Operation Rescue/Albuquerque, New Mexico/Cheryl Sullenger --
A shocking number of medical emergencies at two Albuquerque abortion clinics over the past few months have raised questions about clinic safety and who is responsible for oversight. After months of investigation, pro-life groups have determined that abortion clinics often operate in regulatory gaps and actively seek to "fly under the radar," as one regulator put it. This has created a public safety crisis in New Mexico.
A total of 14 calls for emergency medical assistance were placed to 911 dispatchers by Southwestern Women's Options (SWO) and the University of New Mexico Center for Reproductive Health (UNMCRH) over a 35-month time frame between November, 2008, and September, 2011. Three were placed from the UNMCRH while, alarmingly, eleven of the calls for help originated from SWO.
Complaints were filed with the New Mexico Medical Board (NMMB) against the known abortionists who work at those clinics by representatives of Project Defending Life and Operation Rescue. However, the NMMB is only responsible for oversight of licensed physicians and is not responsible for oversight of the abortion clinic itself.
"That means trash could be piled to the ceiling inside those clinics, and the NMMB would not have the authority to do anything about it," said Troy Newman, President of Operation Rescue and Pro-Life Nation. "The clinics themselves are never inspected or held to any standard. That creates the potential for a Gosnell-like 'house of horrors' to operate directly under the nose of regulators."
Conversations with Department of Health regulators confirmed Newman's concerns.
CONTINUE READING THIS STORY

