- AdventHealth CEO brings a cyclist’s mind to healthcare headwind navigation
- Baptist Health Arkansas hospital to end OB services
- Baptist Health Arkansas hospital to end OB services
- Texas behavioral health provider launches 6th Austin-area clinic
- The readiness gap facing new dental graduates
- Texas AG sues dental providers for Medicaid fraud
- Health systems embrace teledermatology
- New Jersey expands authority for advanced practice nurses
- Boone Health sues Missouri Heart Center for breached contracts, data misuse
- 42 North Dental appoints senior VP of operations
- Advocate Health taps Epic’s AI Agent Factory
- Why HealthPartners won’t get ‘caught up in the race’ on AI
- The groups among whom mammography rates are falling: Study
- Why these 2 roles are key to expanding behavioral access, per SAMHSA
- Why ASCs are watching NewYork-Presbyterian’s anticompetitive lawsuit
- CVS Health to open more stores than it closes in 2026
- CMS signals tougher expectations for hospital nutrition services: 5 notes
- Sun Life appoints dental business president
- Memorial Regional, Joe DiMaggio Children’s name CFO
- Dr. Yun Saksena appointed vice dean for academic, student affairs at University of Washington
- 12 Big Tech health system partnerships
- MB2 Dental’s 3-year growth recap: 17 moves
- Kaiser Permanente’s $9.3B net income draws scrutiny: 6 things to know
- New orthopedic CEO trims $2.5M in costs — 2 targeted areas
- How 2 orthopedic groups formed strong payer partnerships
- ACA enrollment at 23.1 million in 2026
- 6 states with the most DSO activity in Q1
- Illinois hospital to expand cardiovascular care with $29M project
- Intermountain Health outpatient building acquired by real estate firms
- 2026 gastroenterology fellowship match: A breakdown
- Maryland eye practice acquired
- South Carolina system centralizes OB delivery services
- CDRH Guidance: Patient Preference Information (PPI) in Medical Device Decision Making
- CDRH Guidance: Patient Preference Information (PPI) in Medical Device Decision Making
- Unlocking Hidden Margin: How Health Systems Are Thinking About AI, Automation, and Revenue Risk
- BSCI’s LAAC CHAMPION-AF study for WATCHMAN FLX meets primary and secondary safety and efficacy endpoints
- BSCI’s LAAC CHAMPION-AF study for WATCHMAN FLX meets primary and secondary safety and efficacy endpoints
- Apple Store to ID Regulated Medical Device Apps
- Apple Store to ID Regulated Medical Device Apps
- 16 dentists making headlines
- California autism center to close 2 locations, lay off 62
- 70+ DSO affiliations in Q1: State-by-state breakdown
- Oceans Healthcare taps VP of corporate development
- PCDM acquires Ohio periodontics practice
- Pennsylvania expands law enforcement, SUD treatment collab
- Washington physician sentenced for selling recalled medical devices to patients as new
- How Orlando Health is reshaping bariatric care
- CMS: This year's open enrollment brought fewer signups, higher premiums
- White House denies plans for 20% NIH funding cut
- Medical Schools No Longer Required To Teach Health Inequities
- Connecticut behavioral health provider names president
- 10 providers seeking RCM talent
- Lilly presses for UK deal that would see higher drug prices in exchange for resumed investments: FT
- Closed Illinois hospital may receive lifeline
- United plots Tyvaso FDA filing after ph. 3 win elicits talk of 'new IPF standard' and blockbuster sales
- RCM firm names Quorum Health veteran VP of revenue cycle operations
- 7 health systems with boosted outlooks
- Fluoride Quietly Removed From Birmingham Water Years Ago, Officials Face Backlash
- FDA Weighs Expanding What Can Go Into Supplements
- 9 Now Sickened in Outbreak Tied To Raw Milk and Cheese
- BMS, Novartis, Gilead, Iovance dinged over biologics promos in rare spate of CBER untitled letters
- Nearly half of US hospital markets entirely controlled by 1 or 2 health systems: KFF
- Idorsia eyes pediatric insomnia use with midstage trial win for sleep med Quviviq
- Electronic Paperwork Increasing Burnout Risk Among Young Doctors
- Kratom Cases Surging In U.S.
