half of it happens outside the hospital

Here are the most interesting items we saw this week in women's health:

🤰 Nearly half of all serious pregnancy complications happen before labor begins or after the mother goes home. A McMaster University study found the obstetric care system is concentrated on the birth itself, leaving the moments that are actually killing women largely unmonitored.

⚖️ A Georgia woman charged with murder for taking abortion medication at home was released on a $1 bond after a judge called the case "extremely problematic." The county coroner didn't rule the death a homicide, and if prosecutors pursue it, it would be among the first murder cases brought against a woman for ending her own pregnancy under Georgia's six-week ban.

🏙️ Philadelphia passed a law requiring employers to accommodate workers whose menstrual or menopause symptoms interfere with their ability to do their jobs. A Villanova law professor argues it should be a national model, especially for retail and service workers who can't just log off when a hot flash hits.


TOP CLICKED STORIES THIS WEEK

Georgia murder charge gets a $1 bond and a skeptical judge // AP

Nearly half of severe pregnancy complications happen before labour or after birth and are not monitored // McMaster University / CMAJ

Philadelphia's menstruation and menopause workplace law should be a model for the country // The Conversation

Built for the wrong body: 50 years of male crash test dummies // NYT

Abortion numbers held flat in 2025 despite bans // Guttmacher Institute

13 states under federal investigation for requiring abortion insurance coverage // AP

Continue Reading half of it happens outside the hospital

a $1 bond

Tonight: a Georgia woman is charged with murder over a self-managed abortion and there are (of course) early cracks in the case, plus what’s actually worth paying attention to on midlife exercise and COVID shots in pregnancy.

p.s. We unfortunately had some broken links in Tuesday’s edition! Below are links that actually work.

NYT: Buckle Up, Women. Cars Still Aren’t Built for You.

McMaster University: Nearly half of severe pregnancy complications happen before labour or after birth and are not monitored


GEORGIA MURDER CHARGE GETS A $1 BOND AND A SKEPTICAL JUDGE // Alexia Moore, a Georgia woman charged with murder by local police after taking abortion medication at home, was granted a $1 bond this week by a judge who called the charge "extremely problematic" and said it would be "a hard charge to convict upon." Moore said she didn't know how far along she was and the county coroner did not rule the death a homicide. If prosecutors pursue it, it would be among the first murder cases brought against a woman for ending her own pregnancy under Georgia's six-week ban.

STAYING ACTIVE IN MIDLIFE CUTS PREMATURE DEATH RISK IN HALF // A study of more than 11,000 Australian women found those who consistently met exercise guidelines across midlife had about half the risk of dying prematurely compared to those who stayed inactive. Researchers followed participants for over two decades, surveying them nine times. The association appeared similar for cardiovascular and cancer deaths, though those findings were less conclusive.

YOUR COVID SHOT DURING PREGNANCY STILL PROTECTS YOUR BABY // A study more than 140,000 infants in Norway found COVID vaccination during pregnancy was linked to about half the risk of COVID hospitalization in the first two months of life. Protection waned by about six months, around when babies become eligible for vaccination themselves. The study also found no increased risk of other infections in exposed infants, undercutting claims made by Robert Malone, an RFK Jr. appointee leading CDC vaccine policy.

SENATE VOTES TO KEEP THE VA ABORTION BAN // Senate Republicans on Wednesday blocked a Democratic effort to restore abortion access for veterans and their dependents at VA facilities. The ban was reimposed by the Trump administration earlier this year. Advocates noted the result means women veterans now have less access to abortion than people in federal prisons or on Medicaid.

Continue Reading a $1 bond

where women die

Tonight: how crash test dummies built for men have left women more likely to die in a car accident for 50 years, exactly where women are dying during pregnancy, 13 states targeted by Trump for requiring insurers offer abortion coverage, and more.

— Meghan McCarthy


PHILLY SAID "HOLD MY WEIGHTED VEST" // A Villanova law professor argues that a Philadelphia city ordinance prohibiting discrimination based on menstruation, perimenopause, and menopause should be a model for the rest of the country. The law requires employers to provide reasonable accommodations to workers whose symptoms substantially interfere with their ability to do their jobs. Accommodations might include flexible bathroom breaks, breathable uniforms, or temperature control, modest asks that could make a real difference for retail and service workers who don't have the luxury of working from home when a hot flash hits.

BUILT FOR THE WRONG BODY // For more than 50 years, federal car safety standards have been designed around a male body, and women are paying for it with their lives. While a new female crash dummy was announced by a federal agency at the end of last year, Eve Van Dyke has a great op-ed video in the New York Times diving into the history of how we got here and why Congress must pass legislation to force the actual use of female crash test dummies.

