Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Women Denied Care In Oklahoma, Tennessee, Idaho Sue Over Abortion Bans
Eight women in Idaho and Tennessee are asking state courts to place holds on their states鈥 abortion laws after being denied access to the procedure while facing harrowing pregnancy complications that they say endangered their lives. Four physicians have also joined the lawsuits, saying the state laws have wrongly forced medical experts to weigh the health of a patient against the threat of legal liability. A woman in Oklahoma who said she had a dangerous and nonviable pregnancy filed a federal lawsuit on Tuesday asserting that she was denied an abortion despite a U.S. law that requires doctors to perform the procedure when it鈥檚 medically necessary. (Kruesi, 9/12)
Early in her pregnancy, Jaci Statton was in her kitchen when she felt like she was going to pass out and saw that her jeans had become soaked with blood. Doctors told her the pregnancy was not viable and that it could threaten her life if an abortion was not performed soon, she said. But Ms. Statton lives in Oklahoma, a state that bans most abortions. Three hospitals declined to provide the procedure, she said. At the third, 鈥渢hey said, 鈥榃e can鈥檛 touch you unless you鈥檙e like crashing in front of us,鈥欌 Ms. Statton, 26, said in an interview. The hospital鈥檚 only suggestion, she said, was 鈥渨e should wait in the parking lot until I was about to die.鈥 (Belluck, 9/12)
From North Carolina, Kansas, and elsewhere 鈥
North Carolina remained the South's destination for abortions in the first six months of this year, as state lawmakers debated how far to go in restricting the procedure. Patients are proving highly motivated to travel to get the care in the face of state bans, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research organization that supports abortion rights. (Sherman, 9/12)
A Republican lawmaker鈥檚 misleading narratives before a Kansas House hearing this spring supported a state law prohibiting physicians from euthanizing infants who survive abortions 鈥 despite medical experts鈥 assertion that the scenario is a non-existent scare tactic. The lawmaker, Rep. Ron Bryce, acknowledges he had little first-hand evidence for the claims he repeated on and off the House floor. He speculated that abortion providers murder infants, and his testimony appeared to be based on unreliable data. (Donnelly, 9/12)
After Dobbs, the political ground seems to be shifting in some unpredictable ways. (Bazelon, 9/12)
In other reproductive health news 鈥
Over more than a decade working with immigrant farmworkers in the public clinics of the Santa Clara River Valley, Rosemary Hernandez has seen many new moms struggle during the postpartum period. Some were separated from their families in Mexico. Others鈥 husbands or boyfriends had to head straight back to work picking fruit after the baby arrived. Some mothers had to return to work themselves while they were still recovering from childbirth, or else risk losing their jobs in the fields and fruit-packing houses. Their isolation and vulnerability compounded the challenges of caring for a newborn, and drove many of these mothers into anxiety and depression. (Rubenstein, 9/13)
Melinda French Gates says she takes personally the deaths of hundreds of thousands of women and babies during child birth each year and believes more people should get involved in the fight for improving maternal health care. French Gates, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation co-founder and co-chair told The Associated Press that when her daughter, Jennifer, gave birth to Leila 鈥 Jennifer鈥檚 first child and the Gateses鈥 first grandchild 鈥 earlier this year, she couldn鈥檛 help but think of her own experience giving birth. (Beaty, 9/12)