- What Makes Play Fun For Children? Seven Factors Stand Out, Study Says
- Night Shifts Are Tough On People With Type 2 Diabetes, Study Says
- Women's Bone Loss Tied To Heart Health, Study Finds
- Want To Lose Weight? Eat A Boring, Repetitive Diet, Researchers Suggest
- Samsung Biologics union gathers votes to strike as tension over wage, governance mounts
- Takeda begins US layoffs as part of massive $1.3B restructuring
- Biogen looks to shake up SMA status quo with FDA nod for high-dose version of Spinraza
- She Owed Her Insurer a Nickel, So It Canceled Her Coverage
- Inside the High-Stakes Corporate Fight Over Feeding Preterm Babies
- Study Links High Antioxidant Intake To Changes in Offspring Development
- The Healthcare Burnout Backlash (pt 1): Burnout Reaches Well Beyond Clinicians
- The Healthcare Burnout Backlash (pt 1): Burnout Reaches Well Beyond Clinicians
- Even Mild Oxygen Loss in Preemies' First Hours Poses Lifelong Brain Risks: Study
- Oklahoma officials warn of new opioid
- Michigan finalizes Medicaid mental health assessment policy changes
- How the Trump Administration Uses Migrant Kids To Find and Detain Family Members
- Oral GLP-1s, COVID preventatives: 3 more drugs in the pipeline, Optum says payers should watch
- Providence trims 2025 operating loss to $132M, notches second consecutive quarter of gains
- Missouri system debuts mobile behavioral health unit
- $3M Verdict Links Social Media to Anxiety and Depression
- The White House Delays CDC Pick
- New COVID 'Cicada' Variant Is Spreading — What Experts Want You To Know
- Advocate Health to launch ‘nation’s largest’ hospital drone delivery program in Zipline partnership
- Op-ed: Empathy meets efficiency—how the responsible use of AI can transform Medicare
- Family Caregivers Provide $1 Trillion In Annual Labor, AARP Says
- ‘Health Doesn’t Need to Be Ludacris’: Bayer signs rapper-actor to multivitamin campaign
- Rocket plots measured trajectory for new gene therapy Kresladi after clearance to launch from FDA
- Healthy Lab Results May Mask Future Risks for Kids with Obesity
- At-Home Chemotherapy Is Safe, Feasible, Pilot Study Indicates
- What You Do While Sitting Could Predict Dementia Risk
- New Cholesterol Guidelines: What Patients and Caregivers Need to Know
- Want A Bootlicking Yes Man? Ask An AI Chatbot For Advice, Study Warns
- Specially Coated Implants Better For Breast Cancer Patients, Study Finds
- Give and Take: Federal Rural Health Funding Could Trigger Service Cuts
- Trump Team Claims Successes Against ACA Fraud While Pushing for More Controls
- Fierce Pharma Asia—Takeda’s $1.3B reorg; India’s GLP-1 floodgates; Gilead’s $2.2B buy of a China NewCo
- Where are you with EUDAMED?
- Where are you with EUDAMED?
- HL7 Launches Real‑Time Medical Device Interoperability Accelerator
- HL7 Launches Real‑Time Medical Device Interoperability Accelerator
- Two GA Tech ATDC Startups — Nephrodite and OrthoPreserve — Secure FDA Breakthrough Device Designation
- Two GA Tech ATDC Startups — Nephrodite and OrthoPreserve — Secure FDA Breakthrough Device Designation
- Artificial Intelligence: ROI, not Clinical Autonomy, Leads Operational Workflows
- Artificial Intelligence: ROI, not Clinical Autonomy, Leads Operational Workflows
- Medtronic and Merit Medical Systems distribution agreement for new, ViaVerte basivertebral nerve ablation system
- Medtronic and Merit Medical Systems distribution agreement for new, ViaVerte basivertebral nerve ablation system
- Breakthrough Device Designation for Noah Labs Vox Heart Failure Detection Device
- Breakthrough Device Designation for Noah Labs Vox Heart Failure Detection Device
- What the Health? From KFF Health News: A Headless CDC
- Recordati confirms it's weighing CVC Capital buyout offer of $12.6B
- Nonprofit celebrates rescue, recapitalization of Prospect Medical Holdings' Rhode Island hospitals
- UnitedHealth shareholder sues over proposal to include details on integration in annual proxy
- SCAN taps biopharma, CMS vet Aman Bhandari as its first chief AI officer
- Infosys to acquire Optimum Healthcare IT in $465M deal
- Healthcare systems can create AI care pathways with new Viz.ai tool
- DOJ alleges NewYork-Presbyterian forces payers into anticompetitive 'all-or-nothing' contracts
- FDA Warns Biotech Firm Over Cancer Drug Anktiva Claims
- Bees and Hummingbirds May Be Consuming Small Amounts of Alcohol
- Two States Sue Cord Blood Company Over Misleading Claims
- New WHO Guidance Aims To Speed Tuberculosis Testing
- As questions swirl around ATTR competition, Alnylam plots path to market leadership for Amvuttra
- Trump admin delays nomination for new CDC director past deadline
- Outspoken ACIP member steps down amid vaccine panel uncertainty: reports
