The Guardian (USA)

US supreme court appears divided after hearing arguments on emergency abortion care

- Carter Sherman

For the second time in a month, the US supreme court on Wednesday heard arguments in a major abortion-rights case, the second to reach the justices since they overturned Roe v Wade two years ago.

Wednesday’s case involves a 1986 federal law called the Emergency Medical

Treatment and Active Labor Act, or Emtala, which requires hospitals that receive federal dollars to stabilize the health ofpatients who show up at their emergency rooms with medical emergencie­s. The Biden administra­tion has sued the state of Idaho, arguing that its ban clashes with Emtala because Idaho only permits abortions in medical emergencie­s if a woman’s life is at risk – a higher threshold than Emtala.

Tensions flared at multiple moments during the two-hour hearing. The court’s three liberal justices – all of whom are women – spent several minutes emphasizin­g the medical and legal dilemmas unleashed by bans like Idaho’s, while conservati­ve justice Samuel Alito raised an anti-abortion theory that would ultimately lead to the end of abortion writ large. By the end of the hearing, conservati­ve justice

Amy Coney Barrett appeared to be the most skeptical of Idaho’s arguments, but the court seemed largely divided along ideologica­l lines.

Elizabeth Prelogar, the US solicitor general, emphasized the danger now facing women who show up in crisis at Idaho emergency rooms.

“If a woman comes to an emergency room facing a grave threat to her health, but she isn’t yet facing death, doctors either have to delay treatment and allow her condition to materially deteriorat­e, or they’re airlifting her out of the state so she can get the emergency care that she needs,” Prelogar said. “One hospital system in Idaho says that, right now, it’s having to transfer pregnant woman in medical crisis out of the state about once every other week. That’s

untenable and Emtala does not countenanc­e it.”

The case is a test of one of the Biden administra­tion’s chief efforts to protect abortion rights. Shortly after the supreme court overturned Roe and allowed states to outlaw abortion, the administra­tion issued guidance clarifying that Emtala requires hospitals everywhere to perform abortions if patients need them in emergencie­s.

A federal judge initially sided with the Biden administra­tion, stopping Idaho from enforcing the parts of the ban that conflicted with Emtala. But the supreme court in January issued an order allowing Idaho’s full abortion ban to take effect.

Idaho, which is also represente­d in the case by the powerful Christian law firm the Alliance Defending Freedom, has argued in court papers that its ban does not conflict with Emtala, in part because Emtala does not mention abortion and cannot compel doctors to offer care that is illegal under state law.

Liberal justices Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor hammered Joshua N Turner, a lawyer for Idaho, on when and if doctors could intervene in cases where a woman’s health is at risk but her life is not yet threatened. At one point, Sotomayor read off a list of cases of women whose healthcare was delayed due to abortion bans, including the story of a woman whose abortion was delayed to the point that she lost her pregnancy and then had to get a hysterecto­my.

“You’re telling me the doctor there couldn’t have done the abortion earlier?” Sotomayor asked Turner.

“It goes back to whether a doctor can in good faith medical judgment – ” Turner started to say.

“That’s a lot for the doctor to risk,” Sotomayor interrupte­d. A provider who violates Idaho’s ban could face up to five years in prison.

Coney Barrett, the sole woman among the conservati­ve majority, seemed taken aback by Turner’s claim that doctor could be prosecuted for performing an abortion in order to protect a woman’s health. While Turner insisted that Idaho’s state legislatur­e did not mean for its ban to apply to doctors acting in good faith to save a woman’s life, Coney Barrett asked: “What if a prosecutor thought differentl­y?”

“That, Your Honor, is the nature of prosecutor­ial discretion,” Turner replied. “And it may result in a case.”

Idaho is one of seven states with laws on the books that require a patient’s life to be at risk before an emergency abortion can be performed.

Idaho has also argued that Emtala requires providers to treat an “unborn child”. Justice Samuel Alito, a diehard conservati­ve, brought up that phrase, indicating that Emtala is meant to imply that doctors have two equal patients when a pregnant woman shows up at an ER: the woman and her fetus.

“It seems that the plain meaning is that the hospital must try to eliminate any immediate threat to the child, but performing an abortion is antithetic­al to that duty,” Alito said.

Prelogar insisted that phrase, added to Emtala in 1989, was meant to ensure that hospitals treated women whose fetuses were in crisis while they were not.

“The statute did nothing to displace the woman herself as an individual with an emergency medical condition,” Prelogar replied. “And in many of the cases you’re thinking about, there is no possible way to stabilize the unborn child because the fetus is sufficient­ly before viability that it’s inevitable that the pregnancy is going to be lost.”

The pair went back and forth for several minutes before Alito added: “Nobody is suggesting that a woman isn’t an individual, that she doesn’t deserve stabilizat­ion.”

But the exchange evoked the specter of fetal personhood, a priority of the anti-abortion movement that aims to endow fetuses with full legal rights and protection­s – even if those rights conflict with those of the woman carrying the fetus. Enshrining fetal personhood across the US – which is also a goal of the anti-abortion movement – would dramatical­ly rewrite vast swaths of US law and ban abortion entirely.

The consequenc­es for abortions in medical emergencie­s, like those at issue in the Wednesday arguments, are unclear; although anti-abortion activists have spent years pursuing fetal personhood, the end of Roe has forced them – and the rest of the nation – to reckon for the first time with its realworld consequenc­es.

Wednesday’s hearing comes just weeks after the court heard arguments in another abortion rights case, which involved the availabili­ty of a common abortion pill and the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s ability to regulate it. Lawyers for the Alliance Defending Freedom also argued that case on behalf of anti-abortion activists. Both arguments have significan­t implicatio­ns for the federal government’s power to regulate healthcare.

If anti-abortion states prevail, “you’re basically deconstruc­ting the entire way that we manage health nationally in this country,” said Gerson Smoger, chair of the Physicians for Human Rights board of directors anda co-author of an amicus brief in the Idaho case. “There has to be some baseline that we have, nationally.”

Rulings in both the Emtala and abortion pill cases are expected in June.

 ?? Photograph: Mariam Zuhaib/AP ?? Abortion rights activists at the supreme court on Wednesday.
Photograph: Mariam Zuhaib/AP Abortion rights activists at the supreme court on Wednesday.

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