13 STATES, ONE FEDERAL INVESTIGATION // The Trump administration has launched investigations into the 13 states that require health insurers to cover abortion. It says those states are violating the Weldon Amendment, a law that says health entities don’t have to cover abortion. The Biden administration interpreted the law as applying to health care providers, not employers and insurers. But the Trump administration reversed that position this year. Legal scholars say the question hasn't been resolved in court.

THE COMPLICATIONS NOBODY SEES COMING // Nearly 45% of severe pregnancy complications occur outside the delivery room, either before labor begins or after discharge, according to research from McMaster University. The finding challenges a model of obstetric care that concentrates largely on the birth itself and raises the question of whether prenatal and postpartum monitoring gets enough attention to catch what's actually killing pregnant women.

ABORTION NUMBERS HELD IN 2025 // Despite bans and restrictions in more than a dozen states, the total number of abortions in the U.S. remained essentially flat in 2025, according to the Guttmacher Institute. The data shows that while women traveling out of state for care dropped from 2024 to 2025, medication abortion via telehealth increased to make up for that gap (and then some.)

Continue Reading where women die

what early menopause means for the heart

Here are the most interesting items we saw this week in women's health:

🧠 The brain fog is real, but for what reason? A study of around 14,000 women ages 45–55 found that perimenopausal women report significantly more symptoms like memory lapses than premenopausal women. But objective testing showed almost no measurable cognitive decline—mood, anxiety, and sleep are likely the stronger culprits.

⚖️ Two Florida women had court hearings while in active labor. ProPublica documented cases in which hospitals petitioned the state to override patients' decisions about their own deliveries *while those women were actively laboring*. Florida courts have ruled that pregnant patients can be forced into unwanted procedures (in this case, C-sections instead of vaginal birth), and legislation moving through the state could expand those powers further.

❤️ Early menopause is a heart disease warning sign. Women who stop menstruating before 40 have a 40% higher risk of coronary heart disease, according to a JAMA Cardiology study. Black women are three times more likely to experience premature menopause, a racial health disparity that translates directly into higher lifetime cardiac risk.


TOP CLICKED STORIES THIS WEEK

Continue Reading what early menopause means for the heart

judges in the delivery room

Tonight: judges in the delivery room, more data on early menopause effects on the heart, one of the craziest abortion ban bills I’ve seen thus far, and more.

— Meghan McCarthy


GOP WANTS YOU TO CATCH FETAL TISSUE IN A BAG // You read that right! A bill from several House Republicans would require women to collect pregnancy tissue and blood in a biohazard "catch kit" and return it to the doctor who prescribed their abortion pill. Doctors who don't comply would face up to five years in prison. This isn’t going anywhere soon, but collecting expelled tissue is an extreme we haven’t seen in federal legislation lately (ever?).

EARLY MENOPAUSE IS A HEART PROBLEM // Women who stop menstruating before age 40 have a 40% higher risk of coronary heart disease, according to a JAMA Cardiology study published this week. Black women are three times more likely than white women to experience premature menopause, making the disparity one of the study's most pressing findings. Researchers don't yet know whether early menopause causes the elevated risk or signals it, but they say it should now be part of cardiovascular prevention conversations.

TRUMP WOMEN’S HEALTH CONFERENCE GETS KOOKY // KFF Health News reports that at the Trump administration’s inaugural women’s health conference, panelists promoted “restorative reproductive medicine” and raised concerns about hormonal birth control, while one physician affiliated with an anti-abortion institute said doctors should begin discussing future fertility with girls as young as 8.

A JUDGE DECIDED HOW THEY GAVE BIRTH WHILE IN LABOR // Two women in Florida with previous C-sections who wanted vaginal deliveries were instead subjected to emergency court hearings while in active labor, after their hospitals asked the state to override their medical decisions. ProPublica documents both cases and connects them to a broader pattern: Florida courts have ruled that pregnant patients can be forced into unwanted procedures, and a bill now moving through the state legislature could further expand fetal personhood protections.

HALF OF WOMEN WORLDWIDE AREN'T GETTING BASIC HEALTH SCREENINGS // The fifth annual Hologic Global Women's Health Index places the U.S. 13th globally, underscoring persistent gaps in women’s health outcomes even in high-income settings. There is some progress: testing rates for blood pressure, diabetes, and cancer all reached their highest levels since the Index began.

Continue Reading judges in the delivery room

brain fog for real

Tonight: What’s actually happening in perimenopausal brains, the senator officially targeting the abortion pill, Wall Street’s interest in women’s health — plus more.


THE BRAIN FOG IS REAL, BUT NOT WHAT YOU THINK // A study examining over 14,000 women ages 45 through 55 found perimenopausal and postmenopausal women report significantly more cognitive symptoms, such as brain fog and memory lapses, than premenopausal women. But objective cognitive testing showed almost no meaningful decline — and those symptoms were more strongly linked to mood, anxiety, and sleep than to measurable cognitive deficits.

