A New Law Prevents Texans from Receiving a Telehealth Abortion
Texas, long at the forefront of restrictive abortion policy in the U.S., has passed a new law (which goes into effect in early December) which would take state law and the already in-place abortion ban (SB 8) and apply it beyond its borders. Jessica Waters, Senior Scholar in Residence at the School of Public Affairs at American University, sits down with us to talk about Texas’ new law restricting telehealth medication abortion, an incredibly common and safe method of care.
Specifically, the law prohibits the manufacturing and distribution of mifepristone in the state, and outlines the inability to mail, transport, deliver, prescribe, or provide abortion -inducing drugs to anyone in the state. Currently, pregnant people in Texas cannot receive legal abortion care, so they have relied upon out-of-state abortion care. This new law, though, allows for anyone to sue an out-of-state company or medical professional which provides a person in Texas with mifepristone, even if that doctor or company is in a state where abortion is legal. This law is in direct tension with the shield laws that protect against this very scenario. This will likely create a chilling effect on doctors and abortion funds out-of-state.
LINKS FROM THIS EPISODE
New Texas law restricting abortion pills beefs up an existing legal tool
Just Pills: The Extraordinary Story of a Revolution in Abortion Care
Preying With Pseudoscience: Crisis Pregnancy Centers’ New, Dangerous Rhetoric
The 150-Year-Old Law that Could Impact Abortion Pill Access Today
Pregnancy Exclusions in Advance Directives: A Post-Dobbs Equal Protection Argument
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Transcript
Jennie: Welcome to rePROs Fight Back, a podcast on all things related to sexual and reproductive health, rights, and justice. [music intro]
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Take the time to understand these issues. To learn more about junk science related to abortion, find our recent podcast episode here. To learn more about the Comstock Act, you can also find our past podcast episode here. You can learn more about the history of medication abortion in Rebecca Kelliher’s book Just Pills here.
Donate to abortion funds. Stay invested in keeping abortion care available—particularly as people are required to travel more.