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Tag: Ohio Abortion Laws

  • Ohio’s Six-Week Abortion Ban Overturned by Hamilton County Judge

    Ohio’s Six-Week Abortion Ban Overturned by Hamilton County Judge

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    (Photo by Sofia Resnick/States Newsroom.)

    The U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization in June 2022 ended federal abortion rights.

    A Hamilton County judge has permanently overturned Ohio’s six-week abortion ban that had been tied up in court since its inception in 2019, but was put into effect for several months after Roe. v. Wade was overturned.

    Hamilton County Judge Christian A. Jenkins had already temporarily stopped enforcement of the law when the case entered his courtroom in the fall of 2022 several months after the Dobbs decision overturning national abortion rights established in Roe.

    Thursday’s decision means the law is struck down unless the Ohio Attorney General decides to appeal the decision.

    In November 2023, Ohio voters passed a reproductive rights amendment with 57% support.

    “Ohio’s Attorney General evidently didn’t get the memo,” Jenkins wrote. “For even after a large majority of Ohio’s voters … presumably both women and men — approved an amendment to the Ohio Constitution protecting the right to pre-viability abortion on November 8, 2023, the Attorney General urges this court to leave ‘untouched’ all but one provision of the so-called ‘Heartbeat Act’ clearly rejected by Ohio voters.”

    Hours after the Dobbs decision came down in June 2022, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost asked a federal court reinstate the six-week abortion ban law, which was approved by the court quickly after the request was made. The ban included no exceptions for rape or incest.

    Just as quickly, though, the law was then shoved back into court by abortion rights advocates. At first, advocates asked the Ohio Supreme Court to rule on the case, but after a period of inaction by the state’s high court, they chose to challenge the law locally, specifically in Hamilton County.

    A separate Hamilton County judge in September eliminated restrictions on telehealth abortion treatment.

    With the approval of the reproductive rights amendment in Ohio, attorneys had a new avenue to challenge the six-week ban. They used the language — which allowed abortion to the point of fetal viability, a determination to be made by the pregnant person’s physician, rather than at a point determined by state law — as a tipping point for arguments that the six-week ban was now unconstitutional. Fetal viability typically comes in a range between 24 to 26 weeks.

    Yost pushed back, saying the reproductive rights amendment could not be used to negate any law or provision that was remotely related to abortion rights.

    However, he also acknowledged it would be quite a battle to argue that the six-week ban did not violate the new constitutional amendment.

    In a legal analysis on the reproductive rights amendment before the vote, that has often been used against him in the year since, Yost said the amendment “will make it harder for Ohio to maintain the kinds of law already upheld as valid prior to last year’s decision in Dobbs.”

    “In other words, the Amendment would give greater protection to abortion to be free from regulation than at any time in Ohio’s history,” Yost wrote.

    He went on to say that “many Ohio laws would probably be invalidated,” and that “others might be at risk to varying degrees.”

    That included the so-called Heartbeat Act, according to him.

    “Ohio would no longer have the ability to limit abortions at any time before a fetus is viable,” he wrote. “Passage of Issue 1 would invalidate the Heartbeat Act, which restricts abortions (with health and other exceptions) after a fetal heartbeat is detected, which is usually at about six weeks.”

    Even so, Yost attempted to argue in the case that certain provisions included in the law should be allowed to stand.

    Jenkins disagreed, saying the state constitution “now unequivocally protects the right to abortion” and that “to give meaning to the voice of Ohio’s voters, the Amendment must be given full effect, and laws such as those enacted by (Senate Bill) 23 must be permanently enjoined.”

    He said that if Ohio courts adopted the state’s arguments, Ohio doctors who provide abortion care would continue to be at risk of felony criminal charges, $20,000 fines, medical license suspensions and renovations, and civil claims for wrongful death.

    “Patients seeking abortion-care would still be required to make two in-person visits to their provider, wait twenty-four hours to receive abortion care, receive state-mandated information designed to discourage abortion and have the reason for their abortion recorded and reprinted,” Jenkins wrote. “Unlike the Ohio Attorney General, this Court will uphold the Ohio Constitution’s protection of abortion rights. The will of the people of Ohio will be given effect.”

    ACLU of Ohio cooperating attorney Jessie Hill, who led the legal challenge in the case, called the ruling “momentous” and a show of “the power of Ohio’s new Reproductive Freedom Amendment in practice.”

    Dr. Sharon Liner, medical director for Planned Parenthood Southwest Ohio Region and one of the parties in the case, said the ruling was “an important step in the right direction for access.”

    “The permanent blocking of the six-week ban brings us one step closer to getting our patients the access they deserve,” Liner wrote in a statement.

    Multiple requests for comment from the Ohio Attorney General’s Office went unanswered Thursday afternoon.

    Ohio Right to Life and the Center for Christian Virtue were also contacted and have not yet provided a response.

    Asked if Gov. Mike DeWine had any comment on the ruling, a spokesperson stated, “No.”

    Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.

    Susan Tebben, The Ohio Capital Journal

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  • An Issue for Them? Ohio’s 50-Year-Old+ Women Emboldened by Moreno Comments on Abortion

    An Issue for Them? Ohio’s 50-Year-Old+ Women Emboldened by Moreno Comments on Abortion

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    (Photo by Graham Stokes)

    COLUMBUS, OH — JUNE 24: Christy Hahn of Columbus (left) gives a thumbs up to a passing car from a small group of protesters gathering after the Supreme Court announced the reversal of Roe v. Wade, June 24, 2022, at the Ohio Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio.

    Ohio women 50 and older are headed to the polls having lived through the days before Roe v. Wade legalized abortion nationwide in 1973, during the time when abortion was legal, and now, after the decision was overturned in 2022 and power given to each state to decide.

    That has played a factor in many women’s decisions at the ballot box, though it’s only one factor of many, voters told the Capital Journal in interviews last week.

    “I am not a single issue voter, by any means,” said Mansfield resident and registered Republican Linda Smith.

    But abortion rights has come to the forefront, and in fact has galvanized older women voters in the weeks leading up to the November general election.

