Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: MADD May Hold The Key To Securing Abortion Rights; All Women's Health Care At Stake Post-Roe
For decades, the most pressing aspect of any presidential election for many voters has been the candidate鈥檚 stance on abortion and his or her ability to appoint Supreme Court justices who share the candidate鈥檚 views. The Supreme Court, for its part, regularly resisted attempts at politicization, insisting on stare decisis. The court also regularly reminded litigants, and the world, that the legislature is where the legality of abortion should be decided. (Tamara Kay and Susan Ostermann, 7/7)
In the aftermath of Roe鈥檚 being overturned, supporters of the move want to pretend that abortion access can be surgically extracted from women鈥檚 health care decision-making as a whole. Nothing could be further from the truth.聽(Jamie Abrams, 7/7)
In the shock and outrage of response to the overturning of Roe v. Wade, a lot of outdated, incomplete and false ideas about abortion have come to dominate public discourse. Some are afraid that the end of Roe means a return to the days of the coat hanger. Some are stocking up on the abortion pill, which, while far from ideal, is at least not lethal. While it is true that the end of Roe will cause needless suffering and grave complications for people with wanted and unwanted pregnancies, it鈥檚 also true that we now have more options than we think. The rallying feminist slogan 鈥淜nowledge is Power鈥 has never felt more urgent. (Jennifer Block and Elisa Albert, 7/7)
The 5-4 Supreme Court majority that overturned Roe v. Wade said it was returning decision-making to the states. But conservatives are making a play to block interstate travel for abortions. If they succeed, there might as well be a federal ban. (Jill Lawrence, 7/5)
A Dispatch reader say immaculate conception is not involved in unwanted pregnancies. She questioned why accountability for men is not being discussed. Columbus Conversation: The Future of Abortion in Ohio. (7/8)
The Supreme Court鈥檚 decision to overturn federal protection for abortion changed in an instant how many people think about pregnancy. But it is also changing how health systems need to think about their current and future sharing and monetization efforts for real-world evidence. (Eric D. Perakslis, 7/8)
The key concepts every person should know. (7/7)
In the midst of the apocalyptic hysteria surrounding the Dobbs v. Jackson decision overruling Roe v. Wade, impassioned advocates largely ignore some significant points of consensus on the always-explosive issue of abortion. There is at least one long-term development that all sides could celebrate as positive and promising. (Michael Medved, 7/8)