Idaho House Passes Pro-Life Bill to Ban Webcam Abortions With Dangerous Abortion Pill

State   |   Dave Andrusko   |   Mar 3, 2015   |   2:12PM   |   Boise, ID

Proving last week’s 13-4 vote in the Idaho House State Affairs Committee was no fluke, the full house today voted 55-17 in favor of House Bill 154. The measure would require abortionists to perform in-person exams when they use chemical abortifacients.

In a brief story, the Associated Press reported that all the “yes” votes came from Republicans, all the “no” votes from Democrats. HB 154 now will be considered by the state Senate.

Currently, 18 states have laws on the books which say abortionists cannot avoid the duty of being in the same room as the pregnant woman. (Sixteen are in force, two are being litigated.) But having abortionists at a remote center far from the pregnant woman is at the core of “webcam” abortions.

Dr. Randall K. O’Bannon, NRLC’s director of Education, testified last Tuesday in favor of the “Physician Physical Presence Women Protection Act of 2015”

In his testimony, Dr. O’Bannon carefully summarized how webcam abortions work and the much-underreported dangers of chemical abortions.

In webcam abortions (which proponents insist is part of telemedicine), an abortionist at a hub clinic teleconferences with a woman at one of the smaller satellite offices, reviews her case, and asks a couple of questions. If satisfied, he clicks a mouse, remotely unlocking a drawer at her location.

In that drawer are the abortion pills which make up the two-drug abortion technique (RU-486 and a prostaglandin). She takes the RU-486 there and takes the rest of the pills home to administer to herself later.

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Dr. O’Bannon read from the tally from a postmarketing summary on mifepristone published by the FDA on April 30, 2011.

* more than 2,200 reports of “adverse events” or complications (2,207)

* more than 600 women (612) hospitalized,

* more than 300 (339) requiring transfusions.

* 256 women reported infections, with 48 of them classified as severe.

* 58 cases of ectopic pregnancies, which the pills do not treat

Sometimes these complications prove deadly.

The FDA knew of at least 14 deaths associated with use of these drugs in the U.S. and at least five more in other countries. And that was nearly four years ago!

“As the testimony demonstrates, it is in Planned Parenthood’s interest to make this a discussion over telemedicine, in general, rather than the unique risks associated with chemical abortion and what telemedicine does to compound those risks,” said Mary Spaulding Balch, JD, NRLC Director of State Legislation.

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Balch noted that telemedicine is not currently used for any other invasive procedures in this country or anything similar to abortion. It is mainly used for primary care doctors to share charts, X-rays and other vitals with specialists, or to monitor medical devices in use by patients to measure things like heart ECGs and blood glucose levels, or to help consumers get specialized information, participate in discussion groups or for medical education.

Use of telemedicine for abortion is inappropriate because there is no doctor to examine the woman before the abortion or to give follow-up care in the case of an emergency,” Balch told NRL News Today.

HB 154 also requires that abortionists make “all reasonable efforts” to ensure that women return between 12 and 18 days after their abortions for follow-up examinations.

LifeNews.com Note: Dave Andrusko is the editor of National Right to Life News and an author and editor of several books on abortion topics. This post originally appeared at National Right to Life News Today.