Court Opinion

ID: 4909276
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-08 22:01:17.206347+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:19.829494
License: Public Domain

In the

    United States Court of Appeals
                  For the Seventh Circuit
                      ____________________

Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573
WHOLE WOMAN’S HEALTH ALLIANCE, et al.,
                                                 Plaintiffs-Appellees,

                                  v.

TODD ROKITA, Attorney General of Indiana, et al.,
                                     Defendants-Appellants.
                      ____________________

          Appeals from the United States District Court for the
           Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
        No. 1:18-cv-01904-SEB-MJD — Sarah Evans Barker, Judge.
                      ____________________

                    DECIDED SEPTEMBER 8, 2021
                      ____________________

   Before FLAUM, EASTERBROOK, and WOOD, Circuit Judges.
   PER CURIAM. The district court entered an injunction that
prohibits oﬃcials from enforcing these provisions of Indi-
ana’s law:
    •     Ind. Code §16-34-2-1(a)(1) to the extent this stat-
          ute limits the provision of first-trimester medica-
          tion abortion care to physicians; requires a physi-
          cal examination to be performed on a woman
2                                      Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

        prior to receiving an abortion; and prohibits the
        use of telemedicine by requiring the prescriber to
        be physically present at the abortion facility in or-
        der to dispense the abortion-inducing drug and
        the patient to ingest the drug in the physical pres-
        ence of prescriber;
    •   Ind. Code §16-34-2-1(a)(2) providing that second-
        trimester abortions be performed only in hospi-
        tals or ambulatory surgical centers;
    •   Ind. Code §16-34-2-1.1(a)(1), (a)(4), (b)(1) to the
        extent these provisions prohibit providers from
        using telemedicine or telehealth to obtain in-
        formed consent from patients or to conduct pre-
        abortion counseling sessions;
    •   Ind. Code §25-1-9.5-8(a)(4) prohibiting the use of
        telemedicine in abortion care;
    •   410 Ind. Admin. Code §26-17-2(d)(1)(A), (4), (e)(5)
        requiring clinics providing aspiration abortions
        to maintain 120-square-foot procedure rooms,
        scrub facilities, and 44-inch corridors;
    •   410 Ind. Admin. Code §26.5-17-2(e)(1) requiring
        medication abortion clinics to maintain house-
        keeping rooms with storage sinks;
    •   Ind. Code §16-34-2-1.1(a)(1)(E) and (a)(1)(G) re-
        quiring women seeking abortion services to be in-
        formed that “objective scientific information
        shows that a fetus can feel pain at or before
        twenty (20) weeks of postfertilization age” and
        that “human physical life begins when a human
        ovum is fertilized by a human sperm”; and
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                          3

     •   Ind. Code §16-34-2-1.1(b)(2) to the extent it re-
         quires dissemination of a Perinatal Hospice Bro-
         chure containing the following: “Studies show
         that mothers who choose to carry their baby [sic]
         to term recover to baseline mental health more
         quickly than those who aborted due to fetal
         anomaly.”
2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 149959 at *207–08 (S.D. Ind. Aug. 10,
2021). The oﬃcials (collectively Indiana) request a stay of
some aspects of this injunction: the “physician-only law as ap-
plied to medication abortions, Ind. Code §16-34-2-1(a)(1);
[the] second-trimester hospital/ambulatory surgical center re-
quirement, id. §16-34-2-1(a)(2); [the] in-person counseling re-
quirement, id. §16-34-2-1.1(a)(1), (a)(4), (b)(1); [the] in-person
physical examination requirement, id. §16-34-2-1(a)(1); and
[the] telemedicine ban, id. §25-1-9.5-8(a)(4).”
    All of the contested provisions have been in force for
years, so a stay would preserve the status quo pending appel-
late resolution. And Indiana has made the “strong showing”
on the merits necessary to receive a stay. See Nken v. Holder,
556 U.S. 418, 426, 434 (2009).
    We start with Ind. Code §16-34-2-1(a)(1). State laws requir-
ing abortions to be performed by physicians have been chal-
lenged before, and in Mazurek v. Armstrong, 520 U.S. 968
(1997), the Supreme Court held that they are constitutional.
The district court nonetheless declared that requiring a phy-
sician is unconstitutional with respect to one means of induc-
ing an abortion. That exception does not ﬁnd any support in
Mazurek or this court’s decisions. See Whole Woman’s Health
Alliance v. Hill, 937 F.3d 864, 874 (7th Cir. 2019); Planned
4                                         Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc. v. Box, 991 F.3d 740, 751
(7th Cir. 2021).
    Laws requiring second-trimester abortions to be per-
formed in a hospital or surgical center also have been chal-
lenged before. Indeed, Ind. Code §16-34-2-1(a)(2) itself was
challenged and sustained by the Supreme Court. Gary-North-
west Indiana Women’s Services, Inc. v. Orr, 496 F. Supp. 894
(N.D. Ind. 1980) (three-judge court), aﬃrmed, 451 U.S. 934
(1981). The Supreme Court’s decision was summary and un-
reasoned, but like other summary dispositions it sekled the
validity of the contested statute even though it did not estab-
lish general principles. Two years later, the Court concluded
after full brieﬁng and argument that a materially identical
statute in Virginia is constitutional. Simopoulos v. Virginia, 462
U.S. 506 (1983).
    The requirement of in-person counselling, Ind. Code §16-
34-2-1.1(a)(1), (a)(4), (b)(1), likewise is a return litigant. It was
contested and held constitutional in A Woman’s Choice v. New-
man, 305 F.3d 684 (7th Cir. 2002). We concluded that the valid-
ity of such a statute was established in Planned Parenthood of
Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833, 881–87 (1992),
which held that a materially identical informed-consent stat-
ute does not create an “undue burden” on access to abortion.
And if as Casey and A Woman’s Choice hold a state may require
in-person meetings with physicians before an abortion, then
the validity of the restriction on telemedicine, Ind. Code §25-
1-9.5-8(a)(4), follows directly.
   Plaintiﬀs contend, and the district court found, that devel-
opments in videoconferencing make it possible to dispense
with in-person meetings, that improvements in medicine
make the use of hospitals or surgical centers unnecessary, and
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                         5

