Vanessa Gill Preston |
Dr. Curtis Wayne Boyd, proud member and co-founder of the prestigious National Abortion Federation, once told his fellows at a meeting that he'd decided to take up abortion because his wife had nearly died while he was in medical school after the couple had arranged an illegal abortion. He'd actually started out in the 1960s performing criminal abortions.
Vanessa, a day-care worker, went with her husband to Curtis Boyd's Fairmount Center in Dallas on January 22, 1980 for a 16-week abortion. During the procedure, Vanessa suffered multiple vaginal punctures -- not the kind of injury likely to prove fatal. However, before Boyd could remove the placenta, Vanessa went into a grand mal seizure and then into cardiac arrest.
Curtis Boyd |
During exploratory surgery at the hospital at Parkland Hospital, during which 24 units of blood were administered to try to stop her circulatory system from collapsing, Vanessa died.
An autopsy revealed that Vanessa's uncontrollable bleeding had been caused by an amniotic fluid embolism (AFE - amniotic fluid in the mother's bloodstream) and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC - a blood clotting disorder) during the abortion. When Boyd's staff resuscitated Vanessa, they caused a small laceration of her liver. This is typical in even properly performed CPR, and is not usually life-threatening.
However, because of the DIC, Vanessa's blood couldn't clot, and she bled to death from the liver laceration.
However, because of the DIC, Vanessa's blood couldn't clot, and she bled to death from the liver laceration.
Since second-trimester evacuation abortions were still new at the time, Boyd and his staff didn't realize that there was a risk of DIC. To Boyd's credit, he reported Vanessa's death to the Centers for Disease Control and wrote a medical journal article warning other abortion practitioners that DIC could occur during second-trimester evacuation abortions.
News coverage of Vanessa's death reports that in the 17-year period since Roe vs. Wade, Boyd's clinic was the site of the abortion deaths of more than 50,000 unborn babies, an average of just under 3,000 babies every year.
Evidence is that Boyd's quality of care did eventually deteriorate over the years. His late-term abortion clinic in New Mexico has been accused of providing substandard care resulting in the death of Keisha Marie Atkins in 2017, a departure from Vanessa's death where, if you assume he meant well in killing the unborn child of a pastor and his wife, he didn't screw anything up.
Watch When All Efforts Fail on YouTube.
Sources:
- “Fatal embolism during legal induced abortion,” Atrash, Cheek, Hogue, American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 162:4, April 1990, p. 986-90
- “Fatal Pulmonary Embolism During Legal Induced Abortion in the United States from 1972-1985,” Lawson, Herschel W., MD, Atrash, Hani K., MD, MPH, Franks, Adele L., MD, American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Vol. 162, No. 4, April 1990, p. 986-990.
- Texas Certificate of Death # 07018
- "Abortion patient dies," Corpus Christi (TX) Times, January 24, 1980
- Texas Autopsy Report No. 0190-80- 0095
- "Woman Dies in Abortion," Waco Tribune-Herald, January 24, 1980
- "Examiners withhold death ruling," McKinney Courier-Gazette, January 25, 1980
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