    U.S. Senate candidate Bernie Moreno made comments about abortion rights and the interests of suburban women, which have since been used in campaign ads against him.

    Those comments have also renewed conversations about the topic with women who may not be experiencing pregnancy or the need for an abortion, but who remember times when reproductive health care was more risky, and are looking to the future for their daughters and granddaughters.

    “Women don’t make their health care choices and decisions lightly and they’re often complicated decisions.” Smith said. “They’re life-altering.”

    Moreno’s comments were made at a town hall in Warren County and first made public by WCMH via a viewer-submitted video.

    “You know, the left has a lot of single issue voters,” Moreno said. “Sadly, by the way, there’s a lot of suburban women, a lot of suburban women that are like, ‘Listen, abortion is it. If I can’t have an abortion in this country whenever I want, I will vote for anybody else.’ OK. It’s a little crazy by the way, but — especially for women that are like past 50 — I’m thinking to myself, ‘I don’t think that’s an issue for you.’”

    After a pause, he added, “Oh, thank God my wife didn’t hear that part.”

    Moreno’s campaign did not respond to a request by the OCJ for comment, but in a previous statement to The Statehouse News Bureau, spokesperson Reagan McCarthy said Moreno was “clearly making a tongue-in-cheek joke about how Sherrod Brown and members of the leftwing media like to pretend that the only issue that matters to women voters is abortion.”

    After Moreno’s comments, an open letter was released by Republican, independent and Democratic-voting women, saying Moreno “mocked many of us who are over the age of fifty” and criticizing him for trying to “play your comments off as a joke” after the fact.

    “As Ohio women across the political spectrum, we don’t agree on everything,” the letter stated. “But there are some things bigger than party politics. What unites us is the firm belief that Ohio women should have the ability to make their own health care choices, free from the involvement of people like you.”

    Smith was one of the Republican voters to sign on to the letter.

    “It’s distressing to me to see that this (issue) has become a political pawn,” Smith told the Capital Journal.

    The issue is coming up among other priorities for older Ohioans, such as inflation, the economy and Social Security.

    An August survey commissioned by the AARP showed 16% of Ohio’s 50+ voters polled placed it as their first or second choice among important issues driving their votes in the general election. Nine percent of 50+ survey takers put it as their most important issue in the election, putting it above other single issues like Social Security, taxes, gun control, crime, general health care, foreign policy, Medicare and climate change.

    The AARP poll also found that 94% of 50+ Ohio voters plan to vote in the upcoming election.

    Overall, incumbent Ohio Democratic U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown held a narrow lead over Moreno, 46%-42%, but among 50+ voters specifically, the race was reportedly much closer, with Moreno holding a five-point edge in the August AARP numbers.

    The candidates, the ballot measures, and the tools you need to cast your vote.

    Seville resident Mosie Welch is a registered Democrat in her 60s, and she readily admits reproductive rights tops the list of issues she is using to decide her votes. She connects reproductive health care to family issues, along with the economic health of the state and the concept of individual rights.

    “Yes, this is one of the big issues driving my vote, especially at the national level, because I fear what will happen if women no longer have the right to make decisions about their own bodies as they don’t in some states today,” Welch said.

    As a mother and grandmother, she wants to see future women have the “full range of health care necessary to ensure that they can live their life as fully as possible.”

    “I’m not expecting to personally need this health care, but I would imagine there’s many families worried about this issue,” Welch said.

    She also fears for the rights of physicians, who expressed concern about litigation and the potential loss of medical licenses, along with patient care delays, as the debate over abortion rights went on after the Dobbs decision overturned Roe v. Wade.

    “When that happens and a woman dies, or a woman loses their fertility, or is racking up huge medical bills, that doesn’t just affect one individual,” Welch said. “It affects everybody, it affects the community.”

    Combining her decades of life experience and the rhetoric of the 2024 election has only served to motivate Welch and her fellow voters, like Susan Polakoff Shaw.

    “I know a lot of women who are rage-filled, and it’s women around my age who know what it’s like, who have heard what it was like pre-Roe,” said Shaw, who did work for Ohio Physicians for Reproductive Rights during the 2023 election. “It’s about being able to control your life and have a say in your future and your destiny, and your health and your family.”

    More than just reproductive rights as an issue for older women, Smith said her decisions in the upcoming election are informed by elected officials who “frequently disregard the will of the people,” including legislative attempts and comments that seek to undermine the reproductive rights amendment passed by a majority of state voters last year.

    “You can disagree, but when 57% of the electorate votes for that, you need to respect that,” Smith said.

    But Smith said she is optimistic for the future of Ohio and even the Republican Party, partly because of the discussion brought on by Moreno’s comments.

    “People who rise above their differences to fight for common causes  – like you are seeing now for women’s reproductive freedoms,” Smith said, “it’s that collective voice and vote that will make a difference.”

    Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.

    Susan Tebben, The Ohio Capital Journal

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  • Independents, Republicans Chide Moreno Over Comments About Older Women and Abortion

    Independents, Republicans Chide Moreno Over Comments About Older Women and Abortion

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    (Photo by Nick Evans, Ohio Capital Journal.)

    Arthur “Ed” Dunn speaking outside the Columbus Club in downtown Columbus.

    Republican and independent voters are criticizing Republican U.S. Senate candidate Bernie Moreno after he referred to women as “a little crazy” for making abortion policy the deciding factor for their vote. In a video obtained by WCMH, Moreno told a crowd in Warren County “(there’s) a lot of suburban women that are like, ‘Listen, abortion is it. If I can’t have an abortion in this country whenever I want, I will vote for anybody else.”

    “It’s a little crazy by the way,” he went on, “but — especially for women that are like past 50 — I’m thinking to myself, ‘I don’t think that’s an issue for you.’”

    “I’m 63,” Tammy Krings said, “When I turned 50, I didn’t stop caring about my daughter’s body and her choices and her rights.”

    Krings described herself as an independent voter, and she spoke alongside two Republicans Thursday on the sidewalk outside the Columbus Club where Moreno was hosting a fundraiser. The event was organized by Moreno’s opponent, Democratic U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown.

