Dr. Katherine Farris: You know the story of, you put a frog in water and slowly bring it to a boil and they’ll just die in it because they don’t realize it’s boiling? I feel on some levels that’s what’s happened to us with abortion. It’s just gotten worse, and we’re just like, “Okay, well, I know it’s a 24-hour waiting period, but at least it’s a phone call and not two visits for the patient.” “Okay, no, now it’s a 72-hour waiting period, but at least they don’t have to do an ultrasound 72 hours in advance.” So, every time they throw another barrier at us, our automatic thing is, “Okay, how will we overcome this barrier?” Like, I am ready– I am ready to go live with misoprostol-only medication abortion, in case that judge in Amarillo, Texas makes mifepristone completely illegal for some period of time. Right? That is our ammo. You throw another barrier; we figure out how to go around it, we figure out how to jump over it, we figure out how to meet the requirements so that we can continue providing care. We had a 6-week ban in South Carolina we were under from the afternoon of the Dobbs decision. Ten minutes after the Dobbs decision, the state submitted their request to the federal court to lift the injunction on the 6-week ban, and the court responded very quickly. So we figured out, “Alright, how do we care for patients under a 6-week ban?” And we did. On the one hand, you just keep dealing with it. But then at the exact same time, in parallel, I feel like I’m in this glass box, screaming my head off, and nobody hears. And it took Dobbs for people to hear. We’re fighting them on a legislative front, we’re fighting them with lawsuits, we’re fighting them by complying and not letting the barriers stop us from providing care. But at the same time, the average person, when they get pregnant or someone they love gets pregnant, they are completely oblivious. Patients walk through the door and say, “I had no idea.” They had no clue how hard it was going to be.