New Biden rule seeks to protect women crossing state lines for abortions
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[April 13, 2023]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Ahmed Aboulenein
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden administration on Wednesday proposed
new privacy protections to prevent women's health information from being
used to investigate or sue people who obtain or facilitate abortions.
The proposal by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is
aimed at protecting women living in states where abortion is illegal who
travel out of state to have the procedure done - something thousands of
women are already doing, research shows. The rule would also protect
healthcare providers, insurers, or other entities which perform or pay
for abortions.
It is unclear whether the proposed rule would actually stifle criminal
investigations. Fears of criminal investigations aimed at out-of-state
abortions have grown after Idaho this month passed a law explicitly
restricting some out-of-state travel for abortions.
Major companies, including JPMorgan Chase & Co, Amazon.com Inc and Walt
Disney Co, have said they would pay travel costs for employees seeking
abortions out of state and provide reimbursement through
company-sponsored healthcare plans, but Republican leaders have
threatened retribution.
The proposed rule, which is set to be finalized following a 60-day
public comment period, strengthens existing privacy protections under
the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), which
are binding in all states.
It amends the HIPAA Privacy Rule so that existing exceptions that allow
the sharing of private health information do not apply to information
related to reproductive healthcare - including abortion - for
non-healthcare purposes.
The proposed rule specifically prohibits the "use or disclosure" of
private health information by regulated entities, which include
healthcare providers and health insurance companies among others, for
these purposes, including:
"A criminal, civil, or administrative investigation into or proceeding
against any person in connection with seeking, obtaining, providing, or
facilitating reproductive health care that is lawful under the
circumstances in which it is provided."
It also prohibits "the identification of any person for the purpose of
initiating such an investigation or proceeding."
It was not clear, however, how that would work when pitted against state
anti-abortion laws which are a matter of criminal, not healthcare, law.
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Abortion rights campaigners and
anti-abortion demonstrators hold signs during the annual "March for
Life" for the first time since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe
v Wade abortion decision, in Washington, U.S. January 20, 2023.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The current HIPAA Privacy Rule says
state laws that are contrary to it are preempted by the federal
requirements. But it provides exceptions including "the reporting of
disease or injury, child abuse, birth, or death, or for public
health surveillance, investigation, or intervention."
It also permits - but does not require - the disclosure of protected
health information to law enforcement officials under certain
circumstances, including complying with court orders, warrants,
subpoenas, or for the purposes of identifying or locating suspects
and fugitives.
The proposed rule amends some definitions and clarifies others to
prohibit the use of these exceptions when it comes to reproductive
healthcare.
Vice President Kamala Harris on Friday hosted the third meeting of
the Task Force on Reproductive Healthcare Access, an interagency
group that has taken on added meaning following a decision by a
federal judge in Texas to suspend the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration's (FDA) 23-year-old approval of a key abortion drug.
"I do believe that America is facing a healthcare crisis," Harris
said at the beginning of the meeting. "I have met with and talked
with doctors who are in fear of losing their license or being
prosecuted."
A string of judicial decisions and a spate of new state laws have
banned women from getting abortions in many circumstances in large
parts of the country after last summer's U.S. Supreme Court rollback
of Roe vs. Wade.
A senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity
before the rule was announced, said officials have heard directly
from patients and their advocates about privacy concerns.
"They're scared. They are concerned about their medical information
being misused and disclosed," the official said, adding that privacy
concerns have had a chilling effect on woman seeking medical help.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw, Ahmed Aboulenein, and Heather
Timmons; Editing by Heather Timmons, Mark Porter and Jonathan Oatis)
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