(Live Action) â A judge in Hamilton County, Ohio, granted a preliminary injunction last Tuesday against state regulations that may have prevented non-physicians (like physician assistants and certified nurse midwives) from distributing the abortion pill.
Key Takeaways:
- An Ohio judge ruled that non-physicians â like nurse practitioners, certified nurse midwives, or physician assistants â can now prescribe the abortion pill.
- The abortion pill carries significant risks, which are increased without an in-person visit due to a âno-testâ protocol, which fails to determine gestational age, potential ectopic pregnancy, or other risks and contraindications.
The Details:
In 2021, Ohio enacted a law prohibiting âtelemedicine abortion,â in which an abortionist prescribes the abortion pill without first examining the woman in person. It was immediately challenged by Planned Parenthood and the ACLU after its passage, and blocked in the courts.
According to the Ohio Capital Journal, the abortion industry later âamended its lawsuit, arguing that certain statutes regarding medical licensure in Ohio Administrative Code and Ohio Revised Code âcould be read to preclude (advanced practice clinicians) from providing [so-called] medication abortion care.ââ
Judge Alison Hatheway of the Court of Common Pleas in Hamilton County has now agreed with the plaintiffs. In her ruling, Hatheway said the regulations âcould be read to preclude otherwise qualified (nurse practitioners) or (certified nurse midwives) from providing medication abortions merely because they are licensed by the Board of Nursing, not the (State) Medical Board.â
She also referenced the Ohio amendment passed by voters last November which made abortion a constitutional ârightâ in the state, saying the amendment âgrants sweeping protections ensuring reproductive autonomy for patients in Ohio.â She said the plaintiffs offered âsubstantial evidenceâ that the law about medical licensure violates the abortion amendment âand actually causes harm to plaintiffs and their patients.â
With Hathewayâs ruling, advanced practice clinicians who are not physicians are now free to act as abortionists.
Why it Matters:
The abortion pill has been shown to be four times more dangerous than a first-trimester surgical abortion.
A recent analysis of insurance data reported that 11 percent of women who take the abortion pill experience sepsis, infection, hemorrhaging, or other serious or life-threatening complications. This rate is 22 times higher than the FDA reported complication rate on the mifepristone label. A separate study out of Ireland found that 12 percent of women went to the ER for bleeding or infection after taking the abortion pill.
Women are at increased risk when taking the abortion pill via telemedicine, because they fail to receive an ultrasound or other standard testing to confirm the childâs gestational age and to ensure the pregnancy is not ectopic.
The Bottom Line:
Hathewayâs ruling was slammed by Ohio Right to Life, who called it âreckless judicial interference.â
âThe abortion industry will always choose profit over the health of women and this decision reveals their willingness to do that yet again,â the organization said.
âBecause chemical abortions have a 1 in 20 risk of complication and a 1 in 300 risk of a severe adverse event, lifting the requirement of a doctorâs involvement is extremely reckless.â
The group said it is confident that given the risk to women, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost will have âample groundâ to appeal the ruling.
Reprinted with permission from Live Action.
News Source : https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/non-physicians-can-now-prescribe-abortion-pill-in-ohio/