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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Nov 10 2021

Full Issue

Lawsuits Challenging Texas Abortion Law To Be Heard In Court

A state district judge is expected to hear over a dozen cases now consolidated, that were filed by doctors and abortion rights groups over the constitutionality of Texas' near-total ban on the procedure. News outlets report on other abortion news from Indiana and Massachusetts, as well as Cecily Strong's "SNL" skit.

The Texas Tribune: A State District Court Judge Will Hear Over A Dozen Challenges To Texas’ Abortion Law Wednesday

A state district judge on Wednesday morning will hear arguments from abortion providers challenging Texas’ restrictive abortion law in what could be the first court hearing over the statute’s constitutionality. David Peeples, a retired state magistrate judge, will preside over the hearing, which starts at 9 a.m. and is expected to last all day. Peeples will hear over a dozen cases filed in state court challenging Texas’ law, which effectively bans abortions after about six weeks. (Oxner, 11/10)

Reuters: Twenty Democratic AGs Back Challenge To Indiana Abortion Law

A group of 20 Democratic state attorneys general have urged a federal appeals court to uphold a lower court ruling striking down several restrictions on abortion in Indiana, including a ban on prescribing medication via telemedicine to induce abortion. The states, including Illinois, California, New York and Massachusetts, said in an amicus brief filed Monday with the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that U.S. District Judge Sarah Evans Barker in Indianapolis properly considered the burdens placed on women, especially low-income ones, by the restrictions. (Pierson, 11/9)

The Boston Globe: Mass. Abortion Rights Group Going It Alone

With abortion rights on the line nationally and in more than half of states, Massachusetts’ leading reproductive rights advocacy organization will announce Wednesday it’s reconstituting and expanding its reach in New England. NARAL Pro-Choice Massachusetts, one of the organizations that successfully pushed for the state law that expanded abortion rights last year, is being renamed Reproductive Equity Now after a break with its national organization. (Ebbert, 11/10)

Miami Herald: Aborted Fetal Cells And COVID-19 Vaccine: What Science Says

One company in Alabama, however, hinges its objection on different grounds — religion. FabArc, a steel fabricator based in Oxford, Alabama, with more than 100 workers, filed a petition in the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals on Nov. 8 that argues the mandate violates the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act by requiring employers to comply with a standard they find objectional on religious grounds. ... FabArc’s president and majority shareholder, Tony Pugh, is opposed to vaccines “produced in connection with aborted fetal cell lines,” attorneys representing FabArc said in a news release. Scientists, however, have said none of the coronavirus vaccines contain aborted fetal cells. (Fowler, 11/9)

CNN: In Her 'SNL' Skit, Cecily Strong Opened A Dialogue On Abortion. Here Is What Experts Say

"Saturday Night Live"'s Cecily Strong dressed as a clown this weekend to talk about abortion.In the show's Weekend Update segment, the actress explained the clown costume was to make the topic a little more palatable for the audience. She was introduced in light of a controversial Texas law currently being argued in the US Supreme Court.

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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