She questions the hospital's motives. "If the hospital's true intent was to obtain a judicial determination [about the law], they could have gone into court months ago to seek an opinion. Their failure to do so suggests an intent on their part to delay the process to allow the fetus to reach 24 or 26 weeks to bolster their claim that the fetus has some kinds of rights.
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Justic...-pregnant-Texas-woman-takes-complicating-turn
The law actually mandates that the patient be kept on life support until fetal viability. So per the law, the fetus already has rights and actually, if the mother is considered a patient, the hospital has little choice.
I believe that Steven Hawking was diagnosed with ALS when he was a young adult in college and began to display symptoms, so I don't think the two situations are comparable.
I understand your point, but this is not a case of just having a limb deformity. This unborn baby has several issues (brain, heart, etc.) and faces further complications from a likely premature birth. There are a lot more things to consider than the limbs. JMHO.
But the law as written doesn't care whether the baby is deformed or catastrophically ill, etc. The law mandates that the fetus be brought to viability, no exceptions.
They can say whatever they want. I think the intent of the law was obviously to protect the fetus regardless of what condition the mother was in.
There is really very little difference between someone, lets say in a coma, and someone who is brain dead.
Neither person can do anything but lie there. I am not sure why some residual brain activity should make all the difference.
It doesn't unless death means she is no longer a "patient". If so, the law does not apply to her.
By the way, my understanding is a patient could be writhing in pain with some fatal disease and the hospital could not let her go if she was pregnant.
The hospital might have acknowledged it. It doesn't mean she was legally pronounced brain dead. They need to take specific steps to do so.
Lets say only one physician examined her instead of two independent ones. Well, she isn't legally dead then.
Not true. Nothing in the Texas code states that a person has to be "legally pronounced dead" by a physician or hospital to be legally dead. The doctors, however, do have to find or report the conditions for clinical death. Once they do so, a person is legally dead. Even if there is no official "declaration" from a physician.
The physicians do not have the power to come to legal conclusions. The codes and courts do that. They only have the power to report criteria that allows courts to make such a determination or for the code to be applied.
It doesn't sound like the condition of the fetus will enter into the legal discussion.
Oh, yeah it will. The condition of the fetus will come into play when discussing how the Act contradicts itself, and is thus void, when discussing whether ornot the Act constitutes an impermissble violation of a mother's right to privacy ( to an abortion), and later, when the hospiutal is sued for medical bills and care of the child, if the baby survives.