Rosen, Colleagues Demand Trump Administration to Reverse Decision to End Policy on Emergency Reproductive Care

The Trump Administration’s Decision To End Guidance That Reaffirmed Access To Abortion Care In Emergency Situations Will Put Women’s Lives In Jeopardy

WASHINGTON, DC – Following the three-year anniversary of the Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade, U.S. Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV) joined a group of Senators in a letter demanding the Trump Administration to overturn its recent decision to end guidance that reaffirmed hospitals’ responsibility to provide medically-necessary emergency abortions. In 1986, Congress enacted the Emergency Medical Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) to require Medicare-participating hospitals to provide necessary life-saving treatment for any individual—including pregnant women—experiencing emergency medical conditions. However, since the conservative majority on the Supreme Court handed down the Dobbs decision, more than twenty states have passed laws to ban or severely restrict access to abortion, disrupting decades of certainty for hospitals regarding their legal obligation to provide necessary emergency abortion care under federal law.

“While EMTALA remains binding federal law, the rescission will create further confusion for hospitals and providers, especially in states with abortion bans, and will result in medically-necessary care being withheld from pregnant patients in crisis,” wrote the lawmakers. “When doctors are forced to navigate the complex legal interplay of state abortion bans and federal EMTALA protections, pregnant people experience care delays and may receive substandard care.”

“This abrupt decision will further the chaos and confusion that hospitals, physicians, and patients have experienced since the Dobbs decision and will result in negative and deadly consequences for women and families across the United States,” the lawmakers concluded.

The full letter can be found HERE.

Senator Rosen has been a fighter for women’s reproductive rights, taking action to safeguard access to essential health care for women. This week, she helped introduce the Women’s Health Protection Act to enshrine Roe protections in federal law and restore women’s reproductive freedom. Earlier this year, Senator Rosen joined Senate colleagues in introducing the Right to Contraception Act, aimed at federally guaranteeing the right to obtain and use contraceptives and shielding providers who prescribe and offer them. 

###