    “I didn’t stop caring about my future grandchildren and their rights,” Krings added. “Just because you’re not of childbearing age, and just because you’re not a woman doesn’t mean this isn’t important to you.”

    Moreno’s comments in context

    In an emailed statement, Moreno campaign spokeswoman Reagan McCarthy said, “Bernie was clearly making a tongue-in-cheek joke about how Sherrod Brown and members of the left-wing media like to pretend that the only issue that matters to women voters is abortion.”

    “Bernie’s view,” she continued, “is that women voters care just as much about the economy, rising prices, crime, and our open southern border as male voters do, and it’s disgusting that Democrats and their friends in the left-wing media constantly treat all women as if they’re automatically single-issue voters on abortion.”

    Still, Brown’s campaign has latched on to Moreno’s comments. Just days after Ohio voters approved the reproductive rights amendment known as Issue 1 last November, state Democratic officials made it clear they would make politicians’ stance on the issue a central theme of this year’s campaign.

    Moreno’s team says he favors exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother, but when he ran in 2022, before the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Roe, he described himself as “100% pro-life no exceptions.” He’s also embraced the idea of a national “15-week floor” for abortion, but has been less willing to assert that outside of being an aspiration after former President Donald Trump abandoned the idea in April. Now Moreno argues the matter should be settled “primarily” at the state level. Following a surprise Alabama Supreme Court ruling that threatened access to IVF treatment, Moreno dismissed concerns as “a left-wing, media-created issue.” And Wednesday, The Columbus Dispatch reported that Moreno claimed the Founding Fathers would “murder you” for supporting abortion rights.

    Moreno isn’t the only Republican candidate struggling to thread the needle on an issue where the majority of voters don’t appear to align with their position. But even within his party, Moreno’s comments sparked pushback. Former GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley asked, “are you trying to lose the election?” on social media Tuesday.

    Republicans and Independents weigh in

    “Fifty-seven percent of Ohioans voted,” Krings argued, in reference to Issue 1 last November, “and Bernie Moreno wants to just toss that out the window.”

    She insisted politicians need to “understand the assignment.” It’s their job, she said, to uphold the will of the voters not second guess it.

    “He thinks he knows better,” she said. “We the people — his job is to execute on what the people vote for. It’s really kind of simple.”

    Krings is backing Brown because of his record of bringing people together, listening, and striving to represent all of the people in the state, she said. In addition to Krings, Ed Dunn and Lea Maceyko had harsh words for Moreno. They’re both supporting Brown as well.

    Dunn is from Beavercreek and described himself as a lifelong Republican. Like Krings he argued that even a policy doesn’t affect him personally, that doesn’t preclude him from caring about it.

    “We just want women, including my family, friends and others, now and in the future, to have the right to make their own health care decisions,” he said. “The government or politicians shouldn’t be involved in those extremely personal matters.”

    “That’s not crazy,” Dunn added, “that’s just common sense.”

    Lea Maceyko is a Republican, too and comes from “a little one-stoplight town called Cardington.” She described herself as an Ohio woman over 50. “I won’t tell you exactly how far over 50 I am,” she added, “but I’m over 50.” Maceyko was a bit shocked that Moreno would not just disregard the results of Issue 1, but that he’d make light of it.

    “(He’s) making fun of people for caring about our rights and the rights of others,” she said. “And frankly, I just don’t think that’s very funny.”

    “I have grandchildren, nieces, friends and other women in my life that I love and care about, and I don’t think it’s very crazy that I care about their rights.” Maceyko added. “Bernie said I was crazy, but really, I think he’s a little crazy to be mocking people that he wants to represent.”

    Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.

    Nick Evans, Ohio Capital Journal

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  • Bernie Moreno’s Bold Strategy: Going After Ohio Women Voters on Abortion Rights

    Bernie Moreno’s Bold Strategy: Going After Ohio Women Voters on Abortion Rights

    Ohio Republican U.S. Senate candidate Bernie Moreno accomplished something this week I didn’t even know was possible anymore for my jaded journalist’s mind: He truly surprised me.

    There I sat at my desk Monday, raising astonished eyebrows that a statewide political candidate would target a demographic represented in 51% of Ohio’s population about an issue that 57% of voters decided in a landslide less than a year ago. Nevertheless, here we were.

    “Bernie Moreno says women are ‘single issue voters’ for abortion during Ohio town hall,” Colleen Marshall and Mark Feuerborn reported for WCMH:

    NBC4 obtained a video recording from a Warren County town hall on Friday, where GOP Senate hopeful Bernie Moreno accused suburban women of being focused solely on their ability to get an abortion.

    “You know, the left has a lot of single issue voters,” Moreno said. “Sadly, by the way, there’s a lot of suburban women, a lot of suburban women that are like, ‘Listen, abortion is it. If I can’t have an abortion in this country whenever I want, I will vote for anybody else.’ … OK. It’s a little crazy by the way, but — especially for women that are like past 50 — I’m thinking to myself, ‘I don’t think that’s an issue for you.’”

    The story made national headlines on Tuesday.

    Moreno’s campaign spokesperson gave a statement to WCMH:

    “Bernie was clearly making a tongue-in-cheek joke about how Sherrod Brown and members of the left-wing media like to pretend that the only issue that matters to women voters is abortion. Bernie’s view is that women voters care just as much about the economy, rising prices, crime and our open southern border as male voters do, and it’s disgusting that Democrats and their friends in the left-wing media constantly treat all women as if they’re automatically single issue voters on abortion who don’t have other concerns that they vote on.”

    In the video, Moreno makes two assertions and two jokes.

    Without any humor, Moreno asserts: “You know, the left has a lot of single issue voters.”

    He then asserts, “Sadly, by the way, there’s a lot of suburban women, a lot of suburban women that are like, ‘Listen, abortion is it. If I can’t have an abortion in this country whenever I want, I will vote for anybody else.”

