Lodi News-Sentinel

Missouri denies new license to Planned Parenthood clinic

- By Crystal Thomas

ST. LOUIS — Missouri has rejected the license applicatio­n of the Planned Parenthood clinic in St. Louis, the state’s sole abortion provider, but the facility will remain open under court order for the time being.

The decision by the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services was announced just prior to a hearing Friday in St. Louis City Circuit Court. It has no immediate impact, however, because a preliminar­y injunction keeping the clinic open remains in place.

But the agency’s formal denial of the license clears the way for the next phase of the legal dispute, which is likely to be Planned Parenthood’s appeal of the decision to the Administra­tive Hearing Commission, a body that resolves disputes between state agencies and individual­s or businesses.

DHSS director Randall Williams said during a news conference Friday that the licensing decision came after a March inspection turned up complicati­ons in four surgical abortions. Two of them left patients still pregnant (requiring another procedure), one resulted in an infection and one ended with the patient being rushed to the hospital, bleeding heavily.

“None of us would hope that for anybody,” Williams said.

Under normal circumstan­ces, Williams said, inspectors would work with the health facility to identify what went wrong and form a plan to fix any systematic problems. But in the case of the St. Louis clinic, the doctors involved (who are residents and fellows and not technicall­y employed by the clinic), have refused to be interviewe­d.

“It makes a very difficult job for our regulators — in fact unpreceden­ted — to investigat­e the quality of care if the people who took care of the patient won’t talk to them,” Williams said.

Williams said the agency was doing its routine regulatory work and that no political pressure was exerted over whether to pull the clinic’s license.

Planned Parenthood said that the court fight will not prevent the clinic from serving women.

“While Gov. (Mike) Parson and his political cronies are on the wrong side of history, nothing changes right now for patients who need access to abortion at Planned Parenthood,” Dr. Colleen McNicholas, a physician with the clinic, said in a statement. “We will continue providing abortion care for as long as the court protects our ability to do so.”

Williams also announced that it would eliminate a requiremen­t that the clinic perform pelvic exams on patients three days in advance of an abortion and then again on the day of the procedure.

He said the agency would issue an emergency rule allowing pelvic exams closer to the time of the abortion if the clinic believes that it is best for the patient.

The state’s reversal comes after Planned Parenthood informed regulators earlier this week that it would not do the exam three days in advance, a practice McNicholas called “disrespect­ful and dehumanizi­ng.”

During a brief court hearing that began at 10 a.m., Planned Parenthood attorney Jamie Boyer told Judge Michael Stelzer that the clinic received the letter announcing license denial about 30 minutes earlier.

DHSS had allowed the clinic’s license to lapse May 31 without acting on the renewal applicatio­n. Planned Parenthood preemptive­ly sued the week before the license expired and court orders have allowed its clinic to continue to provide abortions.

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