A
lower court judge had blocked enforcement of the ban in certain
situations on Aug. 4, but the order has been on hold while the
state appeals to the Texas Supreme Court. Oral arguments in the
case are set for 10 a.m. (1600 GMT) in Austin.
Judge Jessica Mangrum of the Travis County, Texas District Court
had ruled that the state could not prosecute doctors for
performing abortions under a range of circumstances, including
when a pregnancy poses a health risk, exacerbates a health
condition or when the fetus is not likely to survive after
birth.
The state has argued in court papers that the plaintiffs have
not shown that they will be harmed in the future by the abortion
ban, which includes an exception to save the mother's life.
"All we are asking for is common-sense guidance that will allow
doctors to use their good faith judgment without fearing loss of
their license and life in prison," Molly Duane of the Center for
Reproductive Rights, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said in a
statement.
The lawsuit, filed in March by five women and two doctors,
sought a court order ensuring that doctors cannot be prosecuted
for providing abortions if in their good faith judgment the
procedure is necessary to treat emergencies that threaten a
patient's life or health. An additional 15 women later joined
the case.
They said the ban's lack of clarity about under what
circumstances abortion is allowable was leading doctors to
refuse to perform abortions even when exceptions should apply,
for fear of losing their licenses and facing up to 99 years in
prison.
One of the plaintiffs, Amanda Zurawski, said she was
hospitalized in Texas with a premature rupture of membranes at
18 weeks of pregnancy, meaning her fetus could not be saved. She
was told she could not have an abortion until fetal cardiac
activity stopped or her condition became life-threatening.
Zurawski said she developed sepsis within days, which required
intensive care and allowed the hospital to induce labor.
Other plaintiffs said they were forced to travel out of state
for medically necessary abortions.
(Reporting By Brendan Pierson in New York, Editing by Alexia
Garamfalvi and Bill Berkrot)
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