Democratic lawmaker calls to improve ‘medieval’ women’s pain management
A Democratic lawmaker spoke on the House floor this week about her personal traumatic experience with miscarriage to advocate her amendment to a spending bill that would direct the National Institutes of Health to study strategies for improving pain management during miscarriages.
Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, D-Wash., told colleagues that she and her husband recently lost a pregnancy “after 11 weeks of hope of bringing a new member into the family. Miscarriage is hard but when your body doesn’t let go of a miscarriage, it gets harder. After several weeks of bleeding and mourning the loss of our pregnancy, my doctor made clear that future pregnancy could be much more difficult if I didn’t take medication to expel the retained miscarriage.”
A few weeks ago, my husband and I lost a pregnancy. The physical toll was something not even my doctor prepared me for.
— Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (@RepMGP) June 10, 2026
The standard of care for women’s pain is medieval. We don’t need to agree on everything to agree this should be better. pic.twitter.com/FM07QT7Ip7
Gluesenkamp Perez said she was told this medication “would be about as painful as a regular period, maybe a little stronger cramping.” But when she took the medicine on Sunday, she said “the pain was worse than the pain I experienced during labor and delivery of my son four years ago. I was not even advised to take this medication when my son was out of the house. He saw and heard things that he should never have had to.”
“Between 10% and 20% of all known pregnancies end in miscarriage,” according to the Cleveland Clinic, with most occurring within the first 13 weeks of pregnancy.
Gluesenkamp Perez condemned the standard prescription for pain medication after a miscarriage, which is an “over-the-counter pain medicine, such as acetaminophen (Tylenol), ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin), or naproxen (Aleve) for cramps,” according to Kaiser Permanente.
Gluesenkamp Perez likened the advice to “offering someone a stick to chew on.”
“Women’s suffering is profoundly under-treated. And for eons, the survival of our species has been predicated on it. But while we have advanced in so many other ways, the status quo of women’s pain treatment, especially when it concerns reproductive health in this country, is medieval,” she said. She went on to say, “I know there are broad differences in beliefs on reproductive healthcare here, and we do not need to agree and debate on all of these issues to agree that women should not have to endure excruciating pain to handle a miscarriage and protect their ability to go on and bring a baby into this world.”
Her amendment was adopted with unanimous support by voice vote, according to her office.
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