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Polish doctors torn over mental health as grounds to bypass near-total abortion ban
By , WARSAW (Reuters) - When Polish doctors told Paulina, 29, that her unborn child had no kidneys and would die upon birth, she knew she couldn’t go through with the pregnancy.“Everyone says that the reward after the pain of birth is holding your child in your hands,” said Paulina, a retail manager from Gdynia, who asked Reuters to withhold her surname.“I would have nothing. I would give birth to a dead child, and that pain would be a thousand times worse.”Until two months ago, women like Paulina still stood a chance of being allowed an abortion in Poland. However, in a ruling that came...…By , WARSAW (Reuters) - When Polish doctors told Paulina, 29, that her unborn child had no kidneys and would die upon birth, she knew she couldn’t go through with the pregnancy.“Everyone says that the reward after the pain of birth is holding your child in your hands,” said Paulina, a retail manager from Gdynia, who asked Reuters to withhold her surname.“I would have nothing. I would give birth to a dead child, and that pain would be a thousand times worse.”Until two months ago, women like Paulina still stood a chance of being allowed an abortion in Poland. However, in a ruling that came...WW…
Polish doctors torn over mental health as grounds to bypass near-total abortion ban
By , WARSAW (Reuters) - When Polish doctors told Paulina, 29, that her unborn child had no kidneys and would die upon birth, she knew she couldn’t go through with the pregnancy.“Everyone says that the reward after the pain of birth is holding your child in your hands,” said Paulina, a retail manager from Gdynia, who asked Reuters to withhold her surname.“I would have nothing. I would give birth to a dead child, and that pain would be a thousand times worse.”Until two months ago, women like Paulina still stood a chance of being allowed an abortion in Poland. However, in a ruling that came...…By , WARSAW (Reuters) - When Polish doctors told Paulina, 29, that her unborn child had no kidneys and would die upon birth, she knew she couldn’t go through with the pregnancy.“Everyone says that the reward after the pain of birth is holding your child in your hands,” said Paulina, a retail manager from Gdynia, who asked Reuters to withhold her surname.“I would have nothing. I would give birth to a dead child, and that pain would be a thousand times worse.”Until two months ago, women like Paulina still stood a chance of being allowed an abortion in Poland. However, in a ruling that came...WW…
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