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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Feb 14 2017

Full Issue

Florida Bill Would Allow Women To Sue Doctor 10 Years After Abortion

The measure letting patients file suit for physical or emotional injuries from an abortion could impact doctors' liability insurance. Meanwhile, other women's reproductive health news stories come from California, Iowa and Connecticut.

Health News Florida: Abortion Bill Would Let Women Sue Doctors 10 Years Later 

State lawmakers are advancing a measure giving women the opportunity to sue over physical or emotional injuries from an abortion. The measure could impact doctors’ liability insurance. Doctors can already be brought to court through the medical malpractice system, but Vero Beach Republican Representative Erin Grall’s bill would give patients a new way to sue for physical or emotional damages. (Evans, 2/13)

Sacramento Bee: Abortion Rates Drop In California, Amid Federal Debate On Planned Parenthood, Reproductive Rights 

Abortion rates are at an all-time low in California, and both sides of the political aisle are taking credit. New abortion data from the Guttmacher Institute, a nonprofit organization that studies reproductive health, shows that fewer women than ever are obtaining abortions nationwide. Abortion opponents call it proof that their efforts to sway women away from the procedure are working, while abortion rights advocates point to increased sexual education and contraceptive use as drivers of the decline. (Caiola and Reese, 2/13)

Des Moines Register: Iowa Poll: 77 Percent Back Planned Parenthood Funding For Non-Abortion Services

Iowans overwhelmingly support continued public funding to Planned Parenthood for health services that do not include abortion, according to a new Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll. Seventy-seven percent of adult Iowans surveyed favor continued state funding for non-abortive services at Planned Parenthood, up 3 percentage points from February 2016. Eighteen percent do not support that funding going to Planned Parenthood and 5 percent are not sure. The poll found 62 percent of Republicans believe non-abortion funding should continue, as do 62 percent of evangelical Christians. (Petroski, 2/13)

The CT Mirror: CT Would Protect Planned Parenthood Medicaid Funds Under Malloy Proposal 

As Republicans in Congress seek to cut off federal funds to Planned Parenthood, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has proposed legislation that would allow the state to make up any federal Medicaid dollars the clinics would lose. ... But Chris McClure, a spokesman for Malloy’s budget office, said the language included in one of the governor’s budget bills is intended to “ensure there is no disruption in family planning services provided to Medicaid recipients.” (Levin Becker, 2/14)

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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