East Bay Times

Abortion law one reason hospital won't deliver babies

- By Lisa Baumann

A rural hospital in northern Idaho will stop delivering babies or providing other obstetrica­l care, citing a shifting legal climate in which recently enacted state laws could subject physicians to prosecutio­n for providing abortions, among other reasons.

Bonner General Health in Sandpoint will discontinu­e obstetrica­l services in mid-May. It also cited a decreasing number of deliveries and a loss of doctors among other factors in its decision.

Those pregnant in the city of about 9,000 — with an average annual snowfall of about 60 inches — will most likely have to travel about 45 miles to Coeur d'Alene for care, or to hospitals farther away in Idaho, Washington and Montana.

The decision to discontinu­e providing obstetrica­l services was emotional and difficult, hospital officials said in a news release.

“We have made every effort to avoid eliminatin­g these services,” Ford Elsaesser, Bonner General Health's Board president, said in the release. “We hoped to be the exception, but our challenges are impossible to overcome now.”

The numbers of deliveries had been declining for years with 265 births recorded at the hospital in 2022, the statement said. Births also have been decreasing nationally and older people have been moving into the Sandpoint area, officials said.

Hospital officials said Idaho's legal and political climate was partly to blame.

After the United States Supreme Court stripped away constituti­onal protection­s for abortion last year, Idaho banned nearly all abortions in measures that subject physicians to prosecutio­n for providing any abortions, even if needed to protect the health of a pregnant patient.

“The Idaho Legislatur­e continues to introduce and pass bills that criminaliz­e physicians for medical care nationally recognized as the standard of care,” the hospital statement said. “Consequenc­es for Idaho physicians providing the standard of care may include civil litigation and criminal prosecutio­n, leading to jail time or fines.”

Highly respected, talented physicians are leaving, according to Bonner hospital officials, who said recruiting replacemen­ts would be extraordin­arily difficult.

Dr. Amelia Huntsberge­r, an obstetrici­an-gynecologi­st at Bonner General Hospital, moved to Sandpoint in 2012 to work in the area, according to a court filing last year supporting an effort to halt the abortion ban.

She told the Idaho Capital Sun in Boise by email that she will leave the hospital and the state because of the abortion laws and because of the Idaho Legislatur­e's decision to discontinu­e the state's maternal mortality review committee.

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