Abortion Clinic Staffer Tries to Hide Botched Abortion on 911 Call, Calls Hemorrhaging a “Non-Emergency”
On May 25, an employee of Women’s Med Dayton (WMD) in Dayton, Ohio, called 911 to request “non-emergency” transport for a 36-year-old woman to a hospital for emergency intervention.
The 911 dispatcher was clearly confused by the request, perhaps at first thinking the caller was calling for an Uber ride instead. “I don’t understand a non-emergency transportation,” the dispatcher said with a stern and confused tone.
Late-term abortion facility staff regularly use the term “non-emergency” to describe botched abortions that can definitely be life-threatening.
In fact, when the dispatcher asked the caller, “Can we have an excuse?” he answered quietly, “Uh, hemorrhage.”
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Obviously, abortion complications that require a 911 call and transport to a hospital emergency room are not “not occurring.” The purpose of a 911 service is to report emergencies.
And, more specifically, bleeding, if not taken seriously and quickly addressed, is an immediate danger to life. Operation Rescue has reported on many cases of women dying from bleeding during botched abortions.
Catherine Romanos, a WMD abortionist with a long history of overseeing and performing abortions resulting in complications, described one patient’s condition as non-emergent in May when he called 911 directly.
Staff were probably trained to follow his lead in minimizing the severity of their induced abortions. Characterizing an emergency transport as “non-emergency” will increase the chances that EMS professionals will neglect to use lights and sirens, which will undoubtedly delay their arrival on the scene to treat the sufferer. that patient.
WMD has a tendency to manipulate the system. Formerly known as the Women’s Med Center of Dayton, a slightly longer version of its current name, the abortion business failed to have a proper hospital transfer agreement, as required by Ohio law. The proposed facility variance for the use of back-up physicians was rejected by the Ohio Department of Health.
After an appeal for nearly six years, the denial was overturned in the Ohio Supreme Court.
In an unscrupulous maneuver, the late-term abortion business slightly changed its name in 2019 and partnered with the new Executive Director of the Ohio Department of Health, Amy Acton, to obtain a new facility license under the previously denied distinction.
“The callous, dangerous, and corrupt business of abortion has shown its true colors for years now,” said Operation Rescue President Troy Newman.
“Abortionists and staff clearly do not value the lives of the women they claim to serve. But when they heartlessly kill growing babies, why should any of us expect them to respect and honor the lives of their mothers? ”
LifeNews Note: Anne Reed writes for Operation Rescue.