Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Missourians Clear First Hurdle For Putting Abortion Rights Up To A Vote
Advocates on Friday turned in more than twice the needed number of signatures to put a proposal to legalize abortion on the Missouri ballot this year. The campaign said it turned in more than 380,000 voter signatures 鈥 more than double the minimum 171,000 needed to qualify for the ballot. (Ballentine, 5/4)
Updates from Arizona and Florida 鈥
Millions of Latinx Floridians and Arizonans started off the month of May with new and looming restrictions on their reproductive health decisions. Florida, home to the third-largest Latinx population in the country, on Wednesday became the latest state to ban abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, before many people know they are pregnant. In Arizona, a key battleground state and home to the sixth-largest Latinx population in the country, a Civil War-era total abortion ban will go into effect for at least several months until a repeal approved by state lawmakers takes effect. (Barclay, 5/3)
Health care providers in North Carolina, three states to the north, are rushing to expand availability and decrease wait times. 鈥淲e are already seeing appointments,鈥 said Katherine Farris, chief medical officer of Planned Parenthood South Atlantic. 鈥淲e have appointments on the books with patients who were unable to get in, in the last days of April in Florida.鈥 (Seminera and Mulvihill, 5/4)
Florida鈥檚 six-week abortion ban officially went into effect this week. But another bill also intended to lower the number of abortions could soon quietly become law as well. An expansion of Florida鈥檚 鈥淪afe Haven鈥 policy 鈥 which decriminalizes surrendering unwanted infants, as long as they are given up to specific agencies like hospitals, fire stations and EMS services 鈥 faces just one more hurdle to becoming law. It has long been a piece of legislation in the toolbox of anti-abortion supporters who view legal infant surrenders as a way to encourage more women to carry their pregnancies to term. (Duncan, 5/4)
From Rhode Island, Texas, and Idaho 鈥
The state Senate this week passed a bill that would shield medical providers who offer transgender care and abortion services in Rhode Island from civil or criminal action by other states or their residents. On Thursday, the Senate voted 29 to 7 for legislation introduced by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairwoman Dawn Euer, a Newport Democrat. The bill now heads to the House, where Majority Floor Manager John G. 鈥淛ay鈥 Edwards, a Tiverton Democrat, has introduced a companion bill. (Fitzpatrick, 5/3)
As soon as Collin Davis found out his ex-partner was planning to travel to Colorado to have an abortion in late February, the Texas man retained a high-powered antiabortion attorney 鈥 who court records show immediately issued a legal threat. If the woman proceeded with the abortion, even in a state where the procedure remains legal, Davis would seek a full investigation into the circumstances surrounding the abortion and 鈥減ursue wrongful-death claims against anyone involved in the killing of his unborn child,鈥 the lawyer wrote in a letter, according to records. Now, Davis has disclosed his former partner鈥檚 abortion to a state district court in Texas, asking for the power to investigate what his lawyer characterizes as potentially illegal activity in a state where almost all abortions are banned. (Kitchener, 5/3)
Waiting in a long post office line with the latest shipment of 鈥渁bortion aftercare kits,鈥 Kimra Luna got a text. A woman who鈥檇 taken abortion pills three weeks earlier was worried about bleeding 鈥 and disclosing the cause to a doctor. 鈥淏leeding doesn鈥檛 mean you need to go in,鈥 Luna responded on the encrypted messaging app Signal. 鈥淪ome people bleed on and off for a month. 鈥滻t was a typically busy afternoon for Luna, a doula and reproductive care activist in a state with some of the strictest abortion laws in the nation. (Ungar, 5/4)
In news about doulas 鈥
For the past two years, medical professionals have been sounding the alarm for what they consider a 鈥渕aternal care crisis鈥 on Guam. After the closure of the island鈥檚 only standalone birth center in December 2022, Guam鈥檚 maternity support options are the single hospital and the one doula who helped Marati. Though many U.S. states are starting to reimburse doula care through Medicaid, that coverage doesn鈥檛 extend to U.S. territories like Guam. The island has also been without abortion services since the only abortion-providing doctor retired in July 2018. (Kim, 5/4)
It is 2 a.m. when Brianca Spence slips behind the wheel of her car. The drive to the nearest hospital can stretch as long as an hour, and feel like an eternity when she鈥檚 rushing to guide an expecting mother through childbirth. (Goodman, 5/3)