WALL STREET FINALLY NOTICING (AGAIN) // The Health of Women Investor Summit at Nasdaq drew major pharma, VCs, banks, and other investors, a sign women’s health has made the move from edge case to capital priority. Funds in the space have grown 6x since the summit began, and McKinsey estimates that improving women’s health could add more than $1 trillion a year to the global economy, reflecting how large — and long overlooked — the gap is.

ABORTION PILL OFFICIALLY TARGETED IN CONGRESS // Republican Sen. Josh Hawley introduced legislation to strip FDA approval from mifepristone, the pill used in roughly 63% of US abortions. This is unlikely to get serious consideration in the Senate, as the Trump administration has tried to avoid unpopular abortion restrictions before the midterms. But expect it to become the new litmus test for Republicans. Keep in mind that the FDA says the drug is safe, backed by 25 years of data and a serious-complication rate under 1%.

…AND THE STORY FEW PREDICTED // The New York Review of Books has a deeply reported history of how the number of abortions has risen every year since 2022, even after the Supreme Court ended Roe vs. Wade. The answer isn’t a surprise to readers: it’s the abortion pill and telehealth. But the piece explains in great precision how we got here. (And why people like Hawley are targeting the pill.)

THE MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS HIDING INSIDE MENOPAUSE // Most women still aren’t aware menopause can affect mental health — a UK survey found only 28% knew it could trigger depression or anxiety. Meanwhile, evidence suggests perimenopause raises the risk of first-time major depression by ~30%, underscoring how often these symptoms are missed or misdiagnosed.

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these states are literally paying more

Tonight: what happened to federal food programs after states banned abortion, why pregnancy complications can haunt your heart for years afterward, botox at Planned Parenthood (plus more).

— Meghan McCarthy


ABORTION BANS INCREASE SPENDING // A study found states that had fully banned abortion at the start of 2023 saw birth rates rise nearly 2%, with around 14,500 additional births that year. At the same time, enrollment in WIC, a federal food program, increased over 4% for postpartum women and more than 2% for infants in those states, adding nearly $7 million in food costs across 13 states that year. The catch? The WIC budget is not set to absorb everyone who qualifies — meaning increases can lead to waiting lists.

PREGNANCY COMPLICATIONS CAN HAUNT THE HEART // Another reminder that pregnancy can shape long-term health: A study finds women who had complications like preterm birth or hypertensive disorders and who reported higher stress during and after pregnancy had slightly higher blood pressure two to seven years later, compared to women with lower stress. The effect was modest (about a 2 mm Hg difference), but researchers say the findings highlight the need for cardiovascular monitoring after complicated pregnancies, not just care during pregnancy itself.

BOTOX SAVING PLANNED PARENTHOOD? // The New York Times digs into life at a Planned Parenthood clinic that's pivoting to aesthetic procedures to keep the lights on. Reporter Alisha Haridasani Gupta covers a clinic in Sacramento that has started offering Botox injections and IV hydration treatments — pricing Botox at about $9 per unit, roughly 25–40% cheaper than many nearby medical spas.

WHY PREGNANT WOMEN ARE TURNING TO CANNABIS // A study analyzing national data found that just under 4% of pregnant women report using cannabis, and most say they’re trying to manage symptoms — especially mental health issues (83%) and nausea or gastrointestinal distress (77%). The findings suggest cannabis use during pregnancy may often reflect untreated symptoms like anxiety, nausea, or pain, raising questions about whether the health system is offering pregnant patients enough safe and effective alternatives.

A BLOOD TEST THAT SEES DEMENTIA COMING — DECADES OUT // A JAMA Network Open study found a blood biomarker linked to Alzheimer’s disease could flag women at higher risk of dementia up to 25 years before symptoms appear. Researchers analyzed blood samples from nearly 2,800 women collected in the late 1990s and found that higher levels of p-tau217, a protein fragment tied to early Alzheimer’s changes, were strongly associated with later dementia.

Continue Reading these states are literally paying more

the president’s tylenol problem

Tonight: how a White House press conference kept a trusted medication from thousands of pregnant women, what your mammogram might already know about your heart, (yet) more data showing abortion ban states are losing future doctors, and more.

— Meghan McCarthy


THE PRESIDENT IS A BAD PRESCRIBER // Last September President Trump told pregnant women at a White House briefing to avoid Tylenol, claiming without evidence that it causes autism. A new Lancet study tracked what happened next: ER acetaminophen orders for pregnant patients fell 10%, while orders for non-pregnant women didn't change. Untreated fever in pregnancy increases the risk of miscarriage, neural tube defects, and preterm birth; the researcher who led the study called it "thousands of women not getting pain control or fever reduction when they need it."