    Again, no humor here, in content or delivery. Just a second declarative statement – along with Moreno using the fronted adverbial “Sadly,” indicating he thinks this plight he’s envisioning about “a lot of suburban women” is sad.

    The next part is where Moreno makes a joke. “OK. It’s a little crazy by the way, but — especially for women that are like past 50…” is his set-up.

    “I’m thinking to myself, ‘I don’t think that’s an issue for you,’” is his punchline. Some people laugh.

    Then he added his second joke: “Thank God my wife didn’t hear that one.” Some laugh at that too.

    I find the humor a bit… strange. First, because it’s playing off of an idea that selfish myopia and a lack of empathy for others on huge societal questions is a desirable quality in a voter, and weirdly projecting that onto women over the age of 50.

    But, more to the point, I find it strange because this issue this isn’t some hypothetical in Ohio, it’s the very recent past. And Moreno has yet to take a clear stand on whether he would protect the expressed will of Ohio voters after he opposed Ohio’s reproductive rights amendment last year.

    Ohio’s 6-Week Abortion Ban

    For eight weeks in the summer of 2022 after Roe v. Wade was overturned and Ohio’s six-week abortion ban was in place, we heard horror story after horror story from women and doctors.

    We had the notorious case of the 10-year-old rape survivor who had to flee Ohio to seek care because Ohio’s extremist abortion ban didn’t have exceptions for rape or incest. At least two other pregnant minors who had been raped were denied abortions.

    Doctors’ affidavits described more than two dozen other instances in which the abortion law put Ohio women under extreme duress. They included two women with cancer who couldn’t terminate their pregnancies and also couldn’t get cancer treatment while they were pregnant. Other women had partially delivered fetuses too undeveloped to survive only to see the delivery stall. In that condition, with the fetus partly out, they had to sign paperwork — and then wait for 24 hours, or for the fetus’s heart to stop.

    Women suffering other complications such as a detached umbilical cord faced similar intrusions just after they were devastated to learn they would lose a child they dearly wanted. They, too, had to wait a day or for fetal demise. In one instance, that took 14 hours, a doctor said. Still other women — shattered to learn that the baby they’re carrying lacks vital organs necessary for survival — were told that in Ohio they had to carry that baby, possibly for months, only to see it be stillborn, or to watch it quickly die.

    Many of us were absolutely horrified by these stories and don’t ever want our fellow citizens to suffer in such ways, no matter what our age, gender or demographic is.

    The 2023 Ohio Abortion Rights Amendment

    In November 2023, Ohioans went to the polls and passed a constitutional amendment protecting reproductive rights to put an end to these horror stories for good.

    At least as early as August 2023 when it made the ballot, current Ohio U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown supported the reproductive rights amendment.

    Moreno opposed the amendment. He also “donated six figures of his own money” to stop it, and he campaigned against the abortion rights amendment with false fear-mongering, about, of all things, child rapists.

    Back in October 2021 when Moreno was first running for Senate, and in a primary against now-Ohio U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance, Moreno told Brietbart, “I’m 100 percent pro-life with no exceptions.”

    In fact, as the article states, back in 2021, before Roe was actually overturned, both Vance and Moreno were 100% pro-life with no exceptions.

    The Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade was decided in June 2022.

    That’s when Ohio learned what it was like to have a six-week abortion ban with no exceptions.

    By October 2023, Moreno supported a federal abortion ban at 15 weeks with exceptions.

    Ohio voters passed the reproductive rights amendment Moreno opposed in November 2023, which set fetal viability as the standard, which comes in a variable range around 25 to 27 weeks.

    But even after voters passed the amendment, Moreno said during the January 2024 primary debate that he supports “a 15-week floor, where there’s common-sense restrictions after 15 weeks.”

    In 2024, Moreno has been favoring euphemisms like “standard,” “restriction,” or “floor,” but he’s stayed steady on the 15 weeks.

    This September, when asked if he would support a national ban, Moreno told NewsNation it’s “mostly” an issue for the states.

    But then he added, “I do think at some point, aspirationally, we can get to the point where after 15 weeks there’s some common sense restrictions.”

    Moreno is very committed to being noncommittal, but he seems pretty “aspirationally” thirsty for imposing something at 15 weeks, thus overturning the 2023 amendment.

    Ohio voters of any age can’t afford to be so cavalier about a six-year term representing Ohio families in the United States Senate.

    As we know too well, these laws have intimate, enormous impacts on our lives.

    Moreno has massaged his position a lot in a very short period of time.

    So if he has time to make jokes about voters right now, it’d be nice if Moreno would give Ohio voters a straight answer: Would he respect the will of Ohio voters and the Ohio Constitution? Or would he ever cast a vote – perhaps the deciding vote in the U.S. Senate — for a national abortion ban that overturns the will of Ohio voters?

    Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.

    David Dewitt, Ohio Capital Journal

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  • A Race Against Time: The Hidden Cruelty of Ohio’s 24-Hour Waiting Period Abortion Rule

    A Race Against Time: The Hidden Cruelty of Ohio’s 24-Hour Waiting Period Abortion Rule

    Madeline Fening

    A nurse holds a sign in support of abortion access at a Planned Parenthood rally in Downtown Cincinnati on May 15, 2022.

    While staring at the ceiling of an Ohio emergency room, Ellen Groh realized she’d experienced this pain four years before.

    In February 2020, at nearly 18 weeks pregnant, she experienced a miscarriage.

    “I was feeling great and then all of a sudden I had to poop,” Groh says over a Zoom call. Some identifying details, like her legal last name, have been changed to protect her identity. “And so I ran to the bathroom, and I didn’t poop. I delivered into the toilet. My 18-week fetus, pregnancy… I’m going to call them pregnancies, I think. I don’t really know what to call them.”

    Weeks before, this pregnancy came as a surprise to Groh and her then-boyfriend, now husband. Nervously embracing the prospect of parenthood, everything was new to the young couple, including the symptoms of labor that had started three days before she ended up delivering in her toilet. Despite both Groh and her husband working in the medical field, they felt lost at that moment.

    “We kind of froze,” she says. “We’re like, ‘What the hell do we do?’”

