Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Mifepristone Starts To Become Available At Some Pharmacies
A handful of independent pharmacies across the country have quietly begun dispensing the abortion pill mifepristone under new rules created by the Biden administration earlier this year, even as a looming Supreme Court case could reimpose restrictions or ban the drugs entirely. Thousands of branches of major pharmacy chains are poised to join them 鈥 making the drugs more accessible to millions of people nationwide and kicking off a new phase of the legal and political battle over the most popular method of ending a pregnancy. (Ollstein and Gardner, 10/6)
In abortion news from Florida 鈥
Attorney General Ashley Moody will try to block a proposed constitutional amendment that seeks to ensure abortion rights in Florida, according to a filing Monday at the state Supreme Court. Moody took a required step of asking the Supreme Court to review the wording of the proposed amendment, which supporters hope to put on the November 2024 ballot. As part of that filing, Moody wrote, 鈥淚 submit that the aforementioned initiative does not satisfy the legal requirements for ballot placement.鈥 The Supreme Court plays a key gatekeeper role, as it reviews proposed ballot initiatives to determine if the wording is clear and is limited to single subjects. It can reject initiatives that don鈥檛 meet legal standards. (Saunders and News Service of Florida, 10/9)
Supporters of a proposed constitutional amendment aimed at ensuring abortion rights have topped 400,000 valid petition signatures submitted to the state. The Florida Division of Elections website on Thursday showed 402,082 valid signatures for the proposal, which the political committee Floridians Protecting Freedom is trying to put on the November 2024 ballot. The total reflects signatures that have been validated, not necessarily the overall number of signatures collected. (10/9)
More abortion news from across the U.S. 鈥
California Attorney General Rob Bonta filed a lawsuit on Sept. 21 against a chain of California crisis pregnancy centers and its national parent organization for false advertising of 鈥渁bortion pill reversal鈥 (APR)鈥攁n unproven and possibly dangerous high-dose progesterone intervention the anti-abortion movement claims can 鈥渞everse鈥 an underway medication abortion. This is the first lawsuit in the country challenging the CPC industry鈥檚 promotion of APR. (McKenna and Baker, 10/9)
Michigan Democrats want to pass new bills to remove abortion obstacles like a 24-hour waiting period, and a ban on Medicaid reimbursement. But one Democrat doesn't agree 鈥 and they need her vote. (Wells, 10/10)
More than a year after the U.S. Supreme Court decided states could set their own abortion laws, including bans, the nation鈥檚 highest court now could cut off abortion access in states where abortion is still legal. The Supreme Court began its new term this week and has yet to announce whether it will hear Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration, before the term ends in June 2024. This case was designed by the religious right to overturn the approval of the commonly used abortion drug mifepristone. But whatever the court does 鈥 even if it declines to hear the case 鈥 will further alter healthcare access in the U.S., reproductive health advocates said on a call to reporters Thursday. (Resnick, 10/8)
A crucial new phase in the political struggle over abortion rights is unfolding in suburban neighborhoods across Virginia. An array of closely divided suburban and exurban districts around the state will decide which party controls the Virginia state legislature after next month鈥檚 election, and whether Republicans here succeed in an ambitious attempt to reframe the politics of abortion rights that could reverberate across the nation. (Brownstein, 10/8)
There are six times as many white women as Black women in Ohio. Yet last year, Black women had more abortions. The wild disparity and other data in the most recent state abortion report suggest that economics plays a huge role in women鈥檚 decisions about whether to abort a pregnancy. The economic impacts of pregnancy and abortion might be considerations for Ohioans as they go to the polls on Nov. 7 to vote on Issue 1, an amendment that would enshrine reproductive rights in the state Constitution. (Schladen, 10/9)
Missouri is turning to voters after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned 'Roe v. Wade.' Abortion rights advocates are trying to repeal the ban in 2024 鈥 and that includes a new Republican-led nonprofit. (Rosenbaum, 10/9)
In other news about maternal health 鈥
The topic of babies came up when Kesha Baptiste-Roberts was chatting recently with a young woman working the counter at a makeup store in the mall. The worker, a Black woman, told Baptiste-Roberts she didn鈥檛 want to get pregnant. Not because it wasn鈥檛 the right time for her, or because she didn鈥檛 want kids. Because she didn鈥檛 want to die. (Roberts, 10/9)