Federal judge strikes down state law Bevin cited, requiring abortion clinics to have agreements for ambulance service

Kentucky abortion clinics do not need to have written agreements with an ambulance service and hospital for patient care in the event of an emergency, because such restrictions are unconstitutional, a federal judge ruled Friday. The ruling by U.S. District Judge Greg Stivers undercuts Gov. Matt Bevin's efforts to eliminate legal abortion in the state.

Abortion providers argued Bevin "was using the law unfairly to try to shut down the state's only abortion clinic and block another from opening," reports Deborah Yetter of the Louisville Courier Journal. "The ruling involves a 1998 state law requiring abortion clinics to have so-called 'transfer' agreements with an ambulance service and hospital in the event of a medical emergency at the clinic, a provision opponents argued was unnecessary but one that lawyers for Bevin said is necessary for patient safety."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Baptist Health names Dr. Jody Prather chief strategy officer

Food-service employee at UK hospital diagnosed with hepatitis A; if you ate at Pavilion A cafeteria Oct.11-30, get vaccinated

Cigarette smoking rates among U.S. adults are at a historic low, 14%, but one in five still use some type of tobacco-based product