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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Jun 11 2019

Full Issue

Missouri's Only Abortion Clinic Gets Another Reprieve As Judge Forces State To Make Final Decision On License

State Circuit Court Judge Michael Stelzer said Missouri's health department has to make a decision whether to renew the license for the Planned Parenthood facility before the case can be properly reviewed. Stelzer says the department has until June 21 to make a decision on the license, but the injunction would remain in place until he issued another ruling.

Reuters: Missouri's Only Abortion Clinic To Stay Open After Injunction Issued

The only abortion clinic in Missouri can stay open after a St. Louis judge issued a preliminary injunction on Monday saying the state must make an "official" decision on the facility's license before it can be reviewed, a court document showed. Women's healthcare and abortion provider Planned Parenthood sued Missouri two weeks ago after state health officials refused to renew the license of the Reproductive Health Services of Planned Parenthood clinic in St. Louis. (O'Brien, 6/10)

The New York Times: Missouri’s Last Abortion Clinic Wins Temporary Reprieve In The Courts

In a nine-page written decision, Judge Stelzer said that Planned Parenthood had “demonstrated that immediate injury will occur to its facility” if its “license is allowed to expire.” But the judge made clear that he was not ruling on the merits of the clinic’s license renewal. He has scheduled a hearing for June 21 to discuss the case further. Planned Parenthood praised the judge’s ruling, but said its dispute with the state continued. “Abortion access in Missouri is hanging on by a thread,” Dr. Colleen McNicholas, a doctor at the Planned Parenthood clinic, said in a statement. (Eligon, 6/10)

Politico: Judge Says Missouri’s Lone Abortion Clinic Must Remain Open For Now

The ruling represents a blow to Republican Gov. Mike Parson and state health officials, who said the clinic had numerous violations that had to be addressed in order to renew the license. Missouri health officials said there was at least one incident in which patient safety “was gravely compromised." They also said there were instances of failed surgical abortions in which patients remained pregnant, as well as a failure to obtain a patient's "informed consent." (Pradhan, 6/10)

KCUR: Judge Temporarily Protects Access To Abortion At Planned Parenthood's St. Louis Clinic 

“Today’s ruling gives doctors like me the ability to wake up tomorrow and continue providing safe, legal abortion in the last health center in the state that provides abortion care,” said Dr. Colleen McNicholas, an OB-GYN and attending physician at the clinic. “For patients, that means for now, they can continue to make decisions about their bodies, lives, and future in their home state," she said. (Cazares and Fentem, 6/10)

St. Louis Public Radio: Judge Temporarily Protects Access To Abortion At Planned Parenthood's St. Louis Clinic

Stelzer wrote that the proper venue for a review of the state's actions on a license is the Administrative Hearing Commission. But he said that can't occur until the state makes a decision on Planned Parenthood's application for a renewed license, as the commission would need an action to review. (Cazares and Fentem, 6/10)

Kansas City Star: Missouri Lab Records Show Failed Abortion At STL Clinic

An inspection report from a lab that reviewed tissue samples from an embattled Planned Parenthood clinic in St. Louis shows evidence of a failed or incomplete abortion that necessitated a second procedure a month later. State officials, in a court fight with Planned Parenthood over the facility’s license, have cited the lab report as one reason they want to interview physicians who worked at the clinic. (Marso and Thomas, 6/10)

Kansas City Star: Will Missouri’s Abortion Law Worsen Infant Mortality Rate?

A renewed debate over abortion is roiling Missouri, with the state’s last provider in danger of losing its license and, starting in August, a near-total ban on abortions after eight weeks of pregnancy. While state law increasingly reflects a desire to see women carry pregnancies to term and give birth, Missouri remains one of the most dangerous places in the developed world to do so. (Marso, 6/11)

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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