A passenger airline client is developing the complicated scheduling tools to ensure that pregnant employees can minimize working in states with actively dangerous restrictions on reproductive healthcare. Pilots also need to rethink where to divert if a passenger has a prenatal medical emergency.
The nearest airports are not necessarily places where care can be provided. This is a major safety, moral, and reputational risk, and it's damned shameful that we have medical "dead zones" in America
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John Cutting (jcutting@social.vivaldi.net)'s status on Tuesday, 01-Aug-2023 11:22:14 JST John Cutting -
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Paul Cantrell (inthehands@hachyderm.io)'s status on Friday, 02-Feb-2024 13:10:57 JST Paul Cantrell @jcutting Do you have a source or further reading for this? Or is it something you’re hearing firsthand from someone in industry?
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John Cutting (jcutting@social.vivaldi.net)'s status on Friday, 02-Feb-2024 13:10:58 JST John Cutting Update to this:
They abandoned the project. The assumption is that a federal ban will go into effect by this time next year either through the scotus or a Trump presidency.
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