How Georgia’s LIFE Act killed Amber Thurman

114

Amber Nicole Thurman’s death in 2022 was an avoidable tragedy. The 28-year-old, a mother and aspiring nurse died in a Georgia hospital due to a complication from her pregnancy.

A Life Cut Short by Medical Inaction

The doctors who treated her were constrained by the state’s abortion ban, the so-called LIFE Act, which made them fearful of committing a felony. This delay in care cost Thurman her life, as the medical team hesitated to perform a lifesaving procedure. Thurman’s death is a grim reminder of the dangerous consequences of extreme abortion restrictions on women’s health.

How Georgia's LIFE Act killed Amber Thurman
Source: MSNBC News

Thurman had discovered she was pregnant with twins in the summer of 2022 and, as a mother to a young son with hopes of attending nursing school, she quickly realized she could not continue the pregnancy. However, Georgia’s strict abortion laws, implemented after the Supreme Court decides to overturn Roe v. Wade, restricted her access to healthcare. Despite the law’s vague exception for maternal life, doctors often face legal risks, creating an environment where women’s health is sidelined.

The Preventable Circumstances Leading to Thurman’s Death

Initially, Thurman scheduled an abortion in North Carolina, where the procedure was still legal. However, a traffic delay and an overwhelmed clinic forced her to miss her appointment. Instead, she was given abortion pills to terminate the pregnancy, which is typically a safe and effective method. Upon returning to Georgia, Thurman began experiencing severe pain and bleeding—signs of a rare complication. Seeking help at a local hospital, she was met with hesitation from doctors concerned about violating the LIFE Act.

Thurman showed clear signs of sepsis—a life-threatening condition that should have been treated promptly with a dilation and curettage (D&C) to remove remaining fetal tissue. However, Georgia’s law, which bans any procedure that might be interpreted as terminating a pregnancy, made the medical team wary. Instead of receiving immediate care, Thurman’s treatment was delayed for nearly 24 hours. By the time doctors intervened, her organs had started to fail. Tragically, she died during surgery, her final words being a plea for her mother to take care of her son.

A Grim Reality for Women’s Health

Thurman’s death was not caused by her legal use of abortion pills. Instead, it was the result of a system that criminalized the medical care she desperately needed. As ProPublica reports, deaths related to abortion pills are exceedingly rare, with only 11 out of nearly 6 million cases leading to sepsis. Thurman’s case exposes how laws like the LIFE Act, designed by ideologues with little regard for the real consequences, put women’s lives in jeopardy.

How Georgia's LIFE Act killed Amber Thurman
Source: Demorcacy Now!

Georgia’s abortion ban, like those in many other states, was passed under the guise of “protecting life.” When Governor Brian Kemp signed the bill, he claimed the state “values life” and stands for those who cannot speak for themselves. Yet, when Thurman lay dying, no one came to her aid in time. The reality of such restrictive laws is that they prevent doctors from saving women like Thurman, who only wanted to live. Her death serves as a heartbreaking example of the dangers posed by extreme abortion restrictions that ignore the complexities of healthcare and endanger the lives of women across the nation.

Comment via Facebook

Corrections: If you are aware of an inaccuracy or would like to report a correction, we would like to know about it. Please consider sending an email to [email protected] and cite any sources if available. Thank you. (Policy)


Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.