logo
Trump rescinds guidance protecting women in need of emergency abortions

Trump rescinds guidance protecting women in need of emergency abortions

Yahooa day ago

The Trump administration on Tuesday rescinded Biden-era guidance clarifying that hospitals in states with abortion bans cannot turn away pregnant patients who are in the midst of medical emergencies – a move that comes amid multiple red-state court battles over the guidance.
The guidance deals with the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (Emtala), which requires hospitals to stabilize patients facing medical emergencies. States such as Idaho and Texas have argued that the Biden administration's guidance, which it issued in the wake of the 2022 overturning of Roe v Wade, interpreted Emtala incorrectly.
In its letter rescinding the guidance, the Trump administration said that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) 'will continue to enforce Emtala, which protects all individuals who present to a hospital emergency department seeking examination or treatment, including for identified emergency medical conditions that place the health of a pregnant woman or her unborn child in serious jeopardy. CMS will work to rectify any perceived legal confusion and instability created by the former administration's actions.'
Abortion rights supporters said on Tuesday that rescinding the Biden administration's guidance will muddy hospitals' ability to interpret Emtala and endanger pregnant patients' lives. Since Roe's collapse, dozens of women have come forward to say that they were denied medical treatment due to abortion bans. A reported five pregnant women have died after having their care denied or delayed, or being unable to access legal abortions.
'This action sends a clear message: the lives and health of pregnant people are not worth protecting,' Dr Jamila Perritt, an OB-GYN and the president of Physicians for Reproductive Health, said in a statement. 'Complying with this law can mean the difference between life and death for pregnant people, forcing providers like me to choose between caring for someone in their time of need and turning my back on them to comply with cruel and dangerous laws.'
Last year, the US supreme court heard arguments in a case involving Idaho's abortion ban, which at the time only allowed abortions in cases where a woman's life was at risk. In contrast, most state abortion bans permit abortions when a patient's 'health' is in danger – a lower standard that could make it easier for doctors to intervene. Idaho's standard, the Biden administration said, blocked doctors from providing abortions in some emergencies and thus violated Emtala's requirement that hospitals must stabilize patients.
Ultimately, the supreme court punted on the issue by ruling 6-3 on procedural grounds that the case had been 'improvidently granted', indicating they should have never taken it up in the first place.
'This court had a chance to bring clarity and certainty to this tragic situation and we have squandered it,' wrote Ketanji Brown Jackson, the supreme court justice, at the time. 'And for as long as we refuse to declare what the law requires, pregnant patients in Idaho, Texas and elsewhere will be paying the price.'
The Trump administration's Tuesday move is not unexpected. In March, the administration moved to drop out of the case over the Idaho abortion ban. A local Idaho hospital later filed its own lawsuit over the ban.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump, Musk's Public Feud
Trump, Musk's Public Feud

Bloomberg

time6 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Trump, Musk's Public Feud

The Pulse with Francine Lacqua Elon Musk signaled he would move to cool tensions with US President Donald Trump, after differences between the two exploded Thursday into an all-out public feud. Earlier in the day, Musk called for Trump's impeachment and insinuated he was withholding the release of files related to disgraced New York financier Jeffrey Epstein because of his own presence in them. Trump, in turn, proposed cutting off the billionaire's government contracts, following his onetime adviser's repeated exhortations for Republicans to vote against the president's signature tax legislation. Musk's olive branch came after Tesla Inc. shares tanked 14% and his personal wealth dropped by $34 billion. Today's guests: Emmanuel Cau, Barclays European Equity Strategy Head, Gregory Peters, PGIM Fixed Income Co-CIO, Maria Demertzis, The Conference Board Economy, Strategy & Finance Center Europe Lead. (Source: Bloomberg)

Bessent Looks to Revamp Currency Monitoring After Damage Done
Bessent Looks to Revamp Currency Monitoring After Damage Done

Bloomberg

time6 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Bessent Looks to Revamp Currency Monitoring After Damage Done

I'm Chris Anstey, an economics editor in Boston. Today we're looking at the US Treasury's semiannual foreign-exchange report. Send us feedback and tips to ecodaily@ And if you aren't yet signed up to receive this newsletter, you can do so here. The first US Treasury semiannual assessment of American trading partners' exchange-rate policies since Trump returned to the White House read, in substance, much the same as the last one under President Joe Biden.

US Jobs Preview: What to Watch for in May Report
US Jobs Preview: What to Watch for in May Report

Bloomberg

time6 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

US Jobs Preview: What to Watch for in May Report

00:00 Normally this would be the biggest news of the day. What we're going to have to have some kind of weird number to display. Trump and Musk from the top of the news agenda these days. It's always possible. And certainly the markets are expecting a kind of week report in comparison to what we've had. As you mentioned earlier, 126,000, which is definitely down from what we've seen. It's not that the Fed wouldn't think it would be bad, but it's not what we have been watching. 4.2% to the unemployment rate and average hourly earnings actually slowing down a little bit on a year over year basis, even though they're up on a month over month basis, because it's kind of a base effect kind of thing. And I'm sure you've pointed out the whisper number is only 110,000. So Wall Street leaning negative here. We're going to watch the unemployment rate because that's what the Fed is watching, is their sign of whether or not the economy is slowing down and labor force size, it may be too early, but with all of the people who are no longer coming across the border, the labor force shouldn't be growing very much. And if that's the case, that will help hold unemployment down some. And then this hasn't gotten a lot of publicity because it really doesn't matter all that much. But there are huge revisions coming to the household survey today in all kinds of areas except for the unemployment rate. When they updated numbers, they made a mistake in the Excel spreadsheets and it has changed a lot of the numbers, but only by a thousand or two in all kinds of areas of the report. So economists can have fun parsing through that. But the BLS says it does not change the unemployment rate.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store