New York Daily News

Hands off abort pill: city

Tells Supremes restrictio­ns would ‘overburden’ hospitals

- BY TIM BALK

New York City and five other large blue-state municipali­ties filed a friendof-the-court brief with the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday urging the court not to limit Americans’ access to a widely used abortion pill.

The brief said a Supreme Court ruling reducing access to the pill would put added pressure on strained municipal hospital systems, including NYC Health + Hospitals, the nation’s largest system, by forcing them to carry out more abortions at the expense of other care.

San Francisco; Los Angeles County; Cook County in Illinois, which includes Chicago; King County in Washington, which includes Seattle, and Santa Clara County in California signed on to the filing, formally referred to as an amicus brief.

The city’s 33-page brief comes in a closely watched case over the fate of mifepristo­ne, one drug in the two-part sequence typically used in pill-induced abortions. The conservati­ve-leaning Supreme Court is considerin­g vacating or limiting the drug’s quarter-century-old Food and Drug Administra­tion approval.

Last summer, a U.S. Court of Appeals panel in New Orleans ruled in favor of limiting access to the pill, a decision that partially reversed a Texas federal judge’s order aimed at quashing the drug’s federal approval altogether. The appeals court’s ruling, if adopted by the Supreme Court, would return the pill to a regulatory framework that existed until 2016.

The case is the Supreme Court’s most significan­t involving abortion rights since it overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, erasing the federal right to abortion.

A decision in the pill case — Food and Drug Administra­tion vs. Alliance for Hippocrati­c Medicine — is expected by the late spring or early summer, and could have far-reaching health care and political implicatio­ns, coming months ahead of the November elections. Oral arguments are scheduled for March 26.

About half of the abortions in the U.S. are carried out with medication.

The Supreme Court, which was remade by former President Donald Trump and now has a 6-to-3 conservati­ve supermajor­ity, is not seen as likely to fully vacate the pill’s Food and Drug Administra­tion authorizat­ion.

But a ruling in line with the Louisiana appeals court’s decision would prevent patients from accessing the pill by mail or without repeated consultati­ons with doctors. New York, led by Mayor Adams, and other municipali­ties with Democratic leadership said such a shift would be painful for public hospitals.

“Winding back the FDA’s actions to before 2016 would significan­tly increase costs on already overburden­ed public hospitals and health care systems,” said the brief. “Thousands of patients in need of all kinds of nonemergen­cy surgical care could find themselves facing significan­t delays in obtaining procedures.”

Separately, Gov. Hochul joined a coalition of governors in filing another amicus brief that made a similar argument emphasizin­g health care services, according to her office.

In a statement, Hochul said she joined other governors in “demanding an end to the harmful politicizi­ng of reproducti­ve health care” and urging the Supreme Court to “recognize the longstandi­ng, independen­t scientific authority of the FDA.”

 ?? GETTY ?? Brief filed with high court by New York and five other municipali­ties relates to mifepristo­ne, one drug in two-part sequence used in pill-induced abortions.
GETTY Brief filed with high court by New York and five other municipali­ties relates to mifepristo­ne, one drug in two-part sequence used in pill-induced abortions.

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