Many obstetricians and gynecologists, as well as those in other disciplines, don’t want to take the chance their medical expertise will be questioned and vilified. Quite frankly, if I had the money, I would have funded both Cox’s voyage out of Texas and her procedure. I would have even...
Over the last week, millions of people have learned Kate Cox’s name. The Dallas mother of two’s courageous decision tosue the state of Texasforpermission to have an abortionhas made nationwide headlines amid her ongoing medical crisis involving multiple trips to the emergency room to manage ...
Kate Cox left Texas to get an abortion. Kate Cox? The woman at the center of one of the biggest challenges to a state’s abortion law since Roe v. Wade. Last week, a lower court overruled Texas law — which bars abortion at six weeks — to grant Cox an exception for the procedure...
Kate Cox, a 31 year old woman from the Dallas-Fort Worth area who had asked a court for an order allowing her to get an abortion under the medical emergency exception to Texas' near-total ban and will leave the state to receive care while the state's highest court c...
seeking an exception to Texas' ban on abortions because of the baby's condition and the health risks to Cox. On December 11, while the Coxes were in New Mexico,the Texas Supreme Court overturned a lower court ruling, saying Kate Cox did not qualify for a medical exemption to the ...
In her first TV interview since the Texas Supreme Court decision, Kate Cox, who was pregnant with a girl with the genetic condition trisomy 18, discusses being forced to leave Texas to obtain the medical procedure.
Posted in That's our Lege | Tagged abortion, Amanda Zurawski, Ann Johnson, Bryan Hughes, Dan Patrick, Ingrid Skop, Kate Cox, lawsuit, Senate, Texas, Texas Medical Board, The Lege | 1 Comment Nevaeh Crain Posted on November 2, 2024 by Charles Kuffner ProPublica said it had two stories...
Kate Cox, a 31 year old woman from the Dallas-Fort Worth area who had asked a court for an order allowing her to get an abortion under the medical emergency exception to Texas' near-total ban and will leave the state to receive care while the state's highest c...