Discussions surrounding abortion must always include the loss of wanted pregnancies.
After four more weeks and two more hospital visits, I learned that I was pregnant with twins, and was simultaneously experiencing a pregnancy and a miscarriage—one pregnancy was viable and one was not.
The treatment for my miscarriage was a Rhogam shot, usually safe to administer in the third trimester if you and your baby have different blood types. But since I was still in the first trimester, the shot would put my other pregnancy at risk. After suffering physically and emotionally for nearly six weeks, the decision to get the Rhogam shot was an easy one, because I had a child back home I wanted to live for. I had to survive for him.
Within 24 hours of getting the shot, I started feeling better. Fortunately, it did not endanger the viable fetus. But I could not feel relief as the untreated miscarriage caused hemorrhaging in my uterus that put my pregnancy at high risk until I gave birth. I was pregnant with twins, and was simultaneously experiencing a pregnancy and a miscarriage—one pregnancy was viable and one was not. world, I could have been denied this shot or investigated for losing my baby. While Georgia’s six-week abortion ban doesn’t explicitly outlaw the treatment I received, it does create a legal grey area in which
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