Permission for prenatal care

The North Dakota House recently passed an abortion ban that would take effect in the event Roe is overturned. The Senate has taken up the legislation, and is expected to vote on it later this week. The bill has an exception for saving the woman’s life — but not for rape or incest. (Full text of the bill is here.)
The ND legislature also recently failed to pass legislation that would have guaranteed pregnant teens the right to seek prenatal care without notifying their parents. (Full text here.) Currently, North Dakota law requires parental consent to treat pregnant women under 18.
Just to be clear, we’re talking about prenatal care here, not abortion.
Conservatives are wailing that explicitly stating there is no parental notification requirement would “drive a wedge between the daughter and the parents.” But isn’t it obvious that, if a young woman has chosen to carry her pregnancy to term without telling her parents, she most likely has a compelling reason for keeping them in the dark? And if a teenage girl faces very little support at home for keeping her pregnancy — which, presumably, is the reason she would keep this info from her parents — then you would think anti-abortion activists would be in favor of this legislation. After all, they love to publicize cases where parents have coerced their daughters into abortions. You would think that this legislation would prevent that from happening.
Seeing as how the pro-choice movement is actually pro-choice, not pro-abortion (as the antis love to characterize us), we can agree it’s bad for parents to force their daughters into abortions AND bad to force them to carry an unwanted pregnancy to term.
The disconnect in requiring parental notification for abortion but not for prenatal care has long been pointed out as part of the legal rhetoric opposing laws that meddle with teens’ reproductive rights. A Guttmacher Policy Review article from 2000 found no states that require parental consent or notification for teens to receive prenatal care, whereas more than 20 required it for abortion.
But other sources say 27 states and DC “specifically allow pregnant minors to the obtain prenatal care and delivery services without parental consent or notification.” And last year Colorado decided to grant teens confidentiality rights when it comes to prenatal care. Too bad North Dakota won’t be joining their ranks.

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