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Planned Parenthood Argues Against Abortion Reporting Law In Federal Court

By Isaiah Seibert, IPB News | Published on in Health, Law, Politics, Statewide News
The federal court house building in Evansville. (Photo: Google Maps)

Attorneys for Planned Parenthood say a new state law that requires doctors to report complications from abortions is too vague to be constitutional.  As Indiana Public Broadcasting’s Isaiah Seibert reports, a federal judge in Evansville heard arguments today in a lawsuit challenging Indiana’s anti-abortion measure.

The law creates a long list of purported abortion complications it requires doctors to report. But the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana’s Ken Falk, who represents Planned Parenthood, says the measure isn’t clear enough.

“The term is defined so broadly and so uncertainly that it’s impossible to tell what has to be or does not have to be reported.”

Falk says that uncertainty may cause doctors to over-report complications. And those challenging the law say abortions are safer than dental procedures or colonoscopies.  They argue high reported complication rates could mislead women who consider one.

The state argues the law implies doctors should use common sense when they report. And that women can determine for themselves whether an abortion is safe.

If a federal judge doesn’t temporarily halt the law – as Planned Parenthood wants – it goes into effect July 1.