YOUR MAMMOGRAM IS DOING MORE THAN YOU THINK // A study of over 120,000 women found AI analysis can identify “arterial calcification” in routine mammogram images, helping them accurately predict heart attack, stroke, and heart failure risk (even in women under 50.) Nearly 70% of American women have had a mammogram, but fewer than 40% know their own cholesterol levels. Researchers are pushing for FDA review to make this a standard dual-purpose screen.

PERIMENOPAUSE TREATED LIKE AN AFTERTHOUGHT // Nature has a deep dive on how the vast majority of research on hormone therapy was conducted on postmenopausal women — not perimenopausal ones, whose hormones are still fluctuating. The resulting knowledge gap has been filled by an unregulated market of supplements, testosterone protocols, and other treatments with no long-term safety data.

BLOOD PRESSURE, NOT AGE // Life-threatening conditions caused by pregnancy, such as eclampsia, acute kidney failure, and sepsis, increased in the US between 2016 and 2022. The driver isn’t older mothers, but high blood pressure, either during pregnancy or before, and obesity. High blood pressure alone accounted for nearly a third of the total increase. The researchers' conclusion: if you want to prevent these crises, the time to act is before a woman gets pregnant, not when she's already on the delivery table.

STATES THAT BAN ABORTION ARE (YET AGAIN) LOSING FUTURE DOCTORS // After Dobbs, applications to residency programs in abortion ban states dropped sharply, particularly for specialties like OBGYN, family medicine, internal medicine, and emergency medicine. The study looked at 24 million applications across more than 4,000 programs and found states with the strictest bans are making themselves harder to staff.

Continue Reading the president’s tylenol problem

glp1s like women

Here are the trends we spotted this week in women’s health, and as always, scroll for the top clicked stories.

  • 💉 Women lose more weight on GLP-1s than men. It's probably biology. A review of nearly 20,000 people found women on GLP-1 drugs lost more weight than men, and sex appeared to be the most meaningful differentiator. Age and race didn't explain the gap.

  • 🔬 ACOG told doctors to stop waiting for surgery to diagnose endometriosis. The nation's largest OBGYN group updated its guidance, saying symptoms and imaging are enough and a diagnosis doesn’t require surgery. For patients who've spent years being dismissed, this is a big deal.

  • 🏥 The body that decides which preventive screenings your insurance will cover hasn't met in a year. The USPSTF has now missed three consecutive meetings, and five members had terms that expired in January, with no replacements. On hold: finalized guidance on self-collected HPV testing, mammogram updates, and colorectal screening guidelines.


TOP CLICKED STORIES THIS WEEK

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the number that won’t move

The CDC releases new maternal mortality numbers. A federal judge is days away from ruling on whether abortion pills can still be mailed. The body that decides which cancer screenings you get for free hasn't met in a year. And a new study of half a million women has a message for anyone who had a complicated pregnancy.

— Meghan


THE NUMBER THAT WON'T MOVE // The CDC reported 649 maternal deaths in 2024, down slightly from 669 the year before, but roughly where the U.S. stood before COVID spiked the count. Still, Black women died at more than three times the rate of white and Hispanic women. The dip could be "promising," or just a returns to baseline.

QUIET PARALYSIS // This story is really flying under the radar, but it’s important. CNN reports that the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF, they determine which screenings insurers must cover at no cost) has now missed three consecutive meetings. Five of its 16 members' terms expired in January and haven't been replaced. What do they need to consider? Finalized guidance on self-collected HPV testing, plus updates to mammogram and colorectal screening guidelines that millions of women rely on for free coverage.

WHAT THE 911 TAPES REVEAL // ABC News obtained emergency recordings from the ICE family detention center in Dilley, Texas, documenting staff calling ambulances for pregnant women and children multiple times a month. That included a three-month pregnant woman who lost consciousness, and another who was seizing. The calls span October 2025 through February 2026. ICE's own policy says pregnant women generally should not be detained.

YOUR PREGNANCY IS A CARDIAC RECORD // A JAMA Internal Medicine study of more than 500,000 women found that all subtypes of hypertensive pregnancy disorders, including gestational hypertension and preeclampsia, raise long-term cardiovascular risk, but women with superimposed preeclampsia faced nearly three times the risk of a cardiovascular event compared to those with uncomplicated pregnancies. The findings add to growing evidence that pregnancy history belongs in every woman's cardiac chart — and that most doctors still aren't asking.

THE PILL STILL IN THE BALANCE // A federal judge in Louisiana is weighing an injunction that would end telehealth prescriptions for mifepristone — no remote appointments, no pills by mail — in all fifty states. About 30% of U.S. abortions were provided via telehealth as of mid-2025. A ruling is expected soon.

Continue Reading the number that won’t move