that nurses are competent to approve and monitor medica-
tion-induced abortions. The district court concluded that
these ﬁndings permit it to depart from the holdings of earlier
cases. Yet the Supreme Court insists that it alone has the au-
thority to modify its precedents, State Oil Co. v. Khan, 522 U.S.
3, 20 (1997), and we added in A Woman’s Choice that a district
judge lacks authority to use new ﬁndings to depart from es-
tablished law. 305 F.3d at 688–89 (“constitutionality must be
assessed at the level of legislative fact, rather than adjudica-
tive fact as determined by more than 650 district judges.”).
    We leave the merits for resolution after full brieﬁng and
argument. All we hold today is that existing precedents pro-
vide strong grounds for concluding that Indiana is likely to
prevail on the contested issues. To the extent that the injunc-
tion bars Indiana from enforcing Ind. Code §§ 16-34-2-1(a)(1),
(2), 16-34-2-1.1(a)(1), (4), (b)(1), and 25-1-9.5-8(a)(4), it is
stayed pending further order of this court.
6                                               Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

   WOOD, Circuit Judge, dissenting from the grant of the stay
pending appeal.
    Almost 50 years ago, the Supreme Court held that a
woman has a fundamental right to decide whether or not to
carry a pregnancy to term. Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973).
Today, challenges to Roe’s holding abound. In Dobbs v. Jackson
Women’s Health Org., No. 19-1392 (U.S.), cert. granted May 17,
2021, the State of Mississippi has asked the Court to rule that
“all pre-viability prohibitions on elective abortions are []con-
stitutional.” Petn. For Cert., Question 1. Texas took another
approach, by enacting a law that not only bans all abortions
after approximately the sixth week of pregnancy, but also dis-
empowers state oﬃcials from taking any enforcement action
related to that ban, instead authorizing any interested by-
stander to perform that function. See Whole Women’s Health v.
Austin Reeve Jackson, Judge, No. 21A24 (U.S.), Sept. 1, 2021,
denying an application for injunctive relief. And some states
have enacted law after law designed to chip away at Roe,
while piously purporting to protect women’s health. 1

    1 It is a mystery to me why the State is unwilling frankly to say that its

laws regulating abortion are designed to discourage that procedure to the
maximum extent that is constitutionally permissible. The Supreme Court
held as early as 1977 that states may express a preference for childbirth
over abortion, see Maher v. Roe, 431 U.S. 464, 474 (1977), and it reiterated
that point in Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833, 878 (1992).
Rather than insisting that its laws have only the high-minded purpose of
protecting women’s health, in the face of overwhelming evidence that
they have no such effect, it would be preferable from my standpoint to
have an open debate about the outer reaches of the state’s power to imple-
ment laws that have the effect of burdening, or even eliminating, access to
abortions.
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                        7

