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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Oct 18 2023

Full Issue

Abortion Politics Add More Obstacles To Defense Authorization Bill Path

Members of the House Democratic Women鈥檚 Caucus wrote to House and Senate Armed Services committee leaders, warning that they will not support the fiscal 2024 National Defense Authorization Act if added provisions limiting abortion are included. Other abortion news comes from Colorado, Michigan, Texas, and elsewhere.

Members of the House Democratic Women鈥檚 Caucus warned defense committee leaders Tuesday that including provisions that limit abortion access in the fiscal 2024 defense authorization bill would make it impossible for them to support the bill鈥檚 final passage. (Coudriet, 10/17)

After hundreds of pages of court filings and more than two hours of legal argument Tuesday, U.S. District Court Judge Daniel D. Domenico arrived at the simplest possible way to tame the sprawling debate around Colorado鈥檚 new law banning so-called medication abortion 鈥渞eversal鈥 treatment and to decide whether the first-of-its-kind law should stand 鈥 at least for now. The case, he said, wouldn鈥檛 be decided by whose science is most correct. It鈥檚 about whose standard is. (Ingold, 10/18)

Democrats' efforts to expand abortion access in Michigan may still be in peril, even after lawmakers dropped a piece of the legislation that was getting pushback within their own party. The Reproductive Health Act would remove many of the restrictions still on the books in Michigan, including a mandatory waiting period and online consent form that has to be signed and printed 24-hours before a patient鈥檚 appointment. It also would make it easier for people to pay for abortion care, by allowing private insurers and Medicaid to cover abortions. But on Tuesday, lawmakers cut the Medicaid provision, in order to appease holdouts within the Democratic party. (Wells, 10/17)

The city of San Antonio is facing a lawsuit after budgeting $500,000 to support reproductive health services, including, potentially, transportation and lodging for people seeking abortions outside Texas. A group of anti-abortion organizations filed the lawsuit Tuesday in Bexar County, asking a state district judge to prohibit taxpayer dollars from going to organizations that help Texans travel out of the state for abortion. (Klibanoff, 10/17)

Donald Trump 鈥 who has fretted privately that Republicans are 鈥済etting killed鈥 electorally on abortion 鈥 is now running ads touting his pro-life record in Iowa, the first state to vote in the GOP primary. In the ads, paid for by Trump鈥檚 campaign and first reported by Kyle Tharp in his newsletter FWIW, Trump declares himself 鈥淭HE MOST Pro-Life President in history.鈥 (Stuart and McCann Ramirez, 10/16)

In other reproductive health news 鈥

Dr. Colleen McNicholas, the chief medical officer for the St. Louis region鈥檚 Planned Parenthood, is among three finalists selected from across the world for the European Union鈥檚 top human rights prize. McNicholas, Justyna Wydrzy艅ska, of Poland, and Morena Herrera, of El Salvador, were jointly nominated as 鈥渨omen fighting for free, safe and legal abortion.鈥 (Munz, 10/17)

Ashley Caswell screamed in pain from inside an Alabama jail, pleading to be taken to a hospital, according to a newly filed lawsuit. The pregnant detainee鈥檚 water had broken and she was bleeding, but Caswell was allegedly told to 鈥渄eal with the pain.鈥 After being in labor for 12 hours, Caswell gave birth to her son in a jail shower on Oct. 16, 2021, her attorneys say. Then, staffers took photos with the baby while Caswell was passed out on the floor, according to a federal civil rights lawsuit filed Friday on behalf of Caswell by the advocacy groups Pregnancy Justice and the Southern Poverty Law Center, as well as the New York City law firm Sullivan & Cromwell. (Paul, 10/17)

麻豆女优 Health News: Pregnant And Addicted: Homeless Women See Hope In Street Medicine聽

Five days after giving birth, Melissa Crespo was already back on the streets, recovering in a damp, litter-strewn water tunnel, when she got the call from the hospital. Her baby, Kyle, who had been born three months prematurely, was in respiratory failure in the neonatal intensive care unit and fighting for his life. The odds had been against Kyle long before he was born last summer. Crespo, who was abused as a child, was addicted to fentanyl and meth 鈥 a daily habit she found impossible to kick while living homeless. Crespo got a ride to the hospital and cradled her baby in her arms as he died. (Hart, 10/18)

Pregnant soldiers based in the U.S. may have easier access to maternity uniforms after a recent expansion of a program offering to lend out the garments for free, according to the Army. The Maternity Uniform Pilot Program now allows soldiers to coordinate directly with program representatives to obtain the free uniforms and other Army maternity attire such as nursing T-shirts, instead of relying only on maternity-wear availability at base exchange stores, the service said in a recent update. Garments are then returned after use. (Baker, 10/17)

麻豆女优 Health News: Listen To The Latest '麻豆女优 Health News Minute'聽

This week on the 麻豆女优 Health News Minute: Some physicians worry we鈥檙e about to see rising numbers of teen pregnancies after decades of progress, and some addiction experts say states are wasting opioid settlement money on ineffective drug prevention programs for young people. (10/17)

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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