Texarkana Gazette

Judge maintains block of rule on abortion pills

- MICHAEL KUNZELMAN

COLLEGE PARK, Md. — A federal judge in Maryland has denied the Trump administra­tion’s request to reinstate a rule that would require women to visit a hospital, clinic or medical office to obtain an abortion pill during the covid-19 pandemic, noting that public health risks for patients only have grown worse.

U.S. District Judge Theodore Chuang, who agreed to suspend the rule in July, refused Wednesday to lift or limit the scope of that order. He rejected the administra­tion’s argument that economic conditions and patients’ access to medical facilities, child care and transporta­tion have improved sufficient­ly to warrant dissolving the preliminar­y injunction.

Infection and hospitaliz­ation rates are soaring across the U.S., and the nation is going through what the coordinato­r of the White House Coronaviru­s Task Force has deemed the “most deadly phase of the pandemic,” the judge noted.

“Accordingl­y, while the progress on vaccines and medical treatments for covid-19 are cause for optimism and may advance the day that the Preliminar­y Injunction will no longer be warranted, the impact of these advances to date has not meaningful­ly altered the current health risks and obstacles to women seeking medication abortions,” Chuang wrote.

The judge also said the Trump administra­tion has not presented any evidence that its temporary inability to enforce the rule has caused any harm to the government or to patients.

Chuang’s order in July temporaril­y prohibits the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion from enforcing the “in-person requiremen­ts” for dispensing the drug mifepristo­ne during the pandemic. The judge concluded that the rule imposes a “substantia­l obstacle” to abortion patients and likely is unconstitu­tional under the pandemic’s circumstan­ces.

Justice Department attorneys appealed Chuang’s July 13 order. In October, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the government could present a request to dissolve or modify the injunction based on new evidence and directed Chuang to rule on it within 40 days. The Supreme Court did not rule on the merits of Chuang’s decision.

Chuang didn’t set any geographic limitation­s on the injunction. He refused Wednesday to reconsider the national scope of his decision, saying the pandemic’s conditions are “uniformly dire across the nation.”

“Thus, at the present time, there is no meaningful basis by which to distinguis­h one state or region from others as uniquely free from the health risks, and thus the undue burden, imposed by the covid-19 pandemic,” he wrote.

The FDA approved mifepristo­ne to be used in combinatio­n with a second drug, misoprosto­l, to end an early pregnancy or manage a miscarriag­e. Chuang’s ruling allows health care providers to arrange for mifepristo­ne to be mailed or delivered to patients during the pandemic.

The preliminar­y injunction is due to expire 30 days after the end of the public health emergency declared by the secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

“With the positive news relating to vaccines, there is reason to hope that day will come soon,” Chuang wrote.

The American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts and other groups sued Health and Human Services and the FDA in May to challenge the rule.

“The Trump administra­tion’s argument that this travel mandate for abortion patients no longer poses significan­t covid-19 risks is violently out of touch with reality,” American Civil Liberties Union attorney Julia Kaye said Wednesday.

Plaintiffs’ attorneys have argued that the FDA’s in-person requiremen­ts infringe on women’s constituti­onal rights to an abortion and violate the Fifth Amendment.

Government lawyers have argued that the requiremen­ts are necessary to ensure that patients safely use mifepristo­ne.

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