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A statement from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said the federal law would still be enforced, despite the ...
“The more and more women are denied access to care, whether that be abortion [or] other care, the more likely they are to ...
Rep. Kat Cammack's treatment for her ectopic pregnancy was delayed under Florida's six-week abortion ban. But she blames the ...
Federal guidance that the Trump administration says is intended to offer clarity is instead leaving health care providers ...
The move doesn't change federal law, but doctors and abortion-rights advocates fear that it will amplify confusion.
This week, nearly two dozen state attorneys general told hospitals they are still obligated under law to provide emergency abortion care services despite the federal government’s apparent shift on | ...
Democrats are looking to restart the abortion conversation around the third anniversary of the Dobbs decision that overturned ...
NY Attorney General Letitia James affirms hospitals must provide emergency abortion care under EMTALA, despite federal ...
AG Andrea Joy Campbell joins 22 attorneys general in urging hospitals to comply with federal abortion care laws.
Medicare "Part E" would be self-sustaining, funded by premiums, and available through all state and federal health exchanges.
The provision violates the Byrd Rule, which restricts non-budgetary items from appearing in reconciliation bills.
On Tuesday, June 3, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services rescinded a Biden-era policy that directed hospitals to provide emergency abortions if it was needed to stabilize a pregnant patient.