinic’s two out-of-state physicians don’t have those privileges and have had difficulty getting them from local hospitals.

The judge says whether they get those privileges will impact the ultimate issues in the case.

via Judge allows Mississippi’s only abortion clinic to stay open – USATODAY.com.

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“Admitting Privileges” Abortion Law Ruling will be this afternoon.


Today is the day that Judge Daniel Jordan will rule on Mississippi’s new “Admitting Privileges” abortion law. The law was scheduled to go into affect on July 1, but a temporary restraining order filed by Mississippi’s lone abortion clinic, Jackson Women’s Health Organization, halted implementation until the hearing today.

What do you think will happen: extension of the order, grant the injunction and go to trial, or allow the state to begin enforcement? Let us hear from you. Comment on the comment line at 662.205.6737, send it to us in an email to MississippiPEP@gmail.com, or comment to us on Facebook or Twitter.

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Filed under Abortion, Law Enforcement, Mississippi

Pro Life Mississippi Calls on Planned Parenthood to Join in Support of New “Admitting Privileges” Law to Promote Women’s Health.


Pro Life Mississippi officials have sent a letter to pro-abortion organization Planned Parenthood’s national and state offices inviting the group to join in support of the new “Admitting Privileges” law in Mississippi. The law was scheduled to go into affect on July 1, but a temporary restraining order filed by Mississippi’s lone abortion clinic halted implementation until a full hearing on July 11.

In the letter, Pro Life Mississippi President Dana Chisolm writes:

“While our organizations obviously differ on the core issue of abortion, one thing we do hold in common is support of women’s health. Similar laws are already in place in 13 other states holding opportunistic doctors accountable for atrocities against women.

Admitting privileges will require the purchase of malpractice insurance where currently there is no requirement, giving injured women no redress against shoddy practices. On staff OB-GYN’s, as required in the law, provide a higher level of service for the women of Mississippi.

Our organizations may end up disagreeing on many other issues, but certainly we can agree that a woman’s health is of paramount importance. Certainly we could agree that the 2,000 plus Mississippi women each year who feel they must make the horrific choice of abortion deserve a higher standard of care.”

Chisolm had this to say about the letter: “In Mississippi we have itinerant doctors coming in from other states to administer dangerous procedures on our young women. Within hours they are traveling back home to their families, leaving these poor young ladies to fend for themselves. We have witnessed young ladies faint and vomit on the sidewalk in 100 degree temperatures while attempting to get back to their car with no staff assistance. There simply is no room for this level of barbarism in a civilized society. Regardless of the other political issues surrounding abortion, we should at least be able to agree on that.”

View the letter here: PlannedParenthoodLetter7-5-12

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Breaking: Mississippi Judge grants temporary relief to abortion clinic.


The Daily Journal is reporting that a Mississippi judge on Sunday temporarily blocked the state’s new law requiring abortion physicians to obtain hospital admitting privileges until a hearing scheduled for July 11.

See a copy of the order HERE.

Mississippi PEP is putting the final touches on an interview with Pro Life proponent Terri Herring. Look for more on Monday morning.

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Nation taking notice of Mississippi abortion bill going to Governor Bryant’s desk.


Here are a few of the latest stories from around the nation regarding Mississippi lawmakers regulation of abortion clinics. House Bill 1390 would require an attending physician to be OB-GYN certified and have admitting privileges at a local hospital. Of course, Governor Bryant is expected to sign the bill.

Look for a great deal of pomp, drama, and gnashing of teeth over the signing of this one.

Mississippi Poised To Tighten Abortion Regulations, Could Close Last Clinic | Fox News

Mississippi could become abortion-free state under proposed law; Sole abortion clinic threatens to sue  – NY Daily News

Mississippi Abortion Bill May Force State’s Only Clinic To Close-Huffington Post

Mississippi legislature tightens restrictions on abortion providers – CNN

U.S. News – Mississippi on way to becoming ‘abortion-free’ state?

Daily Kos: If Mississippi closes state’s only abortion clinic, it won’t stop abortions, just safe, legal ones

Controversial Measure Would Essentially Shut Down Mississippi’s Only Abortion Clinic – ABC News

Bill dooms only Miss. abortion clinic – MJ Lee – POLITICO.com

Miss. passes abortion bill that could shut clinic – KansasCity.com

Mississippi cracks down on abortion providers | Florida Independent

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Filed under Abortion, Governor, Legislature, Mississippi, Mississippi State House, Mississippi State Senate, Phil Bryant, Politics, Republican, State Government