ADVOCACY COLUMN

June Medical Services v. Russo: Understanding this high-stakes abortion case

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

If SCOTUS rules against June Medical Services, stating that admitting privileges do not cause an undue burden for women seeking to access abortion care, other states likely will introduce and enact similar legislation. These TRAP laws have the potential to limit or eliminate access to abortion for 25 million people of reproductive age. Numerous studies have demonstrated that limiting access to abortion care does not decrease the number of abortions but can result in patients using unsafe means to obtain an abortion.8

The medical community recognizes the danger of enacting restrictive legislation. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), along with the American Medical Association, the Society of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, the Association for Sexual and Reproductive Medicine, the American Association of Family Practitioners, and many others, filed an amicus curiae in support of the June Medical Services plaintiffs.9 These brief filings are critical to ensuring the courts hear physician voices in this important legal decision, and ACOG’s briefs have been quoted in several previous Supreme Court opinions, concurrences, and dissents.

Action items

  • Although June Medical Services v. Russo’s decision will not be made until early summer 2020, we can continue to use our voices and expertise to speak out against laws designed to limit access to abortion—at the state and federal levels. As women’s health clinicians, we see the impact abortion restrictions have on our patients, especially our low income and rural patients. Sharing these stories with our legislators, testifying for or against legislation, and speaking out in our communities can have a powerful impact. Check with your local ACOG chapter or with ACOG’s state and government affairs office for more information.
  • Follow along with this case at SCOTUS Blog.
  • Lastly, make sure you are registered to vote. We are in an election year, and using our voices in and out of the ballot box is critical. You can register here.

Pages

Recommended Reading

The Affordable Care Act, closing in on a decade
MDedge ObGyn
ObGyn compensation: Strides in the gender wage gap indicate closure possible
MDedge ObGyn
Supporting our gender-diverse patients
MDedge ObGyn
The electronic medical record’s role in ObGyn burnout and patient care
MDedge ObGyn
What every ObGyn should know about Supreme Court rulings in the recent term
MDedge ObGyn
Court strikes down Trump’s conscience rule
MDedge ObGyn
OTC hormonal contraception: An important goal in the fight for reproductive justice
MDedge ObGyn
HHS drug importation proposals aim to address high costs
MDedge ObGyn
ObGyn malpractice liability risk: 2020 developments and probabilities
MDedge ObGyn
Trump seeks to cut NIH, CDC budgets, some Medicare spending
MDedge ObGyn