U.S. Repro Watch, October 19

  • US Repro Watch
4 min. read

U.S. Repro Watch provides periodic updates on news of interest on U.S. reproductive rights. Here are a few recent items you won’t want to miss:

1. Independent pharmacies across the country have started to dispense abortion pills under rules created by the Biden Administration earlier this year.

2. New Jersey state officials announced that contraceptives will be available over the counter without a prescription by spring 2024.

  • After two state boards advanced rules under a law enacted in January, pharmacists will be able to provide oral, transdermal or vaginal contraceptives such as birth control pills and patches, vaginal rings and diaphragms without a prescription.
  • New Jersey will join about 30 other states that permit pharmacists to prescribe contraceptives.

3. A federal appeals court temporarily limited Idaho’s ability to enforce its near-total abortion ban in medical emergencies.

Learn more.

4. Florida’s Attorney General asked the state supreme court to block a proposed constitutional amendment seeking to protect abortion rights.

  • Although abortion-rights supporters have so far gathered more than 400,000 signatures to get the measure on the ballot next year, the state attorney general notified the Florida Supreme Court that she plans to argue that the amendment’s language is invalid, although she didn’t explain why.
  • The proposed amendment would bar laws that restrict abortion “before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.”

5. State officials in Wyoming asked a court to rule that the state’s total abortion ban is constitutional, claiming that abortion is not health care.

  • Abortion providers argue that abortion is health care and access is protected by the state constitution, which explicitly protects the right to make one’s own health care decisions.

Did you know?

A study by the Guttmacher Institute found that North Carolina’s recently enacted abortion restrictions have severely reduced abortion access in the state. The study, published October 11, reports that abortions in the state plummeted by 31% the month after the new measures took effect on July 1. The new restrictions include a ban on abortion care after 12 weeks of pregnancy and an in-person requirement for state-mandated counseling, which forces patients to make a separate trip to a health care facility at least 72 hours before the abortion.

An earlier study by Guttmacher found that in the first six months of 2023, before its new restriction took effect, North Carolina saw a 55% increase in abortions compared to 2020.

“The steep drop we see in North Carolina’s July abortion numbers likely represents both North Carolinians and out-of-state patients who are no longer able to access vital reproductive health care due to arbitrary gestational bans and medically unnecessary barriers,” said the report’s lead researcher Isaac Maddow-Zimet.

Coming Up

October 31: Hearing over Alabama Attorney General’s Threats to Sue Abortion Helpers

  • In July, health care providers and an abortion fund filed a lawsuit against the state attorney general over his threats to prosecute those who help Alabamians travel across state lines for abortion care.
  • The plaintiffs have asked the court to rule that the state cannot criminally charge those facilitating or providing information about out-of-state travel for abortion care.

November 28: Texas Supreme Court Oral Arguments in Zurawski v. State of Texas