    The Indiana law before us takes the last form. It constricts
the performance of abortions in countless ways. The plaintiﬀ
organizations provide abortion services in Indiana and else-
where. In this suit, they originally challenged 25 diﬀerent
parts of the law, on the ground that these provisions impose
an undue burden on a woman’s right to obtain an abortion.
Over time, the case was whittled down. After a full bench trial,
the district court entered a permanent injunction against the
following aspects of the law:
   1. The “Physician-Only Law,” Ind. Code § 16-34-2-
      1(a)(1)(A), but only as applied to so-called medication
      abortions (i.e., those accomplished by taking two pills);
   2. The “Second-Trimester Hospitalization Requirement,”
      Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1(a)(2)(B);
   3. The “In-Person Counseling Requirement,” Ind. Code
      § 16-34-1.1(a)(1), (a)(4), (b);
   4. The “Telemedicine Ban,” Ind. Code § 25-1-9.5-8(a)(4);
   5. The “In-Person Examination Requirement,” Ind. Code
      § 16-34-2-1(a)(1);
   6. The “Facility Regulations” (specifying the size of pro-
      cedure rooms and hallways and the type and location
      of sinks), 410 Ind. Admin. Code 26-17-2(d)(1)(A), (d)(4),
      (3)(5); 410 Ind. Admin. Code 26.5-17-2(e)(1); and
   7. Three “Mandatory Disclosure Requirements” (con-
      cerning when life begins, fetal pain, and the woman’s
      mental health), Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1.1(a)(1)(E),
      (a)(1)(G).
See Whole Women’s Health v. Rokita, No. 1:18-cv-01904, 2021
WL 3508211 (S.D. Ind. Aug. 10, 2021). The court denied the
8                                        Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

Plaintiﬀs’ request for injunctive relief against another 13 pro-
visions, ﬁnding instead that the State had the better of the ar-
gument.
    The very next day, the State ﬁled a notice of appeal, along
with a motion to stay the injunction pending appeal. See FED.
R. CIV. P. 62(d). The district court denied the stay motion, and
so, as permitted by Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure
8(a)(2), the State asked this court to issue the stay. My col-
leagues have voted to grant Indiana’s request. Regretfully, I
cannot endorse that action. The district court’s rulings were
grounded in careful and extensive ﬁndings of fact, and in my
view scrupulously followed the Supreme Court’s guidance in
this diﬃcult area. I would deny the stay and allow the appeal
to progress in the normal fashion.
                                I
   Time does not permit more than a cursory overview of the
reasons that persuade me that the extraordinary remedy of a
stay is not appropriate here, but I wish to highlight a few. The
standards for granting a stay do not vary depending on
whether it is the United States, a state, or a private party seek-
ing that relief. The Supreme Court made this clear in Nken v.
Holder, 556 U.S. 418 (2009); its words there are worth recalling:
        A stay is not a matter of right, even if irreparable
    injury might otherwise result. It is instead an exercise
    of judicial discretion, and [t]he propriety of its issue is
    dependent upon the circumstances of the particular
    case. The party requesting a stay bears the burden of
    showing that the circumstances justify an exercise of
    that discretion.
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                          9

Id. at 433–34 (quotation marks and citations omitted). The
State of Indiana thus has the burden here of demonstrating
the appropriateness of a stay of the district court’s injunction.
    The Nken Court also identiﬁed the salient considerations
in deciding whether a stay should issue:
      (1) whether the stay applicant has made a strong
   showing that he is likely to succeed on the merits; (2)
   whether the applicant will be irreparably injured ab-
   sent a stay; (3) whether issuance of the stay will sub-
   stantially injure the other parties interested in the pro-
   ceeding; and (4) where the public interest lies.
Id. at 434. With respect to the all-important likelihood-of-
success factor, the Court emphasized that more than a
negligible chance of success or some possibility of irreparable
injury is required. Id. at 434–35; see also Illinois Republican
Party v. Pritzker, 973 F.3d 760, 763 (7th Cir. 2020) (applicant
must make a strong showing of likelihood of success, though
that may be less than proof by a preponderance).
   The State argues that it has met this standard. It points to
several key decisions in its eﬀort to show that the district court
erred badly enough that we should immediately freeze its in-
junction. Those decisions were the following:
       •   Mazurek v. Armstrong, 520 U.S. 968 (1997), which ad-
           dresses a Montana law restricting the performance
           of abortions in that state to licensed physicians.
       •   Simopoulos v. Virginia, 462 U.S. 506 (1983), which
           upheld a Virginia law that required second-
           trimester abortions to be performed either in a
           hospital or in some kind of clinic. See also Gary-
10                                     Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

