So what though? I don't know exactly the reasoning for standing requirements, but they clearly weren't intended to prevent suits over things that affect millions of people in exactly the same way. I mean, standing would prevent man from suing to overturn a ban on women voting, but that's clearly a bug, not a feature.
My point is that you can find evidence for any outcome. The Supreme Court has a stance they like and backpedal to make the argument for it leading to inconsistent rulings.
There are a myraid of ways that roe vs wade could've turned out and in the final ruling document they'd all fit the correct format.
> [2] McCorvey gave birth to a daughter at Dallas Osteopathic Hospital on June 2, 1970
At that point she lost standing similar to another Jane Doe whose case became moot because she already had the abortion [1] and the desired action (injunction against an abortion) is irrelevant because it's already happened.
There's no harm from denying somebody an abortion when they're not pregnant.