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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Apr 22 2025

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Wyoming Judge Clears The Way For Abortion Clinic To Resume Services

Wyoming Health Access in Casper stopped providing abortion services on Feb. 28, after Republican Gov. Mark Gordon put licensing and ultrasound requirement laws into effect. Abortions again will be provided while the cases wind through the courts.

Wyoming鈥檚 only abortion clinic is resuming abortions after a judge on Monday suspended two state laws. One suspended law would require clinics providing surgical abortions to be licensed as outpatient surgical centers. The other would require women to get an ultrasound before a medication abortion. Wyoming Health Access in Casper had stopped providing abortions Feb. 28, the day after Republican Gov. Mark Gordon signed the licensing requirement into effect. (Gruver, 4/21)

More abortion news from Virginia, Montana, Oklahoma, and Idaho 鈥

Virginia had the greatest increase in clinician-provided abortions nationwide last year, according to a new analysis. It's the latest data to show just how much the limited abortion access in the South has impacted the only Southern state without a post-Roe abortion ban or waiting period. By the numbers: The number of clinician-provided abortions in Virginia jumped from about 33,400 in 2023 to nearly 39,000 last year, per data compiled by Guttmacher, a research group that supports reproductive rights. That's the biggest spike of any state in the country. (Moreno, 4/21)

Voters in Montana won鈥檛 see a proposed constitutional amendment to confer 鈥減ersonhood鈥 rights on embryos, but a couple of other bills related to abortion are headed to the desk of Gov. Greg Gianforte. Last week, House Bill 316 sponsored by Rep. Lee Deming, R-Laurel, failed to earn the minimum 100 votes out of 150 in the Montana Legislature needed to present a constitutional amendment to voters. (Szpaller, 4/21)

A Senate panel on Monday advanced a measure to prevent the use of popular abortion-inducing drugs, including mifepristone. House Bill 1168 makes it a felony to intentionally deliver abortion-inducing drugs in the state. 鈥淲e are stopping the pill from the abortion side of this just because of the damage it does to an unborn person, primarily, but also because of the damage it does to women and mothers,鈥 said Sen. David Bullard, R-Durant, the Senate author of the measure. Abortion in Oklahoma is already illegal, except to save the life of the mother. (Hoberock, 4/21)

Desi Ballis didn鈥檛 understand why her doctor needed her to go to Utah. She lay on an exam table in Boise, her pregnant belly wet with ultrasound gel. At 38, she鈥檇 done various genetic tests that confirmed her baby was developing normally. Its small features looked perfect on the screen. But her baby wasn鈥檛 getting enough oxygen. Her 20-week ultrasound in February 2024 showed findings of hydrops fetalis, an often lethal condition where fluid builds up in the fetus鈥 body, according to Desi鈥檚 medical records. Her baby would almost certainly die before delivery. If she remained pregnant, Desi risked dying, too. She remembers the tears in the ultrasound technician鈥檚 eyes as the doctor calmly repeated, 鈥淚 need you to get to Salt Lake.鈥 It wasn鈥檛 until later that day, when the Utah doctor called on her drive home, that Desi learned the blunt truth: She might need an abortion to save her own life. And she would have to leave Idaho to get it. (Turner, 4/19)

In other reproductive health news 鈥

In the post-Roe v. Wade era, ob/gyns continued to practice in similar locations as before, according to a descriptive cohort study. From the quarter right before the June 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision through the end of the study in September 2024, 95.8% of ob/gyns remained in states that protect access to abortion, 94.8% remained in states threatening bans, and 94.2% remained in states with abortion bans, reported Becky Staiger, PhD, of the University of California Berkeley, and colleagues. (Robertson, 4/21)

The professional association for OB-GYNs is recommending a shift in the way prenatal care is delivered, away from a dozen or more office visits to a more individualized approach built around social needs and patient choice. (Bettelheim, 4/21)

麻豆女优 Health News: Fate Of Black Maternal Health Programs Is Unclear Amid Federal Cuts

Eboni Tomasek expected to take home her newborn the day after he was born in a San Jose hospital. But, without explanation, hospital staff said they needed to stay a second night. Then a third. A nurse said her son had jaundice. Then said that he didn鈥檛. She wondered if they had confused her with another African American mother. In any event, why couldn鈥檛 she and the baby boy she鈥檇 named Ezekiel go home? No one would say. (Cohen, 4/22)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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