    Groh told her husband to call their doctor, who instructed her to go to the hospital right away. There, she delivered her placenta, received antibiotics and started to navigate ricocheting feelings.

    “It’s all different emotions, like relief, guilt, obviously sadness,” she says. “But like, we were okay. Cried a lot.”

    Fast forward to October of 2023. Groh and her husband found out they were pregnant for the second time. Still a surprise, but a welcome one. They were excited to be parents.

    “I want to say it was planned, because it was kind of like, if it’s going to happen, it’s going to happen,” she says. “Who’s ever ready?”

    Like her first pregnancy, Groh’s developing embryo was healthy, but she and her husband took extra precautions to try and prevent another miscarriage, like genetic testing. Everything from her anatomy scan in February 2024 looked great.

    Less than 10 days later at 20 weeks gestation, Groh and her husband were having sex – which is widely considered safe for pregnant individuals – when she began bleeding.

    “I just kept bleeding and I was like, ‘Well, this is not normal,’” Groh says. “I had one big cramp and I was like, wow, that’s weird.”

    Groh’s doctor told her to go right to the hospital. She thought they’d be coming home that same day.

    “We didn’t even pack any bags,” she says. “It’s like, alright, we’ll be back soon.”

    Groh’s cervix was nearly four centimeters dilated with telescoping membranes, meaning it was likely her body would try to deliver the pregnancy. Doctors presented the idea of cerclage, which is where doctors stitch a patient’s cervix shut to stave off labor, but Groh was told she may be too far dilated.

    “After you’re dilated a certain amount, it becomes a risk of rupturing the membranes, and then [you’re at risk of] infection,” Groh says.

    Next came the subject of viability – a conversation Groh knew was coming.

    Fetal viability, which is the gestational age at which a fetus can survive outside the womb, is generally considered to be around 23 to 24 weeks with intensive medical care. Pregnancies delivered between 21 and 22 weeks rarely survive, with only 3% of babies surviving four hours after delivery, according to the National Institutes of Health.

    “At this point […] I don’t think anybody has told me specifically that I’m miscarrying yet because, like, they’re trying, you know? We’re trying to get hope,” Groh says. “But I just want the facts. Give me the facts because I understand what’s happening with my body. With the limited medical knowledge that I have of this area, I can understand.”

    Groh made it clear to her care team that she is a pediatric nurse. She knows the size of the tubes that can be used to keep a premature baby alive, and that a baby delivered at 20 weeks is too small for even the smallest tools needed to give them hope. She’s also intimately aware of what life would look like if she were to deliver a baby that’s not ready to enter the world – if her pregnancy would survive at all.

    “There are substantial effects that this pregnancy, that this child could have down the road. Because I see this daily at work,” she says. “At this point, with the knowledge that I have and my history, in my brain, I think I know what’s gonna happen.”

    Contractions were ramping up and becoming increasingly painful. Doctors confirmed Groh’s instincts from her experience in 2020: this wasn’t labor, this was a miscarriage. The pregnancy’s chances of survival were extremely low and the threat of infection and complications were rising, putting her own health at risk. Her care team grew with more specialists, more doctors who presented her with options, of which she knew there was only one. She decided to call it.

    “It was almost like, kind of relieving,” she says. “I have all these thoughts in my brain, but now we’re going down a solid path. This is the path that we’re going down.”

    The path included a handful of options for ending Groh’s physical and emotional suffering, but only two stuck out in the moment and in her memory: delivering the miscarried fetus naturally or getting a dilation and evacuation, known as a D&E.

    “At the end of the day, this is what I wanted. I wanted a D&E,” Groh says. “I wanted to be done having contractions because I knew this fetus, or this pregnancy, was not going to survive. I had already been through it once, so I knew that this is what this fetus is going to look like.”

    In addition to being used in miscarriage cases like Groh’s, a D&E is a method of abortion care used by doctors. Often referred to as a surgical abortion, the procedure uses suction and medical tools to empty the uterus. Some patients may also use misoprostol to remove a miscarriage during early pregnancy loss. Misoprostol is one pill from the often two-step medication abortion method, which is available to patients who are less than 11 weeks along in their pregnancy.

    Patients who want or need to terminate a pregnancy can do so with a D&E until 21 weeks and six days gestation – that’s when Ohio law prohibits abortions of any kind moving forward, unless the patient’s life is at risk.

    In Groh’s case, there was no way to know how long it would take to deliver her miscarried fetus naturally. All they knew was she was bleeding and the pregnancy was still giving off tones that indicate cardiac activity, and that matters. Doctors could have proceeded with the D&E if Groh’s fetus was no longer giving off heart tones, but Ohio law requires that doctors and their patients wait at least 24 hours before starting an abortion if fetal or embryonic cardiac activity is detected. The medical community generally considers cardiac activity to begin in utero around six weeks gestation, which is usually before most patients know they are pregnant. The concept of being able to hear a true fetal heartbeat at six weeks is also contested by some physicians.

    According to Dr. Nisha Verma, an OB/GYN from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, cardiac valves don’t even exist at six weeks of gestation.

    “The flickering that we’re seeing on the ultrasound that early in the development of the pregnancy is actually electrical activity, and the sound that you ‘hear’ is actually manufactured by the ultrasound machine,” Verma told NPR for a story about “heartbeat bills.”

    Anatomy of the 24-hour rule

    Identifying the presence of fetal heart tones is part of Ohio’s mandatory “informed consent” requirement for abortion patients, and it’s wrapped up in the 24-hour rule under that same umbrella.

    The Ohio Legislature first imposed a mandatory information requirement for abortion in a law that took effect in 1992. Originally, that law allowed the information to be conveyed 24 hours before the abortion, “verbally or by other non-written means of communication” – meaning it did not require an initial in-person visit to the clinic. The information could be given by phone or even fax. This law was challenged in state court in Preterm Cleveland v. Voinovich, but the 10th District Court of Appeals upheld it as constitutional, and the Ohio Supreme Court declined to hear the case.

    Then, in 1998, the legislature amended the law to require that the communication must occur in person.

