Los Angeles Times

High court backs abortion pill restrictio­n

Women must travel to get the medication, despite pandemic.

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — A divided Supreme Court on Tuesday granted an appeal from Trump administra­tion lawyers and restored an abortion rule that requires women who want medication to end an early pregnancy to travel to a hospital or clinic to pick up the pills, despite the COVID- 19 pandemic.

The justices, by a 6- 3 vote, set aside a Maryland judge’s nationwide order that waived the in- person pickup rule on the grounds that it was medically unnecessar­y and posed a health risk for women during the pandemic. All six conservati­ves voted in the majority, and the three liberals in dissent.

The decision is the court’s f irst on abortion since Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined in late October to f ill the seat of the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, solidifyin­g conservati­ves’ control of the court.

The incoming Biden administra­tion could seek to change the rule, but that could be a lengthy process.

A group representi­ng 60,000 obstetrici­ans and gynecologi­sts sued last year to challenge the in- person pickup rule as nonsensica­l during the pandemic, saying a woman could consult with a doctor via telemedici­ne but nonetheles­s was required to travel to a hospital to pick up pills that she could take at home.

But the Trump administra­tion continued to f ight against relaxing the rule, even temporaril­y. Last month, Jeffrey B. Wall, the acting solicitor general, urged the court to intervene and insisted there was no evidence “that requiring inperson visits as part of providing an abortion would substantia­lly impede women’s access to abortion during the pandemic.”

In response, the doctors

said the administra­tion had chosen the “most deadly phase” of the pandemic to try again to impose a travel requiremen­t for pregnant women, even after it relaxed similar rules for patients seeking opioids like fentanyl.

After weeks of deliberati­on, the court issued a brief order granting the appeal on Tuesday.

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. concurred in the result, writing: “Here as in related contexts concerning government responses to the pandemic, my view is that courts owe significan­t deference to the politicall­y accountabl­e entities,” whether state governors or, in this instance, federal agency officials. The other five conservati­ve justices, including Barrett, did not write to explain their views.

In dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said enforcing the rule was unreasonab­le.

“The FDA’s policy imposes an unnecessar­y, unjustifia­ble, irrational, and undue burden on women seeking an abortion during the current pandemic, and because the government has not demonstrat­ed irreparabl­e harm from the injunction, I dissent,” she wrote. Justice Elena Kagan agreed; Justice Stephen G. Breyer said he too would have denied the appeal.

Tuesday’s order may signal a more concerted effort by the high court to pull back on abortion rights. The justices meet Friday to consider an appeal of a Mississipp­i law that would bar legal abortions after the 15th week of a pregnancy.

The court’s position on abortion restrictio­ns has been uncertain since Ginsburg’s death in September. In June, Ginsburg was part of a 5- 4 majority that struck down a Louisiana law requiring doctors who perform abortions to have admitting privileges at a local hospital.

In that ruling, Roberts joined with the liberal justices based on precedent; the court in 2016 had invalidate­d a nearly identical law from Texas. In his separate opinion, Roberts also cited a 1992 decision in which the court said abortion regulation­s can stand so long as they do not put a “substantia­l obstacle” in the path of women seeking the procedure.

Justice Department lawyers relied on that reasoning when they first appealed the abortion medication case in late August. They said the long- standing rules on dispensing abortion pills did not prevent women from obtaining an abortion.

Medication is now the

most commonly used method of early abortion.

“It’s exceedingl­y safe and has been used by nearly 4 million women in the United States since 2000,” said Andrea Miller, president of the National Institute for Reproducti­ve Health, which advocates for reproducti­ve freedom.

Conservati­ves, however, want to ban the pills. In September, Sen. Ted Cruz ( RTexas), joined by 20 other Senate Republican­s, wrote a letter to Stephen Hahn, commission­er of the Food and Drug Administra­tion, and called for reclassify­ing the abortion pill as a danger to public health.

“To protect vulnerable women and children, we strongly urge the FDA to remove this deadly drug from the U. S. market,” he wrote.

