Abstract
Restrictive abortion laws have impacts reaching far beyond the immediate sphere of reproductive health, with cascading effects on clinical and ethical aspects of neonatal care, as well as perinatal palliative care. These laws have the potential to alter how families and clinicians navigate prenatal and postnatal medical decisions after a complex fetal diagnosis is made. We present a hypothetical case to explore the nexus of abortion care and perinatal care of fetuses and infants with life-limiting conditions. We will highlight the potential impacts of limited abortion access on families anticipating the birth of these infants. We will also examine the legally and morally fraught gray zone of gestational viability where both abortion and resuscitation of live-born infants can potentially occur, per parental discretion. These scenarios are inexorably impacted by the rapidly changing legal landscape in the U.S., and highlight difficult ethical dilemmas which clinicians may increasingly need to navigate.
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Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank the Children’s Hospital Neonatal Consortium and the Palliative Care and Ethics (PACE) Focus Group, for providing the original forum which brought together this author group.
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AP participated in manuscript conception, design, preparation, critical editing, and development of thetable. SYA, DEC, JTF, NH, ML, KS, CLW participated in manuscript conception, design, preparation,and critical editing. NL critically reviewed and edited the manuscript, provided additional expertise on neonatal bioethics. All authors reviewed and approved the final version of the manuscript.
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Pyle, A., Adams, S.Y., Cortezzo, D.E. et al. Navigating the post-Dobbs landscape: ethical considerations from a perinatal perspective. J Perinatol 44, 628–634 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41372-024-01884-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41372-024-01884-9