Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
NC Governor Sets Up Battle Over 'Dressed Up' Abortion Ban
Gov. Roy Cooper said Sunday that the proposed 12-week abortion ban in his state would largely put an end to abortion in North Carolina. The legislation, approved last week and sent to Cooper, would restrict abortion to within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy (down from 20) but also apply other restrictions as well. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e dressed this up as a 12-week ban, but it鈥檚 really not,鈥 Cooper, a Democrat, told host Margaret Brennan on CBS鈥 鈥淔ace the Nation.鈥 (Cohen, 5/7)
In other abortion news 鈥
A coalition of abortion rights advocates in Florida is set to push a ballot measure that would enshrine abortion protections into the state鈥檚 constitution, with the launch of a public campaign to get the issue on the Florida 2024 ballot expected next week. The coalition has already filed necessary paperwork with the state to begin collecting signatures and fundraising for the effort, said Nikki Fried, the chair of the Florida Democratic Party, who first pitched the ballot measure last August. (Barclay, 5/5)
In the days since state Sen. Merv Riepe cast the lone vote that blocked a near-total abortion ban in his conservative state, he鈥檚 faced protests at his office, the cold shoulder from irate colleagues and calls for his resignation. A stranger left an angry note inside his home mailbox. Yet the 80-year-old Republican has also raked in accolades, becoming an unlikely hero for those fighting to protect abortion access in Nebraska and around the country in the year since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Abortion advocates wept in the Capitol after Riepe鈥檚 April 27 vote. A downtown Omaha novelty store is now selling blue T-shirts and tank tops that say 鈥淗ot Merv Summer鈥 in bold white type. (Itkowitz and Rodriguez, 5/7)
When the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last summer, advocates on either side presumed that the country would divide along the bright color lines: red states completely banning abortion, blue states protecting it. That prediction failed to anticipate the Sister Senators. The Sisters, as they call themselves, are the women in the South Carolina State Senate 鈥 the only women, three Republicans, one Independent and one Democrat, in a legislature that ranks 47th among states in the proportion of women. As a block, they are refusing to allow the legislature to pass a near-total ban on abortion, despite a Republican supermajority. (Zernike, 5/7)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: In Idaho, Taking A Minor Out Of State For An Abortion Is Now A Crime: 鈥楢bortion Trafficking鈥櫬
Mackenzie Davidson grew up in a Mormon household and sheepishly admits she knew little about pregnancy. 鈥淭his is embarrassing,鈥 she said, sitting outside a caf茅 along a street thronged with students in this college town. 鈥淏ut I didn鈥檛 know that you had to have sex to have kids until I was 13 or 14.鈥漇he鈥檚 a writer for the University of Idaho student newspaper, The Argonaut, and was asked recently to report on a new law. (Varney, 5/8)
The burden falls most heavily on economically vulnerable, non-Latinx Black people, who nationwide have a maternal mortality rate three times that of white people. In 2019, Black patients accounted for over 38% of U.S. abortions, even though Black people represent only about 12% of the U.S. population. In a Guttmacher Institute survey of more than 6,600 individuals who obtained an abortion at a health care facility in the U.S. from June 2021 to June 2022, three-quarters of respondents had incomes below 200% of the federal poverty line. (Sonnenberg, 5/5)