-
Hospitals are required to stabilize anyone experiencing a medical emergency. Two lawsuits question whether that includes performing an abortion, despite state laws.
-
Texas Public Radio, the San Antonio-based NPR station, has been recognized by the Texas Association of Broadcasters with five awards for overall excellence, breaking news, newscast, beat reporting, and best sports story.
-
Although the Catholic Church officially opposes abortion, the report says there's far greater diversity of opinion among laity in the U.S.
-
The council established a $500,000 Reproductive Justice Fund last year. But it faced criticism and a lawsuit over whether it could be used to facilitate out-of-state abortion care.
-
Pressure has mounted on Trump to make his own views on abortion public after the Florida Supreme Court allowed the state's six-week ban on abortion to go into effect.
-
District Attorney Gocha Ramirez filed murder charges against Lizelle Gonzalez in 2022. She is now suing Ramirez and others for deprivation of liberty, distress and reputational harm.
-
The doctor tweeted that she will not be attending the conference because of the state's restrictive reproductive healthcare laws.
-
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said maternal mortality — the death of a woman while pregnant or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy — is a crucial health concern.
-
The state agency is responding to a petition from two attorneys to clear up ambiguity about when emergency abortions are allowed
-
We speak with a patient, a doctor, and a legal expert about what happens when the law and medical ethics are at odds.