Biden, doctors say new abortion laws have chilling impact
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[October 05, 2022]
By Nandita Bose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe
Biden and top White House officials announced new guidelines and grants
to protect abortion and contraception rights on Tuesday, and said
women's rights have already been curtailed since the Supreme Court
overturned Roe vs. Wade 100 days ago.
Speaking at a meeting of the reproductive rights task force, with Vice
President Kamala Harris, Biden said the decision that rescinded women's
constitutional right to an abortion has had frightening ripple effects
in some states, include restricting a teen's access to medicine she
needed for arthritis. "We're not going to sit by and let Republicans
throughout the country enact extreme policies," he said.
Abortion bans have gone into effect in more than a dozen states since
the court overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling on June 24. Nearly 30
million women of reproductive age now live in a state with a ban,
including nearly 22 million women who cannot access abortion care after
six weeks, it said.
The meeting, held with doctors, lawmakers and White House officials,
focused on how millions of women cannot access abortion services, face
shrinking access to contraception, and how doctors and nurses are facing
criminal penalties for providing abortions.
The Supreme Court decision "created a health care crisis in America,"
Harris said. "What we are seeing in laws around our country is the
criminalization of doctors and health care providers," she said, noting
some states had reverted to abortion laws put in place before women had
the right to vote.
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Bandanas hang along the White House
fence as Women's March activists protest in the wake of the U.S.
Supreme Court's decision to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade
abortion decision in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 9, 2022.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
"It's clear the Dobbs ruling has
sown fear and confusion on our college campuses," Education
Secretary Miguel Cardona said.
Officials spoke about new guidelines for universities from the
Department of Education to protect students from discrimination on
the basis of pregnancy and $6 million in new grants to protect
access to reproductive healthcare services from the Department of
Health & Human Services.
"I am forced to turn away patients," Dr. Nisha Verma, an
obstetrician based in Georgia.
"I have had teenagers with chronic medical conditions that make
their pregnancy very high risk, and women… who receive a terrible
diagnosis of a fetal anomalies cry when they learn that they can't
receive their abortion in our state, and beg me to help them," she
said.
Democrats are increasingly hopeful that the Supreme Court decision
will boost voter support in November's midterm elections.
About 71% of Americans - including majorities of Democrats and
Republicans - say decisions about terminating a pregnancy should be
left to a woman and her doctor, a Reuters/Ipsos poll in June shows.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington; Editing by Raju
Gopalakrishnan, Heather Timmons and Aurora Ellis)
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