Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Despite Amendment, Missouri Attorney General Will Enforce Abortion Limits
Missouri's Republican attorney general has pledged to enforce some laws restricting abortion despite a new constitutional amendment widely expected to undo the state's near-total ban on the procedure. In an opinion requested by incoming GOP governor Mike Kehoe, Attorney General Andrew Bailey wrote that his office will continue enforcing a ban on abortion after fetal viability. There is an exception carved out in the amendment for cases in which a health care provider deems an abortion necessary to 鈥減rotect the life or physical or mental health of the pregnant person.鈥 (Ballentine, 11/30)
Dr. Betsy Wickstrom understands where some of the voices opposed to abortion are coming from.聽She used to be one of them.聽The Kansas City OB-GYN specializing in high-risk pregnancies is a Republican and a Christian, but her more than three decades in maternal-fetal medicine have moved her away from the 鈥減ro-life鈥 movement and into abortion advocacy.聽The past two-and-a-half years practicing under an abortion ban in Missouri have strengthened her resolve. (Spoerre, 12/2)
More abortion updates 鈥
Arizonans overwhelmingly voted to make abortion a fundamental right, but overturning the state鈥檚 current 15-week gestational ban 鈥 and multiple other anti-abortion laws still on the books 鈥 isn鈥檛 automatic. Just an hour after she joined Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs, Democratic Secretary of State Adrian Fontes and Republican Arizona Supreme Court Chief Justice Ann Timmer on Monday to certify the results of the 2024 general election, Democratic Attorney General Kris Mayes said that officially nullifying the 15-week ban will need to take place in the courts. (Gomez, 11/28)
The morning-after pill is legal across the U.S., even in the states with the strictest abortion bans 鈥 but many Americans don鈥檛 know that, in part due to a mistaken belief that the pill is abortion medication.聽聽Nearly a third of American adults are unsure if emergency contraception like the morning-after pill is legal in their state and 5 percent think it is illegal there, according to a 2023 survey from health policy nonprofit 麻豆女优.聽聽(O'Connell-Domenech, 12/1)
Anti-abortion activists are elated about Donald Trump鈥檚 return to power despite annoyances with the president-elect's lack of appetite for national restrictions. Now, they are cautiously optimistic, looking ahead to what his administration might do for their movement.聽鈥淧resident Trump has said, loudly, that he doesn't believe abortion is a federal issue 鈥 something I deeply disagree with him on,鈥 said Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life of America. 鈥淗owever, we can work with him.鈥澛犅 (Kuchar, 11/29)
In other reproductive health news 鈥
Up to 90% of people who menstruate experience pain during their periods. For some, that pain is severe and linked with symptoms of depression, which are often thought to be a result of the intense throbbing or cramps. But a new study published Wednesday in the journal Briefings in Bioinformatics suggests it may be depression causing period pain, due to specific genes the authors identified 鈥 while other researchers said the interplay of internal mechanisms is more complicated than that. (Rogers, 11/29)