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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Apr 15 2022

Full Issue

Florida Governor Signs Bill Banning Abortions After 15 Weeks

Until this law was enacted, Florida allowed abortion until the third trimester, which is 24 weeks of pregnancy. The Supreme Court is considering a similar Mississippi law that bans abortions after 15 weeks. A decision is expected later this year.

In a historic moment for the anti-abortion movement, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday signed a measure banning most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. The measure, House Bill 5, contains the strictest prohibition passed in Florida during the Roe v. Wade era. It does not come with exceptions for pregnancies that are the result of rape, incest or human trafficking. Under the law, women can still obtain an abortion if their health is threatened or if their baby has a 鈥渇atal fetal abnormality.鈥 Although DeSantis鈥 signature came more than a month after the Legislature passed the bill in early March, there was never any doubt he would approve the measure. (Wilson, 4/14)

DeSantis signed the bill on the last day of Lent, which ends 40 days of prayer and fasting that Christians go through ahead of Easter. One Planned Parenthood official said the fight over preserving access to abortion is not over. Stephanie Fraim, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Southwest and Central Florida, wrote a statement that stopped short of threatening all-out legal action.鈥淚f these politicians think the fight against this abortion ban is over they are sadly mistaken,鈥 Fraim wrote. (Sarkissian, 4/14)

In abortion news from Oregon, Idaho, Texas, California, and elsewhere 鈥

Planned Parenthood is renting medical office space in the town of Ontario, on the Oregon-Idaho border. It鈥檚 the latest strategic move by pro-abortion rights groups in Oregon. Earlier this year, in a quiet campaign, they successfully lobbied the legislature to set aside $15 million in an unrestricted fund for reproductive health equity. (Templeton, 4/14)

"I have been angry and anxious about reproductive rights for a long time," says Kate Chin Park, a custom furniture maker from Oakland. "And unfortunately, because abortion services have been made so scarce in many places, donations from private individuals are a really important way to try and get people access to the care they need." Chin Park is one of four Bay Area creatives who constructed crossword designs for These Puzzles Fund Abortion Too, a pack of 16 puzzles created to raise money for reproductive rights, which launched on March 1. Chin Park describes her fellow puzzle-builders on the project as "the most interesting, envelope-pushing, brilliant, and funny people writing crosswords today." (Alexandra, 4/13)

As Republican-led states move to restrict abortion, The Post is tracking legislation across the country on 15-week bans, Texas-style bans, trigger laws and abortion pill bans, as well as Democratic-dominated states that are moving to protect abortion rights enshrined in Roe v. Wade. (Kitchener, Schaul and Santamarina, 4/14)

As many Texas women are turning to neighboring states to receive abortion services, Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt signed a near-total ban on performing abortions this week. The Oklahoma law, which is set to take effect later this year, would make performing an abortion a felony punishable by up to $100,000 and ten years in prison. It does not penalize a woman receiving an abortion. The move is drawing strong reactions from both pro-life and pro-choice advocates in Central Texas. (Lamparski, 4/14)

KHN: KHN鈥檚 鈥榃hat The Health?鈥: News You Might Have Missed聽

It鈥檚 been extra busy on the health policy beat lately, so a congressional recess provides a chance to explore some of the important stories that people might have missed, like Medicare鈥檚 decision to dramatically limit coverage of Aduhelm, the controversial new drug to treat Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. And even with Congress out, states are rushing to either restrict or expand access to abortion, ahead of a key Supreme Court ruling expected later this spring or summer. (4/14)

In other reproductive health news 鈥

Adrian Gallo鈥檚 interest in better birth control methods for men began about 10 years ago, when he was an undergraduate student with a female roommate. 鈥淪he told me about the many trials and tribulations of being a woman,鈥 including taking birth control pills, Gallo recalled. 鈥淚 remember thinking, 鈥極h my God, hormonal pills sound awful, like, truly awful,鈥欌 which made him wonder why contraceptive responsibilities weren鈥檛 distributed more equitably and why there weren鈥檛 broader choices for men other than condoms or vasectomies. (Chiu, 4/14)

As the nation recognizes Black Maternal Health Week this week, experts want to keep the stories of women and birthing people at the forefront.聽They want them to feel supported, their child bearing experiences celebrated and protected, and systems to be improved and held accountable. The first year of the pandemic saw a surge of maternal deaths, particularly among women of color, according to the聽Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with the mortality rate of Black moms in 2020 increasing from 44 deaths聽to 55 deaths per 100,000. (Hassanein, 4/15)

In the age of rapid advancements in healthcare and treatments for all manner of ailments, women鈥檚 health has been relatively overlooked as we鈥檙e routinely told to 鈥渏ust deal with it鈥. However, the rise in FemTech is, thankfully, radically changing how we respond and view female reproductive health. ... Included under the term FemTech are the likes of savvy period products which offer tailored solutions to make pain more manageable in a natural way. There are also a whole host of digital FemTech products such as hormone tracking apps. (Rufo, 4/15)

The cosmetics section of the luxury department store Isetan offered a retail experience last month that no doubt prompted a double take from Tokyo shoppers: a pop-up store with a sprawling display of colorful menstrual cups, vibrators, kegel balls and period underwear. It was a jarring sight in the storied institution, which for decades has offered a sanitized version of what it means to be a woman. A shopper-friendly chart of each menstrual cup鈥檚 capacity, down to the milliliter, and a diagram illustrating pelvic-floor muscle training showcased women鈥檚 health issues in a rare, in-your-face way in male-dominated Japan. (Lee and Inuma, 4/9)

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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