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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Nov 13 2024

Full Issue

Abortion Opponents Intend To Whittle State Protections Backed By Voters

One of their key goals is to either ban or restrict access to mifepristone, which is used in more than two-thirds of abortions nationwide. Meanwhile, women in Idaho are suing to get clarity on when a pregnancy complication is dangerous enough to warrant medical intervention.

Anti-abortion groups on Tuesday unveiled their 鈥淢ake America Pro-Life Again Roadmap,鈥 an effort to chip away at federal and state access, including in nearly a dozen states that enshrined protections through ballot measures over the last two years. Drawing on the playbook they successfully used under Roe v. Wade to regulate clinics out of existence and outlaw particular methods of abortion, conservative groups plan next year to file lawsuits targeting federal regulation of abortion pills and push legislation in Congress and in at least 15 states they believe can circumvent constitutional amendments and court rulings protecting the procedure. (Ollstein, 11/12)

The effort will kick off in earnest next year. The group believes their strategy of lawsuits and legislation will be able to successfully circumvent the states that have enshrined abortion protections in their constitutions. Many of the bills target mifepristone 鈥 one of the drugs commonly used in medication abortions. Some seek an outright ban, while others seek to replicate Louisiana鈥檚 legislation that classifies the drug as a controlled substance. Others aim to restrict access by claiming the drugs pose environmental risks. At least one piece of legislation argues that the chemicals in abortion pills pose a public health threat once they are passed through a person and then flushed into wastewater. (Weixel and O'Connell-Domenech, 11/12)

Abortion updates from Idaho, Kentucky, and Maryland 鈥

Four women suing over Idaho鈥檚 strict abortion bans told a judge Tuesday how excitement over their pregnancies turned to grief and fear after they learned their fetuses were not likely to survive to birth 鈥 and how they had to leave the state to get abortions amid fears that pregnancy complications would put their own health in danger. 鈥淲e felt like we were being made refugees, medical refugees,鈥 said Jennifer Adkins, one of the plaintiffs in the case. (Boone, 11/12)

A pregnant woman filed a lawsuit Tuesday seeking to restore the right to an abortion in Kentucky in the latest challenge to the state鈥檚 near-total ban on the procedure. The suit, filed in state court in Louisville, claims that Kentucky laws blocking abortions violate the plaintiff鈥檚 constitutional rights to privacy and self-determination. It asks that both state laws be struck down by a judge in Jefferson County Circuit Court. The woman, a state resident identified by the pseudonym Mary Poe to protect her privacy, is about seven weeks pregnant, the suit said. She wants to terminate her pregnancy but cannot legally do so in Kentucky, it said. (Schreiner, 11/12)

麻豆女优 Health News: Maryland Is Training More Health Workers To Offer Abortion Care聽

In the two counties around nurse practitioner Samantha Marsee鈥檚 clinic in rural northeastern Maryland, there鈥檚 not a single clinic that provides abortions. And until recently, Marsee herself wasn鈥檛 trained to treat patients who wanted to end a pregnancy. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 really have a lot of knowledge about abortion care,鈥 she said. After Roe v. Wade was overturned, she watched state after state ban abortion, and Marsee decided to take part in the first class of a new training program offered by the University of Maryland School of Medicine and the University of Maryland-Baltimore. (Varney, 11/13)

Also 鈥

Pregnant women or those who've given birth in the past year are likelier to be murdered than die from medical causes like preeclampsia or hemorrhaging, a new study in JAMA Network Open concludes. (Bettelheim, 11/13)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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