           Northwest Indiana Women’s Servs., Inc. v. Orr, 451
           U.S. 934 (1981).
       •   A Woman’s Choice-E. Side Women’s Clinic v. Newman,
           305 F.3d 684 (7th Cir. 2002) (“Woman’s Choice”),
           which upheld Indiana’s in-person counseling re-
           quirement as then understood.
       •   Planned Parenthood of Ind. & Ky. v. Box, 991 F.3d 740
           (7th Cir. 2021) (“PPINK”), which held that a court
           must ﬁrst ﬁnd that an abortion regulation poses a
           substantial obstacle to the exercise of the abortion
           right, and only then engage in balancing burdens
           against beneﬁts.
       •   Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833
           (1992), which established the undue burden test
           and distinguished between a genuine burden and
           simple inconvenience or expense.
   My colleagues believe that the district court’s painstaking
158-page opinion ignores these decisions, or worse, openly
ﬂouts them. But my colleagues are over-reading the Supreme
Court’s decisions. As I will show brieﬂy, the Court has always
taken the position that for the Casey test—as elaborated as re-
cently as ﬁve years ago in Whole Women’s Health v. Hellerstedt,
136 S. Ct. 2292 (2016), and then two years ago in June Medical
Servs. v. Russo, 140 S. Ct. 2103 (2020)—facts matter.
    This record is unusually rich in the facts that it contains,
because it was compiled after a full trial on the merits. That
record shows that the decisions on which the State is relying
do not resolve the issues before us, because there are critical
factual diﬀerences between those cases and this one. There is
also extensive evidence in the record supporting a ﬁnding
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                        11

that the Indiana laws that the district court enjoined pose se-
rious problems under the Supreme Court’s governing abor-
tion jurisprudence. (Obviously, if the Court chooses to accept
Mississippi’s invitation to overrule Roe v. Wade, then every-
thing is up for grabs. As a lower court judge, however, I must
proceed on the assumption that nothing has changed until the
Court says so. See Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/American
Exp., Inc., 490 U.S. 477, 484 (1989).)
                               II
    I begin with Mazurek. As I indicated above, this case in-
volved the constitutionality of a Montana law that restricted
the performance of abortions to “licensed physicians.” A
group of doctors, plus the only physician assistant in the entire
state who then performed abortions, sued to enjoin that as-
pect of the law. The district court refused to do so; the Ninth
Circuit vacated its decision; and the Supreme Court then
agreed to hear the case.
    The Court’s opinion leaned heavily on the district court’s
ﬁnding that there was insuﬃcient evidence in the record that
a law that disabled only one abortion provider (the physician
assistant) from providing these services could amount to a
prohibited “substantial obstacle” to abortions. 520 U.S. at 973.
In our case, in contrast, the district court found that the
Physician-Only law “signiﬁcantly reduced” the pool of
Indiana’s abortion providers. This problem was exacerbated,
the court added, by Indiana’s physician-supervision
requirement. Mazurek, in contrast, is best read as holding only
that the plaintiﬀs had no evidence that Montana had an
improper purpose in passing its law (i.e., a purpose of
impeding access to abortion), contrary to what the Ninth
Circuit had held. The district court pointed out that this court
12                                      Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

has not yet addressed Mazurek’s precise scope and
application. PPINK does not ﬁll that gap; it speaks only to
state laws that limit abortion providers to licensed
professionals. See 991 F.3d at 751. Indiana’s physician-only rule
sweeps more broadly.
    The Mazurek Court also found it signiﬁcant that “what
[was] at issue” was “not even a defendant’s motion for sum-
mary judgment, but a plaintiﬀ’s motion for preliminary in-
junctive relief, as to which the requirement for substantial
proof is much higher.” 520 U.S. at 972. In our case, in contrast,
the plaintiﬀs went to trial and were subjected to adversarial
testing before they secured the injunction.
    Finally, I do not agree with my colleagues to the extent
that they may be saying that Mazurek resolved the physician-
only issue with respect to every type of abortion imaginable.
In Whole Woman’s Health Alliance v. Hill, 937 F.3d 864, 874 (7th
Cir. 2019) (“WWHA”), we did not go so far as to say that. In-
deed, Mazurek is cited only once in WWHA. More im-
portantly, Mazurek had nothing to say about “pill” abortions,
for the simple reason that they did not exist at the time. It is
thus at best an extension of Mazurek to say that a decision
meant to address an invasive physical procedure (using
“sharp, surgical instruments,” as the State puts it in its Reply
to Plaintiﬀs’ response to its motion), whether an aspiration
abortion, a dilation and curettage (D&C) abortion, or a dila-
tion and evacuation (D&E) abortion, applies with equal force
to the act of handing a person two pills and telling her when
to take each one. On full merits review, we may decide that
this is the case, or we may decide otherwise. But there is no
reason to think that the district court was disregarding
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                        13

