Tuesday, January 23, 2024

JAMA On-line: Scorn for Approach of Texas Supreme Court and AG in Cases Involving Exceptions to Abortion Ban

In an excellent on-line (and free) commentary in JAMA (Jan. 22, 2024), three Harvard authors ask the question: "Whose Responsibility Is It to Define Exceptions in Abortion Bans?" (Disclosure: One of the authors, Louise King, M.D., J.D., is a friend and former colleague.)

The context for this question is not surprising:

Two Texas court cases were filed in late 2023 requesting clarification of the scope of the life exception. In the first case, In re State of Texas, the Texas Supreme Court indicated that clinicians or the Texas Medical Board have responsibility for defining that exception. In the second case, State [of Texas] v Zurawski, the Texas attorney general suggested during oral arguments that the scope would be defined through medical malpractice litigation.

In short, both the Texas Supreme Court and the AG punted on the essential and inescapable issue of the scope of "life exception" to Texas's abortion ban.

Is that a problem?

At first glance, the Texas Supreme Court and attorney general may seem to defer to the expertise of clinicians and the medical system for when abortions are necessary to save a patient’s life. But upon closer analysis, these proposed ways to define the exception’s scope are neither workable nor constitutional. Putting the burden of defining a crime on the person who may commit it violates the US Constitution. Demanding that patients be injured and sue for malpractice to clarify a criminal statute is beyond draconian.

Legislating medical care means clinicians could risk prosecution if they act according to their ethics and training and follow the standard of care. But if they decline to provide care out of fear of legal consequences, they risk injuring a patient and facing a potential malpractice claim. It is for these very reasons that professional societies like the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Medical Association argue strongly against all legislation that interferes with the patient-clinician relationship.2 Texas and other states that criminalize abortion should consider the tremendously harmful effect that comes from interfering in clinical decision-making. 

This short but compelling commentary is worth reading in its entirety. It offers a fine illustration of the hall of mirrors created by the Texas legislature, Supreme Court, and Attorney General. 

 

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