Rabu, 19 April 2023

Supreme Court Extends Pause on Ruling Limiting Access to Abortion Pill - The New York Times

The court said on Wednesday that it would extend a block on a lower-court ruling, giving the justices more time to consider the case.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court extended a pause on a lower-court ruling that had sought to limit access to a commonly used abortion pill, ensuring that the drug, mifepristone, would remain widely available for now.

In a brief order, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. announced that the court would extend its stay through Friday evening, giving the court more time to consider the case.

At issue is a ruling by Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk of the Northern District of Texas, who in recent weeks had invalidated the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of the pill.

The announcement slows down what has been a muddled and fast-moving landscape for mifepristone, marked by conflicting Federal District Court decisions and an appeals panel ruling that further complicated the drug’s legal status.

After the Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to an abortion last summer, political and legal battles have centered on medications used for abortions. In some conservative states, lawmakers have targeted abortion pills.

Medication abortion, a two-drug regimen, is typically used in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy. The first drug, mifepristone, blocks progesterone, a hormone that allows a pregnancy to develop, and the second, misoprostol, taken one or two days later, prompts contractions and helps the uterus expel its contents.

The Supreme Court in Washington.Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

The dispute started in Texas in November, when an umbrella group of medical organizations and a few doctors that oppose abortion sued the F.D.A., challenging its approval of the pill.

In their suit, the anti-abortion groups claimed that the F.D.A. did not follow proper protocols when it approved the drug in 2000. The groups said that the agency had also ignored dangers of the drug in the years since.

The F.D.A., vigorously countering the plaintiffs’ claims, has said that the drug was properly approved more than 20 years ago and that it is very safe. It has cited years of scientific studies that show that serious complications are rare and that less than 1 percent of patients need hospitalization.

The lawsuit was filed in the Amarillo division of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, where a single federal judge, Judge Kacsmaryk, an appointee of President Donald J. Trump, hears cases.

Judge Kacsmaryk, a longtime opponent of abortion, is a former lawyer for First Liberty Institute, a legal group focused on religious liberty cases that has long backed conservative causes.

This month, Judge Kacsmaryk announced a preliminary ruling that invalidated the F.D.A.’s approval of the drug. But the judge said that the agency had a week to seek emergency relief before his ruling would take effect.

Judge Kacsmaryk suffused his ruling with the language of the anti-abortion movement, referring to abortion providers as “abortionists” and a fetus or embryo as an “unborn human” or “unborn child.” He appeared to agree with virtually all of the claims made by the anti-abortion groups.

Less than an hour later, another federal judge, Thomas O. Rice, who was appointed by President Barack Obama, issued a contradictory ruling in Washington State in a different lawsuit. Judge Rice blocked the F.D.A. from limiting the availability of mifepristone in much of the country.

The Washington State lawsuit, filed by Democratic attorneys general in 17 states and the District of Columbia, is a direct challenge to the Texas case.

The Biden administration immediately appealed the ruling by the federal judge in Texas, and a divided three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, based in New Orleans, announced that mifepristone could remain legal and available while the lawsuit makes its way through the courts.

The panel rejected Judge Kacsmaryk’s finding that the F.D.A.’s approval of mifepristone more than 20 years ago was not valid. At the same time, the judges blocked more recent steps by the F.D.A. to make the drug more easily available, including permissions to send the pills by mail. Experts said the consequences could be far-reaching, creating more obstacles for a patient’s ability to secure the drug.

The next day, Judge Rice reaffirmed his ruling, ordering the F.D.A. to maintain the status quo in the 18 jurisdictions, sowing further confusion about the availability of the abortion pill.

The dueling orders all but guaranteed that the case would go to the Supreme Court.

The Biden administration, seeking emergency relief, asked the justices to pause the lower court ruling that sought to limit access to the pill. In its brief, the government argued that the decision had sweeping consequences, not only for abortion pill access but also for the broader pharmaceutical industry.

If the ruling went into effect, the government said, it would “upend the regulatory regime for mifepristone.”

In their brief, the anti-abortion groups that filed the suit contended that “for nearly a quarter-century,” the F.D.A. and the drug’s manufacturer, Danco Laboratories, had “brazenly flouted the law and applicable regulations, disregarded holes and red flags in their own safety data, intentionally evaded judicial review and continually placed politics above women’s health.”

The government and Danco emphasized how consequential the orders from the lower courts would be, if they were to stand.

“Absent a stay, the lower courts’ unprecedented nationwide orders would scramble the regulatory regime governing a drug that F.D.A. determined was safe and effective under the approved conditions and that has been used by more than five million American women over the last two decades,” Solicitor General Elizabeth B. Prelogar, representing the F.D.A., wrote in the brief.

Danco Laboratories said in its reply that the plaintiffs’ argument would “radically rework standing jurisprudence.”

“If this litigation involved any other drug, there would be no debate that a group of doctors who do not prescribe it and rely on a statistical possibility of encountering a patient in need of follow-up care would be found to lack standing,” the brief said.

Adam Liptak and Pam Belluck contributed reporting.

Adblock test (Why?)



from U.S. - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/wIkEzV4
via IFTTT

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar

Idaho college murders: Death penalty would be 'dehumanizing,' defense argues at hearing - NBC News

[unable to retrieve full-text content] Idaho college murders: Death penalty would be 'dehumanizing,' defense argues at hearing    ...