Clinic seeks to allow nurse practioners to perform abortions

The Associated Press - November 9, 2019 9:30 am

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) – An Oklahoma City abortion clinic is challenging longstanding laws that allow only physicians to perform abortions in Oklahoma, marking the sixth time in the past five years that the state’s abortion restrictions have ended up in court.
In the lawsuit filed on Friday in Oklahoma County, the Trust Women clinic alleges that the “physician-only” laws are unconstitutional because they restrict women’s access to abortion without any valid medical basis.
Attorneys for the clinic argue that nurse practitioners are fully capable of providing both medication and aspiration abortions, which figures show accounted for nearly 90% of the roughly 5,000 abortions performed in Oklahoma last year.
Oklahomans for Life Chairman Tony Lauinger frames the challenge as abortion rights groups trying to use the state’s judiciary to thwart the will of the Legislature and the people.

 

Latest Stories

No. 9 OU women remain unbeaten with 88-58 victory over UNLV

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Senior Skylar Vann scored 15 points and her sister, freshman Zya Vann,...

Bryce Thompson scores 17 points and OSU beats Miami 80-74 in the Charleston Classic

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Bryce Thompson scored 17 points, Marchelus Avery had 15 points and eight...

Freshman Jeremiah Fears, Duke Miles propel OU to 84-56 victory over East Texas A&M

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Freshman Jeremiah Fears finished with 20 points, Duke Miles scored 19, and...