“ABORTION” which in news these days as restrictive abortion legislation has been proposed in Republican-led states. Abortion is basic healthcare needs of millions of women/girls not only in United States but also across the globe. It is the best way to save women/girls from lifetime medical complications or death. According to recent reporting from Olivia Truffaut-Wong Singer Halsey revealed that Abortion saved her life as one of her miscarriage required an abortion because her body could not terminate pregnancy completely on its own.
As new law was proposed, there must be some question in mind of women/girls in USA that What happens if a woman needs an abortion for an ectopic pregnancy now? and many more. So here, we bring list of top three experts in United States that can answer all your question:
Johanna Schoen
Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research at Rutgers University
Johanna Schoen (Ph.D. Univ. of North Carolina, 1996) is a professor in the Department of History. Her major interests are the history of women and medicine, the history of reproductive rights, and the history of sexuality. Her research traces women’s health and reproductive care through the twentieth century. Her first book, Choice and Coercion: Birth Control, Sterilization, and Abortion in Public Health and Welfare, examines the role which birth control, sterilization, and abortion played in public health and welfare policies between the 1920s and the 1970s.
In 2002, she shared her research on the history of eugenic sterilization in North Carolina with a journalist from the Winston Salem Journal. North Carolina’s sterilization program ran from the 1920s to the 1970s and led to the sterilization of more than 7,000 people. The paper ran a week-long series of articles on the subject which ultimately resulted in an official apology by the governor of North Carolina. In 2007, Schoen designed an exhibit on North Carolina’s eugenic sterilization program which opened that year in the North Carolina Museum of History in Raleigh. In 2014, North Carolina began to pay restitution to sterilization victims – the first state in the country to take such a step.
Schoen’s second book, Abortion After Roe, which won the William H. Welch Medal for the best book in the history of medicine by the American Association for the History of Medicine, traces the history of abortion since legalization. Abortion is – and always has been – an arena for contesting power relations between women and men. When in 1973 the Supreme Court made the procedure legal throughout the United States, it seemed that women were at last able to make decisions about their own bodies. In the four decades that followed, however, abortion became ever more politicized and stigmatized. Abortion After Roe chronicles and analyzes what the new legal status and changing political environment have meant for abortion providers and their patients. It sheds light on the little-studied experience of performing and receiving abortion care from the 1970s – a period of optimism – to the rise of the antiabortion movement and the escalation of antiabortion tactics in the 1980s to the 1990s and beyond, when violent attacks on clinics and abortion providers led to a new articulation of abortion care as moral work. More than four decades after the legalization of abortion, the abortion provider community has powerfully asserted that abortion care is a moral good.
For decades, Schoen has worked with abortion providers to preserve the history of legal abortion in the United States and to use historical analysis and insights to help preserve access to abortion care. Her current work explores ethical frameworks in defense of the right to decide over life and death in abortion care, neonatology, and at the end of life in so-called physician assisted deaths.
With Kim Mutcherson from the Rutgers Law School at Camden, she is co-directing the Rutgers Center for Historical Analysis Life and Death Seminar from 2019-2021.
In her spare time, she volunteers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center where she is a member of the Patient and Family Advisory Counsel for Quality and the Ethics Committee and works on improving end-of-life conversations between clinicians, patients, and caregivers.
Emily Godfrey
University of Washington School of Medicine
Emily M. Godfrey, M.D., M.P.H. is an Associate Professor in the Department of Family Medicine and in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Division of Family Planning. Dr. Godfrey shares her clinical expertise at two clinical sites: UWNC Northgate Family Medicine Clinic and the UW Women’s Health Care Clinic (WHCC) at Roosevelt.
Dr. Godfrey’s mission is to make high-quality, comprehensive primary care services accessible to all patients. By understanding and working together in the context of their person, partnerships, family and community, she empowers her patients to make choices that help them live healthy lives.
She is a Fellow of the American Academy of Family Physicians and a Program Committee member of the North American Primary Care Research Group. She is a three-time recipient of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) Ambassador Scholarship Award. She also received the University of Illinois Faculty Mentoring Award and the University of Illinois Department of Family Medicine Linda K. Gunzburger Faculty Award for Excellence in Scholarship. She has been recognized for her extraordinary contribution to the health and well-being of women by Sara Feigenholtz of the Illinois House of Representatives.
Dr. Godfrey’s clinical interests include adolescent health, women’s health, men’s sexual health, preventive care, outpatient, procedural car and obstetrics. She is board certified in Family Medicine. She completed a fellowship in Family Planning and a Master of Public Health degree at the University of Rochester in 2003.
Caitlin Bernard
Indiana University
Caitlin Bernard is a family planning fellowship-trained obstetrician-gynecologist and faculty at Indiana University in Indianapolis. She has worked since 2014 with AMPATH — the Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare — in western Kenya providing clinical care, teaching and engaging in research.
Dr. Caitlin Bernard specializes in Women’s Health and Obstetrics & Gynecology. She went to medical school and completed her residency at State University of New York Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY.
Bernard’s clinical interests are in contraception, abortion and miscarriage care in addition to general obstetrics and gynecology. Her research interests are in improving access to contraception and sexual and reproductive health services and understanding how to decrease unintended pregnancy and improve pregnancy outcomes.