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Louisiana Abortion Ban May Force Woman To Deliver Baby Diagnosed With A ‘No Skull’ Medical Condition

Louisiana’s near-total ban on abortion has a pregnant woman and her family on the verge of a tough decision. Nancy Davis is 13 weeks pregnant with her second child. But, according to her interview with WAFB9,the fetus growing in her womb will not survive due to a rare medical condition. Therefore, Nancy’s options include carrying the fetus to term or traveling to a nearby state for the medical procedure.

“It’s hard knowing that…you know…I’m carrying it to bury it…you know what I’m saying,” Nancy said.

The mother explained that her first ultrasound happened at ten weeks pregnant. But after the procedure at Woman’s Hospital in Baton Rouge, Nancy and her boyfriend, both excited about their new baby, learned its fate.

“It was an abnormal ultrasound, and they noticed the top of the baby’s head was missing and the skull was missing, the top of the skull was missing,” Nancy toldWAFB9.

Nancy Weighing Between Abortion In Another State Or Carrying To Term

Nancy said her unborn baby was diagnosed with acrania. According to The Fetal Medicine Foundation, acrania is a lethal condition with death within the first week of life.” Additionally, it’s a condition that affects “1 in 1,000 at 12 weeks gestation.”

Despite this prognosis, the state denied Nancy an abortion. Acrania isn’t a condition listed under the Louisiana Department of Health’s qualifying conditions for abortions. The department published a list of situations in early August and a catch-all exception for “profound and irredeemable” abnormalities incompatible with life, but two doctors must sign off. Also, her life technically isn’t in danger. So it’s a two-way denial of the medical service.

Now, Nancy has about a week to decide whether she’ll carry the fetus to term or travel to another state that allows abortion. She’s pressed for time, given that most states have an abortion cut-off eligibility at 15 weeks. A doctor told her she’d be carrying the child to bury it.

“Florida is the closest…so ideally Florida,” Nancy said. “But then the next closest place would be North Carolina or something.”

In the interview, Nancy didn’t identify as pro-choice or pro-life. However, she expressed that lawmakers should consider expanding the list of qualifying conditions.

“I just want them to consider special circumstances as it relates to abortion…medical problems, like this is one that needs to be in that,” Nancy said.

Cassandra Santiago

Cassandra Santiago is a multimedia journalist, editor, and editorial strategist with over a decade of experience shaping conversations across arts, entertainment, culture, and global news. A graduate of the University of Iowa, she has built a cross-platform career spanning newspapers, magazines, radio, and digital media. She joined The Shade Room five years ago and currently serves as a Senior Editor, where she leads editorial direction, oversees exclusive coverage, and trains and edits a team of writers. Cassandra has played a key role in developing high-impact content and editorial strategies for an audience of more than 30 million, contributing to platform growth, engagement, and monetization across multiple channels. In addition to her leadership role, she remains a daily contributor, with her articles generating more than 41 million views since 2023. Beyond The Shade Room, Cassandra offers freelance social media strategy services, speaks on the influence and impact of Black media at public panels, and owns Did It For You, an event design company in the DC, Maryland, and Virginia area. She is Poynter Institute–certified and was named to the DMV’s 35 Under 35 list in 2024.

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