The Supreme Court on Monday refused to require doctors in Texas to perform certain emergency abortions when the procedure would conflict with the stateâ€
The justices left in place a lower-court ruling that rejected the Biden administrationâ€
As is common when the court refuses to review a lower court decision, the order — issued on the first day of the Supreme Courtâ€
The courtâ€
In the Idaho case, the justices in June temporarily cleared the way for doctors to terminate pregnancies without being subject to prosecution under that stateâ€
In both Idaho and Texas, the Biden administration has asserted that the federal law — the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act — mandates emergency abortion care when it is the only treatment that can save a pregnant womanâ€
The Biden administration first turned to the law known as EMTALA in late 2021 as a way to try to ensure access to abortion in limited situations. In July 2022, after the Supreme Court overturned Roe, the administration told hospitals receiving Medicare funds that emergency room doctors must terminate pregnancies in some circumstances, even if a stateâ€
The state of Texas successfully sued the Department of Health and Human Services in District Court to block federal enforcement of that policy, accusing the administration of exceeding its authority by implementing it without the required process. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit upheld the decision in January, finding that the Texas ban on abortion does not conflict with EMTALA. The court said the federal law does not require any particular care and never requires pregnancy termination.
“EMTALA does not mandate medical treatments, let alone abortion care, nor does it preempt Texas law,� the judges wrote.
Solicitor General Elizabeth B. Prelogar had urged the Supreme Court to get rid of the 5th Circuit decision in light of its action in the Idaho case. Defending the administrationâ€
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton had asked the justices to leave the 5th Circuit ruling in place and drew a distinction between the abortion bans in Idaho and Texas. The Texas law, he said, allows for abortion when necessary to prevent a serious risk of “substantial impairment of a major bodily function.�
In both Texas and Idaho, however, the medical exceptions included in abortion bans are vague, using language that has left doctors unsure of how sick a woman must be before they can legally terminate a pregnancy.
“Given that neither exception is particularly clear, and the interpretation is ongoing, itâ€
By refusing to consider the Texas case, months after sending the Idaho case back to lower courts, the Supreme Court has left all options open for future rulings on emergency abortions, Ziegler said.
“Itâ€
Alexis McGill Johnson, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, responded to the courtâ€
“Pregnant people must be able to obtain the emergency care they need in hospital emergency rooms — which includes abortions, regardless of a stateâ€
John Seago, president of Texas Right to Life, said in a statement on X that the Texas law has “clear & sufficient provisions for treating women� in medical emergencies. He blamed the Biden administration for introducing a “new vague standard that would only lead to more confusion� among doctors about their responsibilities.
Women in Texas, however, say doctors have continued to deny abortions in emergency situations.
Earlier this year, Kelsie Norris-De La Cruz was denied care at a Dallas area hospital for an ectopic pregnancy, a life-threatening condition where a fetus implants outside of the uterus. The doctor sent Norris-De La Cruz home to wait for her situation to worsen, according to medical records reviewed by The Washington Post.
By the time another doctor agreed to treat Norris-De La Cruz, records show, her pregnancy had already started to rupture.