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The 2024 election was perhaps the biggest referendum on abortion rights since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, and the results are a mixed bag, including for those living in the South.
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A group of health care providers and two Louisiana women who were denied abortion care are suing state officials to block a new law that makes common pregnancy medications controlled dangerous substances, arguing the law is discriminatory and unconstitutional.
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A new survey suggests the number of abortions among women in Louisiana may have risen since the state banned nearly all abortions.
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Pharmacists insist no policies have changed as doctors try to determine why their patients have to chase down medication prior to health procedures.
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Women who have suffered unnecessarily after being denied abortions are telling their stories — and that could impact the upcoming election:
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The New Orleans Health Department has launched its investigation into whether Louisiana’s new law restricting two common pregnancy medications could harm women’s health or delay medical care.
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“The last thing I need to be asking myself during an emergency … is: ‘Could I go to jail for this?’” a doctor said.
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Louisiana hospitals have locked up a key drug used to stop women from bleeding out after giving birth as a new state law takes effect Tuesday.
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Lawmakers passed a law designed to limit reproductive rights in Louisiana. But it may also limit patients’ chances of surviving common life events like miscarriages and births.
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Louisiana’s largest health system has sent guidance to some staff on the state’s new anti-abortion law that reclassifies two common pregnancy medications as controlled dangerous substances.