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Not long ago, one of the patients coming to see Schneider

  Not long ago, one of the patients coming to see Schneider from Texas got in a car by herself with a C-section-ectopic pregnancy, a serious complication in which the pregnancy implants in the scar from a previous Cesarean. The ectopic pregnancy ruptured in a deserted area outside Denver, so the woman had to be rushed in an ambulance to the nearest emergency room. There, she underwent a hysterectomy and had to spend days in the I.C.U. to make up for her blood loss. “This is not American health care,” Schneider said of the current system. “It’s Russian roulette.” Eventually, Schneider said, some provider in Colorado, New Mexico, California, or another state with a liberal stance on abortion would be sued by some institution or individual in one of the states that ban abortion. Still, no matter how physically and emotionally taxing, practicing in a city like Denver was itself a privilege in the post-Roe age. “There’s this overwhelming sense of ‘Well, bring it on,’ ” Schneider said. “We’r