John,
This is Amanda, Senior Director of Programs at Women's March.
Tomorrow, the Supreme Court will hear if states can deny pregnant women the emergency care they urgently need.
The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) is a nearly 40-year-old federal law guaranteeing everyone treatment for emergency medical conditions nationwide. But anti-abortion extremists want to exclude pregnant people from this protection, and force doctors to turn away patients suffering emergency pregnancy complications.
Photo by Kisha Bari
If the Supreme Court sides with extremists, it would mean excluding pregnant people from the right to treatment for emergency medical conditions. Anti-abortion extremists are using this case to make it easier to ban emergency abortion care nationwide.
In struggle,
Amanda Chávez Barnes
Senior Director of Programs, Women's March
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