Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Conservatives Divided On Exceptions To Abortion Bans
Though Republican legislators support the broad idea of restricting abortion, they have clashing views on how far to go. Should there be an outright ban? If so, should there be exceptions for rape and incest? And what if a woman鈥檚 health is threatened by a pregnancy but doctors do not believe she will die? (Smith and Bosman, 7/27)
Senate Democrats are urging the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide abortion services at their hospitals, ramping up pressure on federal agencies to increase access to abortion care after the Supreme Court struck down the protection.聽The Supreme Court's recent ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, the senators write in a letter first obtained by NBC News and signed by 23 Democratic lawmakers,聽鈥渕akes it even more critical that veterans receive access to the reproductive care to which they are entitled.鈥澛 (Thorp, Vitali and Tsirkin, 7/28)
Each year, Puterbaugh sees one or two cases of pregnancy-related sepsis. It鈥檚 been rare in the United States for decades, and deaths from these infections have been nearly unheard of. According to maternal mortality data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention covering the last three years, no more than 45 people died of complications linked in any way to this form of sepsis. But after more than 17 years of practicing in Texas, where abortion essentially has been banned since last year, Dr. Rakhi Dimino said more patients come to her now with sepsis or hemorrhaging 鈥渢han I鈥檝e ever seen before.鈥 (Santhanam, 7/27)
On state moves to ban or protect abortion access 鈥
Abortion bans set to take effect this week in Wyoming and North Dakota have been temporarily blocked by judges in those states amid lawsuits arguing that the bans violate their state constitutions. A judge in Wyoming on Wednesday sided with a firebombed women鈥檚 health clinic and others who argued the ban would harm health care workers and their patients, while a North Dakota judge sided with the state鈥檚 only abortion clinic, Red River Women鈥檚 Clinic in Fargo. (Gruver and Willingham, 7/28)
West Virginia鈥檚 Republican-dominated House of Delegates passed a sweeping abortion ban Wednesday that makes providing the procedure a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison. The measure, which now heads to the Senate for consideration, includes exceptions for victims of rape and incest, as well as for medical emergencies. (Willingham, 7/27)
When Kansas voters head to the polls on Tuesday, they will be asked to decide whether the state鈥檚 Constitution should continue to protect abortion rights. It will be the first time since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade that U.S. voters cast ballots on abortion. (Edelman, 7/27)
Democratic Gov. Janet Mills said Tuesday that her administration is reviewing whether the right to an abortion is already enshrined in the Maine Constitution, or if an amendment is warranted. Mills said it鈥檚 possible that the Maine Constitution already has protections that the U.S. Constitution does not under a Supreme Court ruling in June. But she said all options are 鈥渙n the table.鈥 Maine already has a law adopted in 1993 that codified the right to an abortion. (7/27)
When the Supreme Court overturned nearly five decades of federal protection for abortion, Maria Bartini was, in a word, furious. Across the state, others echoed her anger in visceral terms, from 鈥渘auseated鈥 to 鈥渉orrified鈥 and 鈥渄epressed.鈥 Outrage over the rollback of abortion rights nationally is particularly pronounced in Massachusetts, where abortion rights enjoy sweeping public support, according to a new poll. (Ebbert, 7/27)