Supreme Court precedent when it thought that this factual
distinction matters.
    Next, I turn to the second-trimester hospitalization re-
quirement. This requires attention to Simopoulos, which con-
cerned a Virginia statute criminalizing the performance of
abortions outside of hospitals. One cannot look at Simopoulos
without at the same time considering City of Akron v. Akron
Center for Reproductive Health, Inc., 462 U.S. 416 (1983), and
Planned Parenthood Ass’n of Kansas City v. Ashcroft, 462 U.S. 476
(1983). The latter two cases both struck down state statutes
that required all abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy to be
performed in a hospital. Simopoulos distinguished them on
grounds that are critical here. Unlike the rigid hospital re-
quirement in Akron and Kansas City, the Virginia law chal-
lenged in Simopoulos allowed outpatient surgical hospitals to
qualify for licensing that permitted abortions. The district
court thought that the latter option referred only to something
like the ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs) in Indiana, but
that is not clear. The Supreme Court emphasized that it saw
“no reason to doubt that an adequately equipped clinic could,
upon proper application, obtain an outpatient hospital license
permitting the performance of second-trimester abortions.”
462 U.S. at 518–19. Here, the record shows that outpatient
abortion clinics could be just such an “adequately” equipped
site. Yet Indiana’s law categorically bans them from perform-
ing abortions.
    In addition, Simopoulos relied on data from the American
College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) indicating that
second-trimester abortions during or prior to the 16th week
of pregnancy (that is, 16 weeks after the woman’s last men-
strual period) could be performed in “free-standing qualiﬁed
14                                        Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

clinics that meet the state standards required for certiﬁca-
tion.” Id. at 517. The district court understood this as a fact-
based comment, and it was in that context that it observed
that the medical consensus about what is needed for safe D&E
procedures has evolved. In so doing, it followed ACOG’s cur-
rent advice, just as the Court had done years earlier in Si-
mopoulos. Moreover, the district court recognized that much
of this discussion in Simopoulos was dicta: the physician chal-
lenging Virginia’s law had not attacked the Virginia regula-
tions “as being insuﬃciently related to the State’s interest in
protecting health.” Id. Under the circumstances, the district
court was not unreasonable to think that there was room to
consult modern standards from the same authoritative
source.
    The last case that deserves a nod is Woman’s Choice. That
decision addressed an earlier version of many of the same In-
diana rules now before us. For example, it considered
whether Indiana’s requirement that someone seeking an
abortion must make two separate visits to a medical facility
was unduly burdensome. The opinion did not ﬂatly say that
all such requirements are permissible, full stop. Instead, it left
open the possibility that a diﬀerent record might change the
analysis under Casey: “This is not to say that a two-visit re-
quirement could not create a burden comparable to a spousal-
notice requirement.” 305 F.3d at 691. It added this:
     The record in this case does not show that a two-visit rule
     operates similarly to a spousal-notiﬁcation rule by fa-
     cilitating domestic violence or even inviting domestic
     intimidation. It shows nothing except a decline in the
     number of abortions in Mississippi and Utah—leaving
     open both the extent to which other states would
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                       15

   experience the same eﬀect and the reason why the eﬀect
   occurs.
Id. at 692 (emphasis added). The record now before us ﬁlls
those gaps—or at least the district court may not have clearly
erred in ﬁnding that it did. At this stage, with the burden on
the State to justify the stay pending appeal, I do not see any-
thing requiring the immediate suspension of the district
court’s decision.
                              III
   Finally, I would like to address some of the particulars of
the Indiana regime, to show once again that this case is not
the open-and-shut matter that it apparently seems to my col-
leagues.
    Indiana passed the ﬁrst of the laws challenged in this liti-
gation in 1973. In the decades since then, during which the
cases on which Indiana relies were decided, facts on the
ground have changed. Today, most women seeking abortions
within the ﬁrst 10 weeks of pregnancy use medication abor-
tion. See Food & Drug Admin. v. Am. Coll. of Obstetricians & Gy-
necologists, 141 S. Ct. 578, 579 (2021) (Sotomayor, J., dissent-
ing). The federal Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) ﬁrst
approved mifepristone, a medication sold under the brand
name Mifeprix, to provide medication abortions in 2000—
nearly thirty years after Indiana’s law was passed. Medication
abortion is now most commonly provided via a combination
of mifepristone and misoprostol, two hormonal drugs that are
also commonly used for other reproductive healthcare. Nota-
bly, these drugs are also the most eﬀective treatment for mis-
carriage management. Meanwhile, telehealth has rapidly ex-
panded since 1973 (and was turbo-charged by the COVID-19
16                                     Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

