Dr. Misha Pangasa: The other part of this that I want to touch on, too, is that particularly for anyone who is in medicine, who has anything to do with people who are pregnant, and manages deliveries, we know that pregnancy can be this incredible, beautiful, amazing thing. But it’s not for a lot of people. It can be also some of the most devastating moments in people’s emotional health, their mental health, their families, their bodies. People end up in ICUs. Even if they don’t end up in ICUs, they end up with stitches and can’t sit straight for a few weeks. Pregnancy and childbirth are not neutral. To be able to talk to somebody and say “You get to decide how you want this to go,” feels like just such an important thing. That’s why I think so many of us give so much of ourselves for it. Because we know that the alternative–it’s not just having a baby is some easy thing for you to do. It is beautiful sometimes, and really terrible sometimes. The number of people who I’ve seen–they always talk about pregnancy-related mortality. But I feel like not as many people talk about real pregnancy-related morbidity. The number of people who end up on dialysis or in the hospital with antibiotics. Have c-section incisions that have to carry around wound vacs for weeks for them to heal. These things that are all considered normal pregnancy stuff. Well, I guess, dialysis and ICUs are not. But people have surgical site infections all the time, and have to carry around the wound vacs. And that’s normal stuff. That’s a big deal for someone who didn’t want to have a baby.