State says 7,000 Texas women got an abortion out of state in 2024; advocates say number is 4x higher
More than 7,000 Texas women sought an abortion in another state last year, according to official data from the state, but ...
MedPage Today on MSN
Texas Has a New Abortion Pill Law, but One Provider Plans to Keep Sending Them There
The Abortion Coalition for Telemedicine, which provides legal and other support for abortion pill prescribers, is telling ...
The Texas Tribune on MSN
How new regulations impact abortion and birth control access in Texas
Despite clarifying legislation, abortion remains banned in Texas, except to save the life of the pregnant patient.
A new Texas law prohibits the delivery of abortion medications, such as mifepristone. It's enforced by allowing private ...
A bill that would let Texas residents sue out-of-state abortion pill providers for up to $100,000 has been passed by lawmakers and sent to the governor.
The law could allow private citizens to sue nonprofits that help Texans access medication abortion in other states.
The Texas Tribune on MSN
Bill allowing private citizens to sue over abortion pills clears Texas governor’s desk
Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday signed a bill that will allow private citizens to sue anyone who manufactures, distributes, ...
Letitia James, New York’s attorney general, said Texas has no authority to “impose its cruel abortion ban here.” ...
New York Attorney General Letitia James has got involved in a Texas abortion pill lawsuit, vowing to protect New Yorkers from "out-of-state extremists." ...
The 19th News on MSN
Abortion bans push families deeper into poverty and drive up crime, economists say
Researchers found a “strikingly large” relationship between restrictions on abortion and property crime, underscoring the ...
The Texas Tribune on MSN
New Texas law restricting abortion pills beefs up an existing legal tool
Pro-abortion advocates and lawmakers agree that this bill could have a “chilling effect” on safe access for women who need ...
Planned Parenthood May Have to Pay $1.8 Billion to Texas and Louisiana in Fraudulent Medicaid Claims
Oral arguments began Thursday in a case that will determine whether Planned Parenthood is on the hook for claims made after it was suspended as a provider.
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