pandemic), and providers routinely provide a wide range of
important care remotely. These facts matter, as a look at the
enjoined provisions of the law demonstrates.
     A.   Indiana’s Physician-Only Law
    Indiana’s “Physician-Only Law” speciﬁes that only a phy-
sician may perform a ﬁrst-trimester abortion in the state. See
Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1(a)(1). As a result, the law prohibits Ad-
vance Practice Clinicians (APCs), such as physician assistants
and nurse practitioners, from providing abortions. The dis-
trict court permanently enjoined the Physician-Only require-
ment to the extent it applies to ﬁrst-trimester medication abor-
tion, but not as it applies to aspiration abortions.
   As the district court noted, a 2015 analysis found “nothing
more than a minimal diﬀerence” in safety and eﬀectiveness
between medication (and aspiration) abortions provided by
APCs and those provided by physicians. The district court,
weighing expert testimony, found that there is no clinically
signiﬁcant diﬀerence between medication abortions provided
by an APC as opposed to a physician.
   APCs are subject to all generally applicable laws and reg-
ulations that deﬁne the scope of practice and set professional
standards in Indiana, outside of abortion settings. See Ind.
Code §§ 25-22.5-1-1.1(i)(1), 25-23-1-1, 25-23-1-19.4; 844 Ind.
Admin. Code §§ 2.2-1.1-13, 2.2-1.1-16; 848 Ind. Admin. Code
§§ 3-1-1, 3-1-2, 4-1-4, 4-2-1. Physician assistants must be su-
pervised by licensed physicians pursuant to written supervi-
sory agreements. See Ind. Code § 25-22.5-1-1.1(i)(1); 844 Ind.
Admin. Code 2.2-1.1-16. Nurse practitioners practicing in out-
patient settings are required to collaborate with licensed
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                      17

physicians, also pursuant to written agreements. See Ind.
Code § 25-23-1-19.4.
    In 2016, the FDA amended the labeling directions for Mif-
eprix. The label now provides that “any certiﬁed healthcare
provider” or any “certiﬁed prescriber” is authorized to pro-
vide Mifeprix so long as the provider: (1) can diagnose ectopic
pregnancies, and (2) can either provide surgical intervention
in the case of an incomplete abortion or severe bleeding, or
has “made a plan to provide such care through others.” Whole
Woman's Health All. v. Rokita, 2021 WL 3508211, at *25. As the
district court held, this amended label amounts to an FDA en-
dorsement of APCs’ ability safely and competently to provide
medication abortion. Id. Notably, APCs are authorized to pro-
vide medication abortions in about one-third of states (and to
provide ﬁrst-trimester aspiration abortions in about one-
quarter of states).
   It also is telling that APCs are authorized to provide a
wide range of non-abortion-related medical services, many of
which are far riskier than abortion. Signiﬁcant medical
complications from abortions are extraordinarily rare, and
practically nonexistent for medication abortions. As the
record shows, less than one-quarter of one percent of abortion
patients have a complication that requires hospital admission,
surgery, or a blood transfusion. R. 234-1 at 150-51. Clinically
signiﬁcant complications aﬀect only 0.16 and 0.31% of
women. Id. As the district court noted, “[e]ven fewer
complications—0.06%” for medication abortion “necessitate
hospital admission.” Rokita, 2021 WL 3508211, at *7.
    At the same time, the state trusts advance practice regis-
tered nurses who meet certain licensing requirements “to pre-
scribe drugs, including controlled substances.” Ind. Code
18                                     Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

§ 24-23-1-19.5; 848 Ind. Admin. Code 5-1-1. Similarly, physi-
cian assistants are authorized to prescribe controlled sub-
stances. See 844 Ind. Admin. Code 2.2-3. APNs and physician
assistants can and do prescribe opioids, subject to essentially
the same regulations as physicians. See 848 Ind. Admin. Code
5-4-5; 844 Ind. Admin. Code 2.2-3; 844 Ind. Admin. Code 5-6-
6. And just for context, it is worth recalling that the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention report that since 1999,
nearly 841,000 people have died from drug overdoses. See
CDC, The Drug Overdose Epidemic (updated Mar. 15, 2021),
https://www.cdc.gov/opioids/data/index.html. Nothing re-
motely resembling that level of danger exists for any kind of
abortion.
    The State argues that the physician-only requirement
ensures that patients are appropriately screened for
contraindications for medication abortion, most notably
ectopic pregnancies. See Mot. for Stay at 35. But that concern
is resolved by the FDA’s unchallenged labeling instructions,
which speciﬁcally state that only providers who can diagnose
ectopic pregnancies may prescribe the drugs. In Indiana, as
the district court explained, “APCs are fully qualiﬁed to
screen for the contraindications of medication abortion.”
Rokita, 2021 WL 3508211, at *43. In fact, Indiana’s APCs are
licensed to review and interpret ultrasounds for abortion
patients and others—that is, to screen for ectopic pregnancies
and similar contraindications. Id.
    As I noted before, medication abortion is administered
through a combination of mifepristone and misoprostol. The
district court found that this exact combination of drugs is
also considered the most eﬀective medical treatment for mis-
carriage management, and that this regimen involves
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                        19