    Ever since, a physician must give the patient written confirmation that a cardiac activity is present and provide the patient with information about the statistical probability of carrying that pregnancy to term. The patient must sign and acknowledge receipt of this information, fulfilling the state’s informed consent requirement for abortion care.

    Ohio is one of 33 states that requires such counseling before an abortion is performed; one of 29 states that details what information abortion providers must give these patients; one of 28 states that requires patients to wait a specific amount of time for their abortion after counseling; and one of just 16 states that requires this counseling take place in person, according to the Guttmacher Institute.

    After jumping through the hoops of a consultation appointment and putting pen to paper, that’s when the clock starts. And while the waiting period rule may only span 24 hours, abortion providers report there are domino effects that can last weeks.

    Why abortion providers oppose the 24-hour rule

    Vanessa Hinsdale is the administrative director of surgery for Planned Parenthood of Southwest Ohio. She says the 24-hour waiting period clogs the entire scheduling system, impacting all patients.

    “With the waiting periods for us because of the volume of patients that we see, it takes right now about 20 days to get in just for your first appointment,” Hinsdale says. “That clock is ticking and, say they really want a medication abortion, you know, they get in and they’re nine weeks and it’s 10 weeks in a day – it is literally 70 days, so if you come back after that 24-hour period and you are 71 days, we can’t. Without a waiting period, they would have more of a choice.”

    The U.S. Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade in June of 2022 created a cascading effect on abortion rights across the nation. States that once had abortion access quickly enacted “trigger bans” that drastically scaled back abortion access, sometimes outlawing it altogether. Ohio’s own “heartbeat bill” was enacted after the fall of Roe, effectively banning abortions after six weeks, but the ban was put on pause four months later when a Hamilton County judge granted a motion for preliminary injunction. In November of 2023, Ohio voters passed a citizen-led state constitutional amendment to enshrine the right to reproductive freedom, protecting abortion access. Issue 1 passed with wide margins – 56.8% of the vote. Ohio was the first red state to restore abortion rights after the Supreme Court returned the decision to the states.

    Because Ohio abortion law currently allows patients to access an abortion up until 21 weeks and six days gestation, Ohio has become the only option for many out-of-state patients seeking an abortion. These patients are commonly coming from states with total abortion bans, like Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia. But even states that have enacted and maintained narrow abortion windows, like Florida and South Carolina, are seeing citizens flee to Ohio for care. Hinsdale says Ohio’s waiting period law is making it difficult to meet the needs of both in-state and out-of-state patients.

    “I will tell you, because of the 24-hour period and the amount of distance that patients are traveling here, we see around 51% of our patients are not in the state of Ohio,” Hinsdale says. “They’re coming from Lexington, Louisville, Tennessee, Indiana, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana.”

    Ohio currently has nine abortion clinics in operation, including six surgical centers and three medication-only clinics. Depending on a patient’s location and gestational timeline, even in-state patients may need to travel hours and stay overnight to meet the 24-hour waiting period requirements. For out-of-state patients, this further extends the time spent away from work, family and loved ones, many of whom may not know their loved one is seeking an abortion.

    “Not everybody has that comfort level, that ability, those people,” Hinsdale says.

    There is no medical rationale for the 24-hour waiting period, says Hinsdale – it’s simply a matter of the state requiring the patient to have time to think about their decision. In Preterm Cleveland v. Voinovich, the case that upheld the 24-hour waiting period rule, Judge Petree wrote in his partial concurrence (he disagreed with others on the three-judge panel on providing patients with state-mandated information) that a 24-hour waiting period “would foster reflection” in patients.

    “Clearly a waiting period, with ample provision for emergency situations, would foster reflection about important medical decisions,” the ruling reads. “Though we are unaware of similar waiting periods for other types of medical procedures, this is not fatal. No doubt there are many situations where medical providers perform questionable and perhaps unnecessary surgeries, such as hysterectomies, where a waiting period might serve to quell unthinking acceptance of a doctor’s conclusion. This is not too far afield of the common insurance company practice of requiring second opinions before invasive procedures are undertaken.”

    But Hinsdale says sterilization procedures, like hysterectomies, aren’t held to the same standard as abortion care for “reflection” about your decision.

    “If you are getting a vasectomy and you’re using certain types of insurance, or any kind of sterilization, there is a waiting period, and that is a very small subset of the population,” Hinsdale says. “There is nothing else that’s comparative to being like, you have to jump all through these hoops and wait and do all these things in order to have basic healthcare.”

    The 24-hour waiting period law is different for those who are experiencing a medical emergency and want or need an abortion as a result, but doctors are often dealing with extremely narrow definitions about what constitutes “life of the mother” exceptions. Even if a patient is pregnant for less than 21 weeks and six days – the cut-off time for an elective abortion in Ohio – it’s against the law for a doctor to provide an abortion within the 24-hour waiting period window when there’s fetal cardiac activity. That is, unless the patient is at risk of losing their life or a major bodily function. In Ohio, a doctor who is found to have violated that 24-hour rule can be charged with a misdemeanor and potentially lose their license. Since the fall of Roe, there have been highly publicized cases of doctors, including in Ohio, who are declining to perform abortions for medically-emergent patients for fear of breaking the law.

    “If you make standard medical care a crime when folks in all kinds of difficult medical situations present, especially in emergency situations, we are always going to see some type of delay,” Caitlin Gustafson, an OB-GYN in Idaho, told Politico in April. “Because it’s criminalized care, physicians are going to naturally hesitate.”

    Whether a doctor will take on that risk on behalf of a patient experiencing a medical emergency can vary from hospital to hospital – sometimes transfers have to happen.

    “You do have a section of patients that have a pregnancy that might have been a very desired, very sought after, sometimes a fertility-based pregnancy and that there might be parts of the pregnancy that are not sustainable but are not risk of life to the mother,” Hinsdale says. “If a patient doesn’t want to [deliver the pregnancy], they want to be able to just have a procedure, they either have to, in some cases, follow the 24-hour law or they have to go out of state to where there’s not a waiting period. It’s just more undue stress on a very stressful situation.”