The Supreme Court was presented with sharply different data on the risks of medication abortions: The administra­tion’s lawyer said the abortion pill “carries serious risk for up to 7% of patients.” A group representi­ng obstetrici­ans and gynecologi­sts said in reply that this “inf lates the risks by a factor of 70. As the FDA reported in 2016, ‘ major adverse events ... are exceedingl­y rare, generally far below 0.1%.’ ”

Since 2000, the FDA has authorized the use of two drugs — mifepristo­ne and misoprosto­l — taken over two days to induce abortion of a pregnancy up to 10 weeks. A doctor may prescribe the pills after consulting with the woman and advising her of potential risks.

A separate FDA rule says the pills may be dispensed only at a hospital, clinic or medical office, though the woman is likely to take the pills at home.

In May 2020, the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts sued, arguing that there was no medical justificat­ion for requiring pregnant patients to travel to a hospital or medical office to pick up abortion pills. Instead, they could be mailed to her home, they argued.

U. S. District Judge Theodore D. Chuang, an appointee of President Obama, agreed and cited studies showing that most of those seeking abortions are lowincome women of color. A majority of them have a child at home. For them, traveling to a clinic poses a risk to their health, the judge said, and he ruled that enforcing the in- person dispensing rule during the pandemic puts an unconstitu­tional burden on their right to abortion.

When the U. S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals refused to lift the judge’s order, Wall sent an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court in the case of FDA vs. ACOG. He urged the justices to intervene to block “judicial second- guessing of an expert agency’s judgment,” and he argued that women remain free to obtain abortions.

“The Constituti­on does not guarantee access to the abortion method of one’s choice where, as here, reasonable alternativ­es remain available,” Wall said. “Given that surgical methods of abortion remain widely available, the enforcemen­t of long- standing safety requiremen­ts for a medication abortion during the f irst 10 weeks of pregnancy does not constitute a substantia­l obstacle to abortion access, even if the COVID- 19 pandemic has made obtaining any method of abortion in person somewhat riskier.”

ACLU lawyers who represente­d the doctors’ group lambasted this argument, saying it would put patients at greater risk. They also said abortion pills were singled out for especially stringent regulation.

“Of the more than more than 20,000 FDA- approved drugs, mifepristo­ne is the only one that patients must pick up in person in a clinical setting but are permitted to self- administer elsewhere, unsupervis­ed,” they said.

In response to the Supreme Court’s ruling, lawyer Julia Kaye of the ACLU Reproducti­ve Freedom Project said, “The court’s ruling rejects science, compassion and decades of legal precedent in service of the Trump administra­tion’s anti- abortion agenda. It is mind- boggling that the Trump administra­tion’s top priority on its way out the door is to needlessly endanger even more people during this dark pandemic winter — and chilling that the Supreme Court allowed it.

“The Biden- Harris administra­tion must right this wrong on day one and hold f irm to its commitment to support both evidenceba­sed regulation­s and reproducti­ve freedom,” she added.

The American Medical Assn., American Academy of Family Physicians and 15 other healthcare groups submitted a friend- of- thecourt brief urging the justices to block FDA enforcemen­t of the in- person dispensing rule because of the danger of spreading the coronaviru­s. California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra joined a group of 22 Democratic state attorneys in urging the court to deny the appeal.

“We are experienci­ng an unpreceden­ted global pandemic, and instead of making care more accessible by taking precaution­s to reduce the spread of COVID, the Trump administra­tion continues to push for antichoice restrictio­ns that put women in harm’s way,” Becerra said.

 ?? Manoocher Deghati AFP ?? MIFEPRISTO­NE, the “abortion pill,” can be taken at home. The Supreme Court restored a rule, which was waived due to COVID- 19, requiring a visit to a doctor.
Manoocher Deghati AFP MIFEPRISTO­NE, the “abortion pill,” can be taken at home. The Supreme Court restored a rule, which was waived due to COVID- 19, requiring a visit to a doctor.

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