precisely the same (exceedingly rare) risks when used to pro-
vide a medication abortion. Id. at *7. In Indiana, advance prac-
tice clinicians can and do provide both mifepristone and
misoprostol for miscarriage management, at the same time as
the State purports to be too worried about their competence
to permit them to prescribe the same medication for abortion.
Id. at *25–27.
    Misopristol is also commonly used to induce labor in a
term pregnancy or to “open the cervix before any procedure
that’s done inside the uterus, including endometrial biopsy,
hysteroscopy, placement of an IUD.” Phase 1 Tr. Vol. II, 67:5-
12. In Indiana, APCs routinely provide these same proce-
dures, including IUD insertions, which can risk perforation of
the uterus. Rokita, 2021 WL 3508211, at *26.
    Finally, there is childbirth. In Indiana, certiﬁed nurse mid-
wifes are authorized to perform vaginal deliveries, including
related care such as suturing torn vaginal tissue. Id. And
childbirth is signiﬁcantly more dangerous than abortion. As
many as 10% of women who give birth are hospitalized for
complications associated with pregnancy (not counting their
hospitalization for delivery alone). See R. 234-1 at 151. Nation-
wide, the maternal mortality risks associated with live birth
are 14 times higher than induced abortion. Id.
   B.     Telemedicine Ban, In-Person Counseling Require-
          ments, and In-Person Examination Requirements
    Indiana’s Telemedicine Ban bars providers from using tel-
emedicine to provide “an abortion inducing drug.” Ind. Code
§ 25-1-9.5-8(a)(4). Indiana also requires that a physician “ex-
amine a pregnant woman in person” before prescribing medi-
cation abortion, and that all mandatory pre-abortion
20                                     Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

“counseling” be provided “in the presence” of the patient.
Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1.1(a) (emphasis added).
    Abortion providers must furnish this counseling to the pa-
tient at least 18 hours in advance of an abortion. They are re-
quired to furnish information that the district court found was
misleading, intended only to deter the choice of an abortion.
Among other requirements, providers must provide a copy of
the State’s “Informed Consent Brochure” and, if a fetal anom-
aly has been identiﬁed, a copy of the State’s “Prenatal Hospice
Brochure.” Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1.1(a)(4),(b). Although these
brochures are easily available online, they must be provided
in person rather than by telemedicine. Because plaintiﬀs must
visit an abortion clinic to get mifepristone in the ﬁrst place,
and because there are no abortion clinics in 96% of Indiana
counties, people who need abortions are eﬀectively required
to travel to an abortion clinic and stay in another county over-
night. As the district court found, the law forces low-wage
workers with no paid time oﬀ and no control over their work
schedules to put their jobs and wages at risk to seek an abor-
tion in Indiana.
    The district court credited the testimony of an expert who
testiﬁed that “the process for obtaining informed consent via
telemedicine is ‘identical’ to the process of obtaining in-
formed consent in person, that no aspect of the process diﬀers
when telemedicine is utilized” and that no part of the coun-
seling or informed consent process requires in-person inter-
action. Rokita, 2021 WL 3508211, at *20. Moreover, the plain-
tiﬀs’ expert co-authored a peer-reviewed study ﬁnding that
abortion patients in other states found telemedicine to be ef-
fective. Studies also showed high levels of satisfaction with
telemedicine by the providers. Id. at *21. Finally, the district
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                       21