    A sign from an abortion rally - Photo: Mary LeBus

    Photo: Mary LeBus

    A sign from an abortion rally

    The clock starts for Groh

    In Groh’s case, the start of her 24-hour waiting period on that February evening was when she started to feel less like a stoic pediatric nurse and more like a scared patient.

    “I was terrified – oh my god, I’m going to start crying,” Groh says, pausing the interview for a moment. “Jesus Christ, I haven’t cried like this in a while.”

    Her body was still bleeding. The unknown was catching up to her anxieties, and she still had 24 hours to go.

    “I was bleeding and nobody knew if there was an abruption,” she says. “I was like, I’m gonna bleed out, and nobody’s gonna be able to do anything.”

    Groh signed her informed consent form around 9 p.m. that night, meaning doctors had to wait until 9 p.m. the following day to begin her D&E. Her care team promised to monitor her heavily over the 24 hours, tracking her bleeding, the fetal heart tones. She wasn’t sure if they would be able to move up the D&E time if the fetus’ cardiac activity stopped, but she was in too much pain to think about specifics at this point.

    “[I had to] sit here in this agony of these contractions that are terrible,” she says. “I’ve never felt pain like this before.”

    Doctors gave Groh an epidural to help with her painful contractions. She declined one at first, feeling strange about getting care that resembled what was supposed to be a happy experience for fully-developed pregnancies.

    “I’m like, I’m miscarrying a baby, I’m not truly in childbirth,” she says. “I’m like, I don’t need an epidural. Like, I will look weak if I get an epidural, basically. But no, I got one, and that thing was life-changing.”

    Groh’s anxieties dulled slightly with her pain. Her husband, mom and cousin made sure she wouldn’t be alone for a second of her 24-hour waiting period. Under the hum of hospital fluorescents and steady beeps, Groh and her family tried to make the hardest 24 hours of her life feel somewhat normal.

    “I was trying not to think about it,” she says. “We are very sarcastic people in my family, and we joke a lot with each other about things. It was kind of just like, we’re just getting through this. We’re here and we’re getting through it. We’re gonna joke about stuff, we’re going to cry about stuff, we’re gonna do it all. We just have to get through these freaking 24 hours.”

    Snacking on vending machine sustenance in a line of chairs in front of Groh, her husband joked that he felt like they were at the movies, with Groh as the leading lady. She laughs at the comment still, thankful she had her family there to wait with her as the clock ticked.

    “I have these people here to support me, which other people do not,” she says, tearing up again at the thought. “I could not imagine being told that I have to wait 24 hours and not having anybody with me. So this is why I’m doing this [interview], because it’s jacked up that there are people out there that have to do this by themselves.”

    To Groh’s surprise and dismay, she felt the sudden urge to push around 3 a.m., just six hours into her 24-hour mandatory waiting period. Her husband hurried to call for the nurse, but her pregnancy arrived first. It was breathing.

    “It’s obviously traumatic,” Groh says. “I deliver a breathing, 20-week pregnancy, taking breaths, but still not viable. This is not the road I wanted to go down. I wanted the D&E so that I did not have to deliver, see this pregnancy breathing, knowing that it’s going to die. That was probably one of the hardest things, because I chose to have a D&E, but because of [the 24-hour rule], I did not make it to that time. I had to go down the path that I did not choose.”

    Reflecting on those moments makes Groh sad, but really she’s angry. She knows there are patients out there who are forced to navigate the same experience alone, patients who aren’t mentally equipped the same way she was thanks to her own medical training.

    “That’s why I’m angry,” she says. “I think of, once again, all the people who don’t have the support system that I have, and […] there are people that suffer from mental health issues, I think we all do in some sort of aspect, but there are people that can’t handle it.”

    The memory of delivering a dying pregnancy, the baby she was looking forward to meeting later under radically different circumstances, has cemented itself indelibly in Groh’s mind. The memory of her miscarriage at home now coupled with another fatal birth in the hospital. It was never supposed to be this way.

    “It was traumatic the first time, and now I’m doing it a second time. It’s even more traumatic,” she says. “I could have had a D&E. I could have been asleep, like I wanted to be. I could have not had a recollection of delivery.”

    Her choices whittled down by fate and the state, Groh used what little election she had left to do something that she still can’t explain to this day – she chose to hold her dying baby. Asked why, after everything she went through, she held her arms out.

    Groh pauses.

    “I don’t know. I have no idea. Because, I mean, it’s your baby,” Groh says. “I didn’t have to hold the pregnancy. That was also my choice.”

    Taking the 24-hour rule to court

    In April of 2024, the American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Ohio and Planned Parenthood Federation of America filed a lawsuit on behalf of Ohio abortion providers to challenge Ohio’s laws that force abortion patients to wait 24 hours to begin abortion care.

    According to the ACLU, the laws violate a part of the Issue 1 constitutional amendment that prohibits the state from “burdening, prohibiting, penalizing and interfering with access to abortion, and discriminating against abortion patients and providers.”

    “These laws violate Ohio’s constitutional right to reproductive freedom passed on November 7, 2023,” reads a press release from the ACLU. “The challenged abortion restrictions unnecessarily require the overwhelming majority of patients to make two trips to a health center and, in practice, often force patients to wait much longer than 24 hours to receive an abortion. This delays – and in some cases, completely prevents – patients from receiving an abortion.”

    “The singling out of abortion for differential and unfavorable treatment perpetuates the discriminatory view that patients do not think carefully about their decisions and do not understand the nature of the procedure,” adds Bethany Lewis, executive director of Cleveland’s Preterm abortion clinic. “This is a patronizing stereotype that has no place in our laws.”

    Jessie Hill is the lead attorney with the ACLU taking on the state’s 24-hour rule. She says their lawsuit goes after more aspects of the informed consent process for abortions in Ohio, but the 24-hour waiting requirement is the focus of this case.