- Egg-based drugmaker Neion Bio emerges from stealth to cook up multi-product biosimilar collab
- Genentech walks the walk in lupus as sponsor of annual awareness and fundraising event
- Study Reveals How Many Americans Consider Using a Gun
- Massive Study Finds Stress and Grief Don’t Cause Cancer
- Ultra-Processed Foods Harm Fertility In Both Men And Women, Studies Reveal
- Small Daily Habits Can Add Up To Better Heart Health
- Ritalin Might Protect ADHD Kids' Long-Term Mental Health, Study Finds
- Can You Drink Enough Fluids To Prevent Kidney Stones? Maybe Not, New Study Says
- Clasp, loan-linked hiring tool for employers, clinches $20M to expand amid federal loan caps
- Taking a GLP-1? Doctors Say Not To Forget About Movement and Mental Health
- OpenEvidence rolls out AI medical coding feature
- CDC’s Acting Chief Promises a Return to Stability in a Tumultuous Moment
- Remarks at the Financial Stability Oversight Council Meeting
- RWJF: Between 5M and 10M people could lose Medicaid coverage in 2028 under work requirements
- New therapy animal program aims to support 100K patients, providers
- Pulse check on Lilly's GLP-1 fortunes
- Gen Z nurses prioritize schedule flexibility, need more manager interactions to avoid turnover
- How pharma marketers can capitalize on HCPs’ AI, social media and streaming habits
- Federal Officials Investigate States That Require Abortion Coverage
- Corcept's lead drug bounces back from FDA snub with different approval as Lifyorli in ovarian cancer
- Ionis slashes Tryngolza's price tag by 93% ahead of anticipated label expansion
- FDA approves Denali's Hunter syndrome drug, handing rare disease community a win
Every so often, someone pushes back against industry's self-serving narrative. When they do, it's a beautiful thing.
In 1993, when I began medical school at Wake Forest University, one of my first courses was embryology, a course in which all medical students learn in painstaking detail the developmental stages of human life, beginning at fertilization.At no time during this class, did the professor ever say, “and at this point, life begins” and never did any student raise the question. To do so would have indicated a level of seriousness insufficient to complete one’s studies. It is clear that after fertilization and prior to death, no life changing event occurs, either just before or just after any other specific point in human development. No one knows better than the physician how human life begins at fertilization and that which resides in the womb is completely human.
Rather than acknowledge the humanity initiated at fertilization, many physicians have adopted a fantasy version of medical science in which, using brute condescension, they claim the unique power to ascertain when life begins, while never actually having the courage to state when that is. For many years, this version of medical science has been spread across the internet, using names of doctors and their impressive sounding organizations, along with complex medical language, all designed to shield these ideas from criticism.
Serving as the volunteer medical director of two South Carolina Crisis Pregnancy Centers, one in the Myrtle Beach and a second in Charleston, I have become intimately familiar with the extremes to which my colleagues will go to deny what they learned in their first days of medical school, all in order to profit from the tragedy a woman endures with a crisis pregnancy.
Money is the root of all evil, and the medical community is using it in tremendous amounts to prevent passage of our state’s heartbeat bill (S474, the Fetal Heartbeat and Protection from Abortion Act) and similar legislation across the country.
Last June, the Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease published, “When does the Human Embryonic Heart Start Beating?” in which a physician and embryology researcher describes in great detail the supporting data that has allowed the dating of embryonic cardiac activity. He concludes, “the first heartbeats of an individual human embryo may be expected to appear during a time span that starts at 20 days after fertilization and ends at 35 days after fertilization.” At Gottingen University in Germany, medical professor Joerg Maenner, M.D. explains “heartbeat” as “the regular movement that the heart makes as it sends blood around your body.” It is interesting to note that his chosen definition comes from the Cambridge Advanced Learner’s Dictionary, highlighting medical science’s general agreement with the near universal common understanding of heartbeat. Electrical activity which triggers the contractions needed to pump the blood, begins within myocytes, the heart’s muscle cells.
