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The latest attempts to restrict abortion rights don’t even bother to pretend to protect women’s health — as various state legislatures argued they were doing with recent laws requiring abortion doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals. The new efforts go straight for the drama.

Kansas and Oklahoma recently became the first states to ban the safest, most widely used method of abortion in the second trimester. The nearly identical laws, which are both referred to as the Unborn Child Protection From Dismemberment Abortion Act, were signed into law in Kansas on April 7 and in Oklahoma on April 13. Both outlaw the procedure known as “dilation and evacuation” (or D&E) which is described, in the Kansas legislation, as “dismembering a living unborn child and extracting such unborn child one piece at a time from the uterus.” The law makes an exception to save the life of the mother.

The bills were designed to make the procedure sound as gruesome as possible in nonmedical, emotion-laden terms. However, the legislators are accurate on the basics of the procedure: In a D&E, the fetus is removed with forceps, and disarticulation — a medical term that means dismemberment but is less likely to be used in a horror movie — usually occurs, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

The fact is, lots of surgical procedures sound horrific; most are intensely invasive and unpleasant to describe. In this case, the “dismemberment” is being done to fetuses that are not viable outside the womb and that scientists agree cannot feel pain. (Don’t be fooled by the unscientific claims of some anti-abortion groups that they can.)

Nearly 90 percent of abortions in the U.S. are performed in the first trimester, when a D&E is not necessary. According to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, 6.2 percent of abortions occur between 13 and 15 weeks. Only 4 percent occur at 16 weeks or later. But the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that women have a constitutional right to an abortion up to the time that the fetus becomes viable outside the womb, which is about 24 weeks — the end of the second trimester.

Doctors say women most commonly seek late abortions because they didn’t realize they were pregnant, they discovered a fetal abnormality or they have a serious health issue. The D&E procedure is performed in about 95 percent of second trimester abortions because it is the most effective method at that stage of pregnancy. The alternative, known as a medical abortion, takes longer, is less certain to work and sometimes requires a second procedure to suction out all or part of the placenta.

No matter how abortion opponents describe the D&E procedure, their efforts represent nothing more than another attack on access to legal and safe abortions.

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