The importance of professional responsibility and fetal viability in the management of abortion

J Perinat Med. 2024 Feb 12;52(3):249-254. doi: 10.1515/jpm-2023-0503. Print 2024 Mar 25.

Abstract

In June 2022, the Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization Supreme Court decision ended the constitutional right to the professional practice of abortion throughout the United States. The removal of the constitutional right to abortion has significantly altered the practice of obstetricians and gynecologists across the US. It potentially increases risks to pregnant patients, leads to profound changes in how physicians can provide care, especially in states with strict bans or gestational limits to abortion, and has introduced personal challenges, including moral distress and injury as well as legal risks for patients and clinicians alike. The professional responsibility model is based on the ethical concept of medicine as a profession and has been influential in shaping medical ethics in the field of obstetrics and gynecology. It provides the framework for the importance of ethical and professional conduct in obstetrics and gynecology. Viability marks a stage where the fetus is a patient with a claim to access to medical care. By allowing unrestricted abortions past this stage without adequate justifications, such as those concerning the life and health of the pregnant individual, or in instances of serious fetal anomalies, the states may not be upholding the equitable ethical consideration owed to the fetus as a patient. Using the professional responsibility model, we emphasize the need for nuanced, evidence-based policies that allow abortion management prior to viability without restrictions and allow abortion after viability to protect the pregnant patient's life and health, as well as permitting abortion for serious fetal anomalies.

Keywords: abortion; abortion laws; fetus; pregnancy trimester; professional responsibility; viability.

MeSH terms

  • Abortion, Induced*
  • Abortion, Legal
  • Female
  • Fetal Viability
  • Humans
  • Pregnancy
  • Pregnant Women*
  • Supreme Court Decisions
  • United States