The US Supreme Court has ruled that emergency abortions in Idaho can go ahead.
When a patient’s health is at serious risk, hospitals in the northwestern state will be allowed to perform emergency abortions to protect their health.
This comes two years after the landmark overturning of Roe v Wade, when Idaho was among 14 states that outlawed abortion at all stages of pregnancy with incredibly limited exceptions.
The US justices found that the court pre-emptively got involved in the case, and a 6-3 majority reinstated a lower court order that had allowed hospitals in the state to perform emergency abortions to protect a patient’s health.
The opinion means the Idaho case will continue to play out in lower courts, and could end up before the Supreme Court again.
So the same justices who voted to overturn the constitutional right to abortion could soon be again considering when doctors can provide abortion in medical emergencies – meaning the issue is still far from settled.
The Supreme Court previously allowed the ban, which does permit abortion to save a pregnant patient’s life, to go into effect.
But since, several women have needed medical air lifts out of state in cases where abortion is routine treatment to avoid infection, haemorrhage and other dire health risks, Idaho doctors have said.
It was previously reported by Bloomberg that the Supreme Court briefly posted the opinion on the court’s website, before taking it down.
The Supreme Court acknowledged that a document was inadvertently posted on Wednesday before the decision was confirmed Thursday.
“The Court’s Publications Unit inadvertently and briefly uploaded a document to the Court’s website.
“The Court’s opinion in Moyle v United States and Idaho v United States will be issued in due course,” court spokeswoman Patricia McCabe previously said in a statement.
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The court ruling is expected to have a significant effect on emergency care in other states with strict abortion bans.
However, the procedural ruling has left key questions unanswered and it does not resolve the issues at the heart of the case.
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Most Republican-controlled states began enforcing abortion restrictions two years ago – in the aftermath of the constitutional ruling.
Already there have been an increase in reports of pregnant women being turned away from US emergency rooms following the high court’s 2022 ruling.
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