In an effort to defeat numerous state sponsored heartbeat bills, many likeminded individuals in the media are now working closely with large physician groups to make the relatively new claim that the 4-week-old fetus (6th week of pregnancy) does not really have a heart or heartbeat. As just the latest front in the methodical battle to dehumanize the fetus, the media is overloaded with supposed news pieces, which promote this claim.
Found under, “Heartbeat bills: is there a fetal heartbeat at six weeks of pregnancy?” NBC showcases a particularly misinformative opinion piece, beginning with a quote from a pediatric and fetal cardiologist, “While the heart does begin to develop around six weeks, the heart as we know it does not yet exist.” As the heart doesn’t fully develop until after birth with closure of the foramen ovale (a physiologic hole in the fetal heart), the physician’s point appears to be rationalization of abortion even into the first month after delivery. Following this form of unique medical logic, one would say that a human’s skeletal system, which is not fully developed until the mid-teens, is not composed of bones until the growth plate composed of cartilage changes into solid bone.
If there is ever a fetal bone bill, NBC will find a pediatric and fetal orthopedist they will quote, “While the bones begin development around 3 weeks, the bones as we know them do not yet exist.” Although, insultingly illogical, this declaration goes unchallenged.
“The correct medical term for what’s observed at this point (6 weeks of pregnancy) is cardiac activity. It’s not until about 10 weeks that there is an actual structure that has 4 tubes and connects to the lungs and major vascular system like we would think of as a heart.” This comment is presented as that of a professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology. How cardiac activity can exist without a heart, I do not know.
I do know that at this age, the fetus is propelling blood through her arterial system to supply the oxygenated blood, which the child needs to survive. Most doctors I know (we) think of the heart as the only organ that performs this task.
After informing the reader that a medically unnamed organ is pumping blood through the fetus at 6 weeks, the article generously redefines heartbeat for those readers of average intelligence. According to the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG), a heartbeat can now only occur after chambers of the heart have more formally developed. Moreover, what is heard on the 6-week fetal ultrasound is no longer a heartbeat. With out any references to the development of this new definition, one is left to logically conclude that “heartbeat” has recently been redefined in response to the numerous state heartbeat bills.
Under “clinical explanation” ACOG states further, “What pregnant people may hear is the ultrasound machine translating electronic pulses that signify fetal cardiac activity into the sound that we recognize as a heartbeat.” After explaining how unsophisticated pregnant people may be, ACOG tremendously oversimplifies the function of an ultrasound machine, suggesting if the fetus had an actual heartbeat, the ultrasound would generate the same sound one hears in the stethoscope, a capability ultrasound technology does not have. ACOG does not find it helpful to let the reader know that the sound the ultrasound generates for adult heartbeats is “translated” in exactly the same manner. An analogy of their verbiage would be to state that if an x-ray fails to detect a piece of glass under the skin in a traumatic wound, the glass does not exist, even though the x-ray doesn’t have the capability to detect glass.
“If you are invested in the pregnancy, you may want to anthropomorphize that pregnancy as soon as possible, and that’s a heartbeat for people,” states the professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology in the final lines of the opinion piece. After reviewing Webster’s definition of anthropomorphize, “to attribute human form or personality to things not human”, I just sat at my computer for a while, reminiscing about our five joyful pregnancies and contemplating the deep sense of loss my patients have experienced with pregnancy loss. In the real world of medicine, many physicians assume god like power, callously devaluing innocent human lives, especially those carried by mothers in crisis pregnancies, turning their back on the doctor patient relationship they are obligated to establish with both mother and child. All this is done in an effort to justify barbaric procedures, which allow the physician to profit handsomely from the tragedy many of these women experience. In a moral world seeking truth, abortion as we know it would never exist. But money is much more attractive than medical ethics, which brings us to this pathetic point at which it becomes incumbent upon legislative bodies to force physicians to do what they already are ethically obligated to do.
Truth is frequently the enemy of power and wealth. Pro-abortion physicians will never address the humanity of the unborn child, talk about the regret many women have after abortion, admit that aborted girls have no women’s rights or acknowledge that a disproportionate number of aborted children are African American. Rather they will collect a large paycheck and lead us to believe only they know when life actually begins and that all innocent human life does not have equal value.
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2023/05/what_it_means_to_have_a_heart.html
Peter Michael Bleyer is a Family Practice Physician, and retired Naval officer, who has been working strictly in wound care for 8 years. He left his previous job as the Medical Director of a large wound care center in Conway South Carolina to work full time for Mywounddoctor. He has been married for 25 years and has five children.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.















