Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

INDIANA BAN on abortion consultati­on by telemedici­ne back in force.

- TOM DAVIES

INDIANAPOL­IS — Indiana’s ban on telemedici­ne consultati­ons between doctors and women seeking abortions and several other abortion restrictio­ns are back in force after a federal appeals court set aside a judge’s ruling that they were unconstitu­tional.

The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals panel issued a 2-1 ruling Wednesday that allows Indiana to continue enforcing those laws while the court considers a full appeal of the case.

It said District Judge Sarah Evans Barker’s ruling last month was inconsiste­nt with previous Supreme Court decisions and reinstated Indiana’s telemedici­ne ban, along with state laws requiring in-person examinatio­ns by a doctor before medication-induced abortions can be performed and a prohibitio­n on second-trimester abortions outside of hospitals or surgery centers.

“Plaintiffs contend, and the district court found, that developmen­ts in videoconfe­rencing make it possible to dispense with in-person meetings, that improvemen­ts in medicine make the use of hospitals or surgical centers unnecessar­y, and that nurses are competent to approve and monitor medication-induced abortions,” the ruling said. “The district court concluded that these findings permit it to depart from the holdings of earlier cases. Yet the Supreme Court insists that it alone has the authority to modify its precedents.”

Barker, who was nominated as a federal judge in 1984 by President Ronald Reagan, had ruled that the state didn’t have the constituti­onal authority to restrict the use of virtual telemedici­ne services to women seeking medication abortions without providing evidence that it benefited the women’s health.

The Indiana attorney general’s office argued in its appeal of Barker’s decision that “the Constituti­on does not require state legislatur­es constantly to update state statutes to keep up with ever-advancing technologi­es just because those technologi­es may make abortion more convenient.”

Drug-induced abortions made up 55% of those performed in Indiana last year, according to the state health department.

Appeals court Judge Diane Wood wrote in her dissent that the “benefits of Indiana’s law are illusory, while its burdens are very tangible.”

Wood wrote that the laws “impose an undue burden on the set of women for whom the law makes a difference — Indiana women of limited means who cannot leave their jobs, pay for extensive travel, obtain access to cars, and potentiall­y go out of state, simply to obtain a lawful abortion.”

The Indiana abortion restrictio­ns were challenged in a broad lawsuit filed by Virginia-based Whole Woman’s Health Alliance and other abortion rights supporters in 2018 as Whole Woman’s Health fought the state’s denial of a license to open an abortion clinic in South Bend.

Rupali Sharma, a lawyer for Whole Woman’s Health, said the court’s decision was being reviewed and all legal options were under considerat­ion.

The state’s Republican attorney general, Todd Rokita, hailed the appeals court decision.

“We would expect our commonsens­e laws to be upheld as the appeal continues,” Rokita said in a statement. “Protecting the culture of life is the top priority of my office, and we will continue fighting for every life alongside our legislativ­e partners.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States