pm eastern. and because we know a big important hearing in the middle of a school day and work day is not the most convenient thing for everyone, we here at msnbc will have a prime recap of tomorrow s hearing, but tomorrow starting at 8 pm eastern. i ll be hosting that along with my dear friend chris hayes and others the whole team. that is 1 pm when the live hearing starts. 8 pm is when we will start our prime time recap. i can tell you one thing in advance of tomorrow s hearing. i can tell you for sure that the tattoo portion quotient among the witnesses is about to go way up. i don t want to speculate about any of these folks might have lurking under their collars. it is totally possible of course that rusty bowers has an amazing torso full of tattoos, who knows? perhaps judge michael luttig has similar jerry stifle sleeve tattoos lurking under his very sober suit. but in terms of visible tattoos, visible even in business where, and terms of fast tattoos, neck taxes, had t
be the closest place for many american women in the deep south and south texas you need access to abortion care. joining us now is the doctor meg autry, obgyn at ucsf. i really appreciate you making time for us tonight. thank you so much for having me. now by explaining the basics of this have, i ve done this is there any important new outside missing to convey to my audience? no i, think you pretty much have gotten it. one of the really important things to remember is that wealthy individuals in our country will be able to get the care that they want and how they want it, whenever and however they want to, and this is serving a portion of our population that in these restricted states are virtually unable to access those resources. how daunting are the logistics of what you are proposing? obviously there is the matter of acquiring a boat, getting it
know, capes and superpowers. in order to develop cures for rare diseases, what you need is the ability to work with patients who have those rare diseases. and by definition of the word rare, there are not all that many of those patients, so doctors, for example, at the uc san francisco children s hospital in northern california, doctors who are looking to test a potential treatment for a devastating rare disease called mps-6 where kids are born without an enzyme they need to live, doctors wanting to develop a treatment for that rare disease, well, they found a little 7-year-old girl named isabelle. isabelle bueso who lived in another country. she had that rare disease. at ucsf, they reluctanted her and her family. they re asked her family to please come to this country so she could be part of a clinical trial that was testing an experimental treatment for her rare disease. they need patients to be able to