Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Six-Week 'Fetal Heartbeat' Abortion Law Will Stand In South Carolina
South Carolina鈥檚 Supreme Court upheld the state鈥檚 鈥榝etal heartbeat鈥 law in a Wednesday ruling. 聽Justices ruled the state can continue to ban abortion starting at six weeks of gestation, when the current law states a 鈥榝etal heartbeat鈥 can begin to be detected. Abortions in the state have been banned as soon as a health care provider can detect 鈥渃ardiac activity, or the steady and repetitive rhythmic contraction of the fetal heart, within the gestational sac,鈥 under a 2023 law called the Fetal Heartbeat Protection from Abortion Act. (O鈥機onnell-Domenech, 5/14)
Missouri voters will decide whether to reimpose an abortion ban next year, after a landmark statewide vote last year that enshrined the right to the procedure in the state constitution and overturned a previous ban. The Republican-controlled Senate on Wednesday approved a proposed constitutional amendment that, if approved by voters, would overturn a November vote that legalized abortion access. (Bayless and Shorman, 5/14)
Citing parental rights, a Florida appeals court Wednesday ruled that a law that can allow minors to have abortions without their parents鈥 consent is unconstitutional. (Saunders, 5/14)
Arguments surrounding first-of-its-kind legislation that categorizes two widely used abortion -inducing drugs as 鈥渃ontrolled dangerous substances鈥 in Louisiana are scheduled to take place before a state judge Thursday morning. In a lawsuit against the state, plaintiffs say the reclassification of misoprostol and mifepristone 鈥 which have critical reproductive health care uses in addition to being used as a two-drug regimen to end pregnancies 鈥 could cause needless and potentially life-threatening delays in treatment during medical emergencies. (Cline, 5/15)
A Houston-area midwife accused of performing illegal abortions has laid out the case for her innocence for the first time, alleging in an appeal filed Monday that the Texas Attorney General鈥檚 office was so desperate to prosecute an abortion case that it 鈥渃onducted a shoddy investigation and leapt to wild conclusions.鈥 (Klibanoff, 5/14)
Also 鈥
An emboldened fringe movement is breaking with the antiabortion establishment by pushing for women who get abortions to face criminal charges, a departure from decades of 鈥減ro-life鈥 tradition. The 鈥渁bortion abolitionist鈥 movement wants to see the procedure eradicated and supports changing the law to grant personhood to embryos, making their destruction an act of homicide that would be punishable by death in some states. (Bellware, 5/14)
Cara Stanton didn鈥檛 get her period until she was 22. For years, doctors 鈥 including her pediatrician 鈥 recommended taking hormonal birth control to kickstart it. But Stanton was hesitant.聽鈥淚f something doesn鈥檛 make sense to me, I question it,鈥 said Stanton, now a 32-year-old nurse practitioner based in Michigan. 鈥淚t was just one of those things where I thought, 鈥業 don鈥檛 know that my ovaries are broken, so quit trying to put a bandaid on them.鈥櫬(Gerson and Padilla, 5/14)
Yesterday the US Preventive Services Task Force released a final recommendation statement on screening for syphilis infection during pregnancy, giving screening the grade of聽 "A" and suggesting early, universal screening for syphilis infection during pregnancy for all women.聽The task force has been issuing recommendations on maternal syphilis screening since 1996, most recently in 2018. (Soucheray, 5/14)