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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Jan 11 2023

Full Issue

Anti-Abortion Activists To Target Retail Pharmacies Selling Abortion Pills

Politico covers news from anti-abortion activists who plan to target retail pharmacies that will sell abortion pills where they're permitted to by state law, under the new FDA rules. WUSF Public Media reports that Florida laws mandating multiple physician visits will rule out such sales in the state.

Politico: ‘We Want People To Be Uncomfortable’: The Conservative Plan To Target Pharmacies That Dispense Abortion Pills

Anti-abortion advocates are organizing pickets outside CVS and Walgreens in early February in at least eight cities, including Washington, D.C., in response to the companies’ plans to take advantage of the Food and Drug Administration’s decision last week allowing retail pharmacies to stock and dispense abortion pills in states where they’re legal. (Miranda Ollstein and Gardner, 1/11)

WUSF Public Media: Florida Patients Won't Benefit From FDA Change Allowing Pharmacies To Offer Abortion Pills 

Florida law requires patients to have an in-person visit with a physician at least 24 hours before an abortion procedure, including for medication abortion. The patient then needs to make another appointment to take the first dose in person. (Carter, 1/10)

In other news relating to abortion from across the states —

Politico: America’s Abortion Access Divide Is Reshaping Blue-State Border Towns

A Tennessee-based health care provider announced plans in May — just one week after POLITICO published the draft Supreme Court opinion that foreshadowed the end of federal abortion protections — to open a clinic in Carbondale, Ill. The provider, Choices, is seeing a steady stream of abortion patients from Arkansas, Tennessee, Mississippi and Texas since it set up space in a shuttered dermatology office last fall, its only location outside Memphis. (Kapos, 1/11)

Cincinnati Enquirer: Ohio AG Asks Supreme Court To Reinstate Ban On Most Abortions

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost wants the Ohio Supreme Court to reinstate the state's ban on most abortions sooner rather than later. Yost's office appealed to the Ohio Supreme Court after the 1st District Court of Appeals sent a dispute over Ohio's abortion ban back to a Hamilton County judge. The court's decision allows abortions to continue in Ohio through 21 weeks and 6 days into pregnancy. (Balmert, 1/11)

AP: Illinois Lawmakers Greenlight Enhanced Abortion Protections

Illinois lawmakers on Tuesday approved a measure protecting Illinois’ access to abortion from out-of-state meddling, making the state the latest to pursue such protections since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last June. (Savage, 1/11)

The Washington Post: Democrat Aaron Rouse Projected To Win Va. Senate Seat To Replace Kiggans

With Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) pushing to ban abortion in Virginia after 15 weeks, Rouse, a former football safety for the Green Bay Packers, made defending abortion access a key campaign issue. He focused two of his three TV ads on the topic. Although Adams did not make it a focus during his campaign, he had said he favors Youngkin’s proposal, which includes exceptions for rape, incest and to preserve the mother’s life. (Elwood, 1/10)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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