|
Associated Press
April 19, 2007
Abortion case limits health
exception
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID, Associated Press Writer
Women who want a controversial abortion procedure
for health reasons have few options beyond going to court and trying
to prove that a Supreme Court decision banning the practice should
not apply.
For women facing serious health risks, that may
not be practical.
"The problem with that is it's not going to be an
easy thing for women to invoke," said Vikram Amar, a professor at
the University of California's Hastings School of Law. "Because time
is of the essence, and litigation takes money and time, the 'as
applied' route is not as practically feasible."
The high court on Wednesday upheld the ban except
in cases where the woman's life might be in danger. The justices
ruled that an individual — or as-applied — challenge "is the proper
manner to protect the woman's health if it can be shown that in
discrete and well-defined instances a condition has or is likely to
occur in which the procedure prohibited by the act must be used."
The ruling applies to an abortion procedure that
opponents call "partial birth" abortion. Of the 1.3 million
abortions performed in 2000, the most recent data available, 2,200
involved this procedure, according the Guttmacher Institute.
People on both sides of issue agree that legal
action is a woman's only recourse if she seeks the procedure because
of health reasons.
Louise Melling, director of the American Civil
Liberties Union's reproductive freedom project, said the decision is
"the first time ever the court has upheld a restriction where there
isn't an exception to protect a woman's health."
What the ruling did leave open is the possibility
of a lawsuit in which a woman could argue that the law is
unconstitutional as it applies to her.
"That is troubling and inadequate," Melling said.
"Troubling because it is a radical shift in protection for women's
health and inadequate because doctors concerned about their patient
should be allowed to go to the operating room, not the courthouse."
Douglas Johnson, legislative director of the
National Right to Life Committee, said that while the law contains
an exception to prevent the death of a woman, "we don't think, and
Congress didn't think, that that ever would be necessary."
"The word health can mean anything," Johnson said,
and the ruling says an individual could bring a challenge in court
over a particular case.
Roger Evans, senior director of public policy
litigation and law at the Planned Parenthood Federation of America,
said the ruling "appears to be saying" that if a woman needed an
abortion for medical reasons and the banned procedure was the safest
method, she would have two choices.
She could use a riskier procedure because the
safest method is a federal crime. She also could sue, arguing it
would be unconstitutional to impose the riskier method.
"As a practical matter, that's not likely to
happen," said Evans, citing the time and cost involved as well as
the woman exposing herself to unwanted scrutiny.
With nearly 90 percent of abortions performed in
pregnancy, the banned procedure affects only a small number of
cases.
The procedure is formally known as dilation and
extraction and is also referred to as late-term abortion, D&X or
Intact D&X.
It involves dilating the cervix and removing the
fetus. The head of the fetus is crushed or a catheter is inserted
and brain matter removed so the head can pass through the cervix.
Opponents say this amounts to partially delivering
a live fetus and then killing it.
Still legal are procedures in which the fetus is
removed in pieces from the womb. The Supreme Court ruling also noted
that use of chemicals to kill the fetus before its removal would be
legal.
"If intact D&X is truly necessary in some
circumstances, a prior injection to kill the fetus allows a doctor
to perform the procedure, given that the Act's prohibition only
applies to the delivery of 'a living fetus,'" the ruling said. |