Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Mifepristone Maker Pays To Settle Mislabeling Lawsuit
Just days before the Biden administration asked the Supreme Court to preserve access to a key abortion medication, the Justice Department issued a routine, but little-noticed announcement that the manufacturer of the drug 鈥 Danco Laboratories 鈥 had settled claims it violated customs laws. ... Under the settlement dated March 31 and released last week, Danco agreed to pay $765,000 to the U.S. to resolve allegations that, from 2011 to 2019, the company failed to both properly label imports of the drug as originating in China and pay customs duties on imports lacking those labels. (Haberkorn and Gerstein, 4/17)
Abortion news from Nevada, West Virginia, Texas, Washington, and Tennessee 鈥
An amendment to the Nevada Constitution guaranteeing abortion rights in the state is one step closer to coming before voters after the state Senate voted to advance a joint resolution Monday. Senators voted 13-8 on party lines to send Senate Joint Resolution 7 to the Assembly, but not before a contentious floor debate. (Avery, 4/17)
An abortion provider on Monday dropped a two-month-old federal lawsuit seeking to overturn West Virginia鈥檚 near-total ban. The Women鈥檚 Health Center of West Virginia said in a court filing that its primary physician determined he will be unable to resume providing abortion care in the state 鈥渄ue to intervening professional obligations.鈥 Another physician who provided abortion care at West Virginia鈥檚 only abortion clinic prior to the passage of a law last year is no longer available, the filing said. (Raby, 4/17)
For more than a year, abortion clinics in New Mexico, Kansas and Colorado have been flooded with Texans seeking care that鈥檚 largely outlawed in the Lone Star State. Now, those clinics are bracing for another consequence of Texas鈥 anti-abortion animus as an Amarillo court ruling threatens access to medication abortion nationwide. (Klibanoff, 4/18)
The estimated number of monthly abortions in Washington rose by about 10% last year after some states, including neighboring Idaho, began cracking down on the procedure, new data shows. (Santos and Harris, 4/17)
Zoe Poplin first smelled something in 2020, around 2 a.m., as she got home from a late shift at the hospital. It was mild at first. Then it got stronger, thicker, pouring into people鈥檚 homes. The pastor at a nearby Presbyterian church wondered if an animal had died in the ductwork. Some speculated the fumes were industrial. Others reported gas leaks 鈥 but again and again, the fire department would come out and set them straight. Oh, no, they鈥檇 say. That鈥檚 just the landfill. (Boodman, 4/18)
Also 鈥
There鈥檚 a reason people fly to see [Joan] Fleischman. She provides abortions through manual uterine aspiration 鈥 using a small, hand-held device to remove pregnancy tissue. The device is gentle enough that the tissue often comes out almost completely intact. It is also a quick and discreet procedure where a patient might be in and out of the door in less than an hour. Fleischman is co-founder of the MYA Network, a network of primary care clinics and clinicians in 16 states. They believe the tool could be radical in the hands of more primary care clinicians 鈥 clinicians they are amping up to train. (Noor, 4/18)
In other reproductive health news 鈥
A patient鈥檚 urine test landed on Michelle Fisher鈥檚 desk with a warm, wet splash. Fisher, a Black nurse practitioner, remembers looking up from her lunch to see the white manager of Planned Parenthood鈥檚 Bellmawr clinic in South Jersey. (Gantz, 4/18)
A custody case currently unfolding in Texas has separated a newborn from her parents and highlighted two systemic realities in the United States: the policing of Black families by child welfare systems and the disregard of midwifery expertise by many doctors. (Norwood, 4/17)