The Record (Troy, NY)

Challenge

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and thus riskier, will increase. The number of abortions will also increase. And there will be fewer tests for sexually transmitte­d infections and cancer screens — putting patients and their partners at great health risk,” the lawsuit said.

Planned Parenthood, which operates a nationwide network of health centers, says it will leave the Title X program if the rule is implemente­d, forgoing an estimated $60 million in annual funding rather than abide by the new restrictio­ns.

Such an exit could have enormous impact: Planned Parenthood serves 1.6 million of the 4 million women who get care through Title X. The program, enacted in 1970, makes family-planning services available to low-income individual­s for free or at low cost.

In the lawsuit filed in U. S. District Court in Eugene, Oregon, the AMA and Planned Parenthood asserted that the new rule violates a congressio­nal mandate that patients re-

ceiving informatio­n about their pregnancie­s through Title X must receive complete, unbiased informatio­n about their options. They argued that the ban on abortion referrals violates this mandate and unconstitu­tionally infringes on health care providers’ responsibi­lities to their patients.

“Because of the administra­tion’s overreach and interferen­ce ... physicians will be prohibited from having open, frank conversati­ons with their patients about all their health care options,” said the AMA’s president, Dr. Barbara McAneny. “This blatant violation of patients’ rights under the Code of Medical Ethics is untenable.”

Leana Wen, a physician who is Planned Parenthood’s president, said a majority of the Title X patients served by her organizati­on are low-income black and Hispanic women.

“Families that are struggling to make ends meet and people who live in rural areas must have the same access to full, unbiased informatio­n from their doctor as everyone else,” said Wen. She stressed that Planned Parenthood, even if it left Title X, would continue of-

fer its full array of services to patients, including birth control and screenings for sexually transmitte­d diseases and cancer.

The new Trump administra­tion rule is scheduled to take effect in 60 days, but implementa­tion is likely to be delayed by litigation. In addition to the AMA/ Planned Parenthood lawsuit, the rule is being challenged in a lawsuit filed Monday by California officials and another filed Tuesday by officials in 20 other mostly Democratic controlled states. A lawsuit also is planned by the National Family Planning and Reproducti­ve Health Associatio­n, which represents publicly funded family planning providers.

The Department of Justice and the Department of Health and Human Services have declined comment on the lawsuits. HHS contends that the new rule “makes notable improvemen­ts designed to increase the number of patients served and improve the quality of their care.”

The AMA said it had two primary motives for challengin­g the rule: to prevent infringeme­nt on the physician/patient relationsh­ip

and to protect the integrity of Title X, which the AMA considers to be one of the most cost- effective federal health programs. Its grants totaled $286 million in the 2017 fiscal year.

The AMA has engaged previously in cases involving physician/patient communicat­ions. For example, it joined other medical organizati­ons in successful­ly opposing a Florida law that barred doctors from discussing firearm risks and safety with their patients.

One of the concerns of the AMA and Planned Parenthood is that the new Title X rule may result in a shift of some money to ideologica­lly conservati­ve entities which favor abstinence education and natural family planning and which would be unwilling or unable to provide women with the most effective forms of contracept­ion.

The new rule “blesses biased and incomplete pregnancy counseling where the interests of the patient are no longer paramount,” the lawsuit said. The rule “will politicize the practice of medicine and the delivery of health care.”

Abortion is a legal medical procedure, but federal

laws prohibit the use of taxpayer funds to pay for the procedure except in cases of rape, incest, or to save the life of the woman.

Religious conservati­ves and abortion opponents contend that Title X has been used to indirectly subsidize Planned Parenthood — the leading abortion pro-

vider in the U.S.

Groups such as the National Right to Life Committee have hailed the new rule, saying it does not cut funding, but “merely ensures that health facilities receiving Title X funds do not perform or promote abortion as a method of family planning.”

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