Federal judge blocks two pieces of new NC abortion law | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the Carolina Journal. The author of this post is CJ Staff.

    A federal judge has issued an injunction against two pieces of North Carolina's new abortion law. One would require doctors to document a pregnancy's location in a woman's body before administering abortion drugs. The other would require hospitalization for all abortions performed after 12 weeks of pregnancy.

    US District Judge Catherine Eagles' 34-page order issued Saturday leaves the rest of the new law intact. The law restricts most abortions after 12 weeks.

    "The plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits of their vagueness challenge to the requirement that providers determine and document the probably intrauterine location of a pregnancy before administering medication intended to terminate a pregnancy," Eagles wrote. "The Act does not provide a clear standard by which providers can make this determination, the provision is open to differing interpretations and does not provide reasonable notice of what is prohibited, and providers are subject to arbitrary accusations that they have violated the provision and to the penalties that accompany those accusations."

    "The plaintiffs are also likely to succeed on the merits of their equal protection challenge to the Act's requirement that surgical abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy must be performed in a hospital," Eagles continued. "The plaintiffs have offered uncontradicted evidence that the same medical procedures used for surgical abortions are used for miscarriage management and that the risks of those identical procedures are the same whatever their purpose."

    "The legislature's maternal health reasons for requiring these procedures to be done in a hospital when a person who is pregnant as a result of rape or incest or with a life-limiting anomaly chooses to terminate a pregnancy apply equally to the same procedures when a person chooses those procedures to manage a miscarriage," the judge added. "The plaintiffs have shown the absence of any rational medical basis for distinguishing between these two classes of patients and the defendant-intervenors have not offered any evidence or rationale for that distinction."

    Planned Parenthood and Duke Health Dr. Beverly Gray are plaintiffs in the case. State Senate Leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, and House Speaker Tim Moore, R-Cleveland, are considered "defendant-intervenors."

    Eagles had issued an earlier order temporarily blocking the abortion medication documentation requirement, also known as the IUP requirement. The hospitalization requirement for abortions performed after 12 weeks of pregnancy had been scheduled to take effect Sunday.

    Parties on both sides of the dispute submitted briefs to Eagles on Sept. 12.

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    "Plaintiffs' lawsuit is an overt attempt to circumvent the Supreme Court's decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Org., by seeking to create new constitutional roadblocks to laws that protect women from unsafe abortion practices," wrote lawyers representing Berger and Moore. "But the Supreme Court instructed that '[a] law regulating abortion ... is entitled to a "strong presumption of validity"' and 'must be sustained if there is a rational basis on which the legislature could have thought that it would serve legitimate state interests,' including 'the protection of maternal health and safety.' North Carolina's abortion laws easily satisfy this test."

    Lawmakers defended a challenged documentation requirement for doctors administering abortion drugs.

    "As the leading cause of maternal mortality in the first trimester, ectopic pregnancies must be identified and treated before they rupture," lawmakers' lawyers argued. "The North Carolina General Assembly addressed this danger by requiring doctors to document an intrauterine pregnancy (IUP) prior to giving women drugs that can mask the symptoms of a life-threatening rupture. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has also addressed this risk by including a warning on mifepristone's label that a prescriber must 'exclude [an ectopic pregnancy] before treatment.' Codifying FDA's warning into law is rational."

    The legislators' brief also made the case for the new law's hospitalization requirement for abortions that take place after 12 weeks of pregnancy.

    "The General Assembly also sought to provide safe conditions for women who seek abortions beyond the first trimester," according to the brief. "As Plaintiffs have conceded, women who have post-12-week surgical abortions may experience life-threatening complications that require hospitalization. What's more, Planned Parenthood South Atlantic (PPSAT) admits that it has transferred women from its facilities to hospitals due to complications from post-12-week surgical abortions that it could not treat at its facilities."

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    "Simply put, the North Carolina legislature had rational reasons to require IUP documentation prior to a chemical abortion and hospitalization for post-12-week surgical abortions. The Constitution affords the North Carolina General Assembly - not Plaintiffs - that choice," lawmakers argued.

    "The North Carolina General Assembly enacted straightforward, rational protections for women who seek certain types of abortions. And for Plaintiffs to ask the Court to grant their Motion for Preliminary Injunction is to ask the Court to impermissibly 'substitute [its] social and economic beliefs for the judgment of' these representatives," the brief concluded.

    Planned Parenthood and Gray offered the judge a contrasting argument. "[T]he record remains clear: the Hospitalization and IUP Documentation Requirements are not rationally related to patients' health, and the IUP Documentation Requirement fails to give adequate notice of what it demands. The Requirements therefore violate the Fourteenth Amendment."

    The plaintiffs' brief criticized lawmakers' expert witnesses. "These witnesses' opinions that abortion is unsafe, and that carrying a pregnancy to term and delivering a baby are safer than abortion, are not supported by credible evidence, and are contrary to every mainstream medical organization's conclusion."

    Planned Parenthood labeled restrictions on abortion after 12 weeks "irrational." "Here, the overwhelming evidence of abortion's safety - both before and after the twelfth week of pregnancy - more than rebuts any presumption that the General Assembly acted rationally in requiring hospitalization for abortion, a politically stigmatized type of medical care, but not for less-stigmatized procedures."

    The brief directly challenges the hospitalization requirement. "There is no medical reason to require that abortions be provided in hospitals when the need for hospital treatment is so extraordinarily rare, and rarer than for other outpatient procedures."

    "Nor does a hospital setting improve patient safety," Planned Parenthood argued. "Research shows that second-trimester ... procedures can be both safer and more affordable in outpatient clinics than in hospitals. And by delaying survivors of rape or incest and patients with life-limiting anomalies, the Hospitalization Requirement forces these patients to obtain abortions later than they otherwise would, when the risk (although still very low) has increased. The Hospitalization Requirement therefore undermines patient safety."

    Critics of the new law also target the IUP documentation requirement. "Plaintiffs argue that it is irrational to deny medication abortion to patients whose pregnancies are not yet visible by ultrasound and who are low risk for ectopic pregnancy," according to the brief. "Because these patients have been screened and deemed low risk, they are considered patients with a pregnancy of unknown location, not patients with a 'confirmed' or 'suspected' ectopic pregnancy - distinct diagnostic categories."

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    Planned Parenthood emphasized the impact of the 12-week threshold. "[B]anning medication abortion in the earliest weeks of pregnancy is logically incompatible with the Act's intent - that people obtain abortion as early in pregnancy as possible, and that abortion remain generally lawful through the twelfth week of pregnancy," according to the brief. "As both the published research and Plaintiffs' experts explain, there is no reason for the government to mandate that people wait to obtain a medication abortion until their pregnancy is visible by ultrasound, rather than allowing them to opt for a safe and effective medication abortion protocol with concurrent ectopic pregnancy screening."

    State Attorney General Josh Stein and Health and Human Services Secretary Kody Kinsley are named defendants in the case, along with local district attorneys and leaders of the NC medical and nursing boards.

poll#152
With Roe v Wade (originated in 1973) overturned by the US Supreme Court, thereby allowing decisions on abortion legislation completely returned to the states: Where do you find your position on such a "Life and Death" issue for the American People?
  Yes, I approve of the US Supreme Court's decision to reinstate this "medical" issue back to the states' legislative responsibility to regulate.
  No, I believe that every woman should have complete access to abortion on demand.
  This issue is far beyond my intellectual capacity to understand.
583 total vote(s)     What's your Opinion?

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