Lawsuit Filed To Prevent Arizona From Limiting Use of Abortion Drug
LatestA lawsuit challenging Arizona’s limits on the use of RU-486 was filed in federal court on Tuesday.
One of two groups representing the plaintiffs in
the suit is the Center for
Reproductive Rights.
“Arizona politicians have imposed restrictions
that go against years of scientific research and doctors’ practical
experience in yet another effort to block women’s access to safe and
legal abortion,” Nancy Northup, CRR president told Reuters.
The lawsuit, filed on Tuesday in U.S.
District Court in Phoenix on behalf of Planned Parenthood Arizona and
health center Tucson Women’s Center, said the rules, due to go into
effect on April 1, are unconstitutional and would severely hamper a
woman’s right to a non-surgical abortion.
Under
rules required by a 2012 abortion law, any medicine used to induce an
abortion in Arizona must be administered according to protocol
authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and subject to
instructions on the label.
The
FDA has approved RU-486, the so-called “abortion pill,” for use within
seven weeks’ gestation. Doctors who have prescribed it later than that
have made an off-label use which is not be allowed under Arizona’s law.
At
issue in the case is a physician’s discretion to go “off-label” and use
the drug as the doctor believes would be best for a woman seeking to
end her pregnancy.
The restrictions were part of a law aimed at limiting abortions in Arizona. Part of that law, a ban on abortions after 20 weeks was struck down by a
federal court. However, the limits on drugs like RU-486b remain intact, but not unchallenged, according to Reuters:
Similar rules on non-surgical
abortions have been challenged in several states. Last November, the
U.S. Supreme Court let stand a ruling that threw out limits on the
RU-486 abortion pill in Oklahoma after the rules were challenged by the
reproductive rights center.
There’s more abortion regulation news out of Arizona. Also on Tuesday, the Arizona House of Representatives approved legislation that would pave the way for unannounced inspections of abortion clinics in the state, via The New York Times:
The State House of Representatives on Tuesday approved a measure that
would allow state health department officials to conduct unannounced
inspections of abortion clinics. The clinic inspections now require
warrants, and Democrats argued that the legislation would empower public
officials to harass abortion providers. Republicans said the bill would
ensure that abortion providers were following state and federal laws.
Interesting side note—according to The New York Times, the unannounced inspection bill was written by the same Christian organization (The Center for Arizona Policy) that was one of the backers of the anti-gay bill that would have allowed businesses to cite “religious freedom” in order to refuse services to gay patrons.
Image via AP Images.