    “The Reproductive Freedom Amendment that Ohioans adopted in November has much stronger and clearer language that makes it clear the state cannot restrict reproductive decisions, including abortion, unless they are doing so to advance patient health and in accordance with medical standards,” Hill says. “That is clearly not what this [24-hour waiting period] law does. And that’s really the linchpin of our case.”

    The lawsuit is set to go to trial in April 2025, but the ACLU has a hearing scheduled for their motion on a preliminary injunction to stop the 24-hour rule on Aug. 16 in a Franklin County Common Pleas court. Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, a Republican, filed an opposition to this request, saying in court documents that it’s the state’s duty to “respect the will of the people” who passed Issue 1, but that it’s also the state’s duty to defend “statutory provisions that the amendment does not invalidate against meritless attack.”

    What makes the lawsuit “meritless” to Yost is that the newly-passed constitutional amendment keeps the state from burdening, penalizing, prohibiting, interfering with or discriminating against patients seeking an abortion or those assisting with an abortion. To Yost, clinics themselves are not protected by this amendment, so a lawsuit filed by those representing clinics can’t legitimately argue that the 24-hour rule is impeding on patients’ individual rights.

    Yost goes on to address the argument made by the plaintiff that laws creating delays in care, like the domino effect of a mandatory waiting period, are not even the state’s business.

    “But the fact that patients often wait longer than 24 hours is not because of the law, but rather is attributable to several factors outside of the state’s control,” Yost’s filing stated.

    Ohio Republican Governor Mike DeWine, who opposed the passage of Issue 1, told WSYX that the 24-hour requirement should stay in place.

    “Those guardrails are still in effect. They worked well before. So I don’t see any reason to change them,” DeWine told reporters in May.

    Former Dayton mayor and Democratic candidate for Ohio Governor Nan Whaley, who was named the newest CEO for Planned Parenthood Southwest Ohio in June, said the law has not “worked well” like DeWine believes.

    “The 24-hour waiting period is a real challenge for people coming from long distances that, unfortunately, have to come in from long distances to access abortion care,” Whaley says. “We’re becoming a safe-haven state – and we see this in the Cincinnati clinic, particularly – the rule is holding up the ability for us to serve more patients.”

    Asked if she thinks the 24-hour rule “worked well” for her, as DeWine would suggest, she scoffed.

    “Not at all, no. I feel like it discredited my knowledge, my decision making abilities,” Groh says. “It comes down to the fact that this was my choice. Your choice would have been totally different, which is fine, your choice is your choice. But I want to make the choices that are best for me and for my family. So that’s at the end of the day what it boils down to, and I want to make them when I want to make them.”

    A version of this article originally appeared in City Beat.

    Madeline Fening

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  • Ohio Among States Spending Millions on Anti-Abortion Centers Since Dobbs, Study Finds

    Ohio Among States Spending Millions on Anti-Abortion Centers Since Dobbs, Study Finds

    click to enlarge

    (Photo by Ashley Murray/States Newsroom)

    Supporters of reproductive rights protested outside the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday, March 26, 2024, as justices heard oral arguments over access to mifepristone, one of two pharmaceuticals used in medication abortion.

    New data studying state funding for anti-abortion centers showed Ohio provided more than $22 million to groups in the state since the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs decision overturned national abortion rights.

    Since 2013, the state has fed more than $35.5 million to anti-abortion funding, according to Equity Forward’s newest study of state-by-state funding for centers who are also called “crisis pregnancy centers,” and are often religiously affiliated facilities that provide services like ultrasounds and pregnancy tests, but have also reportedly provided outdated or debunked information about pregnancy.

    The organization looked at 23 states allocating public dollars to anti-abortion centers since 1995, the year they say had “the first verifiable instance of funding,” and up to July 23 of this year.

    “AACs use public dollars to fund tactics and programs that not only aim to delay, deceive and discourage those in search of abortion care but also act as an unnecessary barrier to pregnant people looking for other medical care and support services,” the report stated.

    In 22 states, the analysis found that more than $489 million has been allocated to anti-abortion centers since Dobbs was decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2022.

    Ohio has sent $35,583,939 to facilities in the state, with that total including public funding going to “Alternative to Abortion programs,” funding from the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, and “other miscellaneous sources,” the study stated. Specifically, $17.8 million from the TANF program went to centers since 2013, according to Equity Forward. The study reported a total of nearly $200 million in TANF funds used for anti-abortion centers in nine states.

    TANF is a program designed to “help low-income families with children achieve economic self-sufficiency,” according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, though states have discretion when it comes to using the federal funding, along with the state contribution to the fund.

    As part of Gov. Mike DeWine’s Office of Faith-Based Community Initiatives received $13.5 million for fiscal year 2024 in TANF Block Grant earmarks as part of the most recent state operating budget and funds grants through TANF. According to the office’s website, the purposes of TANF include preventing or reducing “the incidence of out-of-wedlock pregnancies,” encouraging the “formation and maintenance of two-parent families” and ending the “dependence of parents in need on government benefits by promoting job preparation, work and marriage.

    The state also has a Parenting and Pregnancy Program through the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, for which $14 million was set aside in the last budget, $7 million per fiscal year, according to the Legislative Service Commission’s breakdown of the state budget.

    Organizations that receive money through the PPP must “promote childbirth, rather than abortion, through counseling and other services, including parenting and adoption support,” according to the state. Those entities are expressly banned from being “involved in or associated with any abortion activities, including providing abortion counseling or referrals to abortion clinics, performing abortion-related medical procedures, or engaging in pro-abortion advertising.”

    The state is still funding entities in this way despite a ballot initiative that constitutionalized reproductive rights including abortion last year, with the approval of 57% of voters. A spokesperson for DeWine has been asked multiple times if language would be changing within the PPP to reflect the language of the amendment, but he has yet to give a response.

    Ohio legislation in the last year seeks to further the support of anti-abortion groups, through possible tax credits, as another Republican bill seeks to keep state funds from benefitting abortion-related services.

    It’s not clear whether those bills will succeed during this General Assembly, which ends in December, but they could be reintroduced next year even if they fail to see a vote or passage.

    Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.

    Susan Tebben, The Ohio Capital Journal

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