court credited the testimony indicating that screening for
other sensitive issues, such as domestic violence, was not im-
peded by the telemedicine format. Id.
    Nonetheless, Indiana bars doctors from using telemedi-
cine to prescribe an abortion-inducing drug. The FDA re-
quires patients seeking medication abortion physically to visit
an abortion clinic or hospital: mifepristone may not be dis-
pensed at a pharmacy or mailed. Plaintiﬀs have not attacked
that rule. In other states, compliance is achieved by using a
“site-to-site” form of telemedicine, where a patient visits an
abortion clinic but meets through remote technology with a
provider who is not physically present at the same clinic.
Rokita, 2021 WL 3508211, at *15. Providers use direct, face-to-
face communication to discuss medication abortion, obtain
informed consent, and prescribe the pills, which are then pro-
vided person-to-person by staﬀ members at the clinic. Id. In
Indiana, Planned Parenthood uses this model for other repro-
ductive care, such as birth control. Id. As the district court
noted, providers can review a patient’s ultrasounds, review
medical histories, and use videoconferencing to determine
whether medication abortion is appropriate for any patients.
    The district court found that “there was no signiﬁcant dif-
ference in the rate of adverse events between [abortion] pa-
tients who received telemedicine care compared to those who
received in-person services.” Id. It rested this conclusion on
expert testimony, a peer-reviewed study of 20,000 abortion
patients in other states, a systemic review of research on tele-
medicine generally, and expert organizations like ACOG’s
strong support for telemedicine as a safe and eﬀective way to
provide medication abortion.
22                                      Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

    In summary, the record revealed almost nothing on the
beneﬁt side of the balance for the in-person requirement. The
burdens, in contrast, are considerable: prolonged unwanted
pregnancies, increased health risks, exposure to violent part-
ners who may discover their pregnancies, potentially cata-
strophic ﬁnancial hardship for working-class patients who
lose much-needed wages or even their jobs, and perhaps most
importantly, the risk of pushing people past the window for
a medication abortion.
     C.   Second-Trimester Hospitalization Requirement
    Last, it is worth looking at the court’s evaluation of
Indiana’s “Second Trimester Hospitalization Requirement,”
which provides that “after the ﬁrst trimester of pregnancy,”
abortions may be “performed [only] in a hospital or
ambulatory outpatients surgical center.” Ind. Code § 16-34-2-
1(2). Indiana already criminalizes abortion after “the earlier of
viability of the fetus or twenty (20) weeks of postfertilization
age,” Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1(a)(2), except where required to
protect the life or physical health of the mother, id. (a)(3).
Twenty weeks post-fertilization translates to 22 weeks after a
woman’s last menstrual period (colloquially known as 22
weeks of pregnancy). Thus, the Second Trimester
Hospitalization Requirement applies only to a subset of
second-trimester abortions, as the second trimester lasts
through the 26th week of pregnancy and this suit does not
challenge the 20-week line.
   Abortions can be provided using aspiration up to 16
weeks after a patient’s last menstrual period, but 90% of
second-trimester abortions are performed with D&Es. Rokita,
2021 WL 3508211, at *29. The district court found that
“second-trimester D&E abortions in places outside of Indiana
Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573                                       23

can be and are safely performed in out-patient, oﬃce-based
settings.” Id. Unrebutted testimony presented to the district
court explained that today’s D&Es do not require a sterile
operating room, because they do not require any incisions
into sterile tissue or general anesthesia. Thus, abortion
patients do not beneﬁt from additional regulation of hospitals
when “the primary purpose of such requirements is to ensure
the sterility of operating rooms.” Id. Ambulatory surgical
centers are no more equipped than out-patient medical clinics
to treat the potential—and exceedingly rare—complications
of a D&E abortion. In such a rare case, both an outpatient
clinic and ASC would transfer a patient to the nearest
hospital. Id. at *30. This is conﬁrmed by unrefuted peer-
reviewed research and expert testimony ﬁnding that second-
term abortions are safely and routinely performed in
outpatient settings in other states. Once again, miscarriages
oﬀer a revealing comparison: providers can and do provide
D&Es for miscarriage management at oﬃce-based settings.
    Based on this record, the district court found that the ben-
eﬁts of Indiana’s law are illusory, while its burdens are very
tangible. It created an extensive record supporting these ﬁnd-
ings. Most importantly, it operated within the room that ear-
lier Supreme Court and Seventh Circuit decisions gave it.
Facts matter. Although the court upheld most of the provi-
sions of the Indiana law that the plaintiﬀs challenged, it found
that the provisions I have discussed impose an undue burden
on the set of women for whom the law makes a diﬀerence—
Indiana women of limited means who cannot leave their jobs,
pay for extensive travel, obtain access to cars, and potentially
go out of state, simply to obtain a lawful abortion. I would
ﬁnd, for purposes of the pending stay motion, that these ﬁnd-
ings are suﬃciently well supported to undermine the State’s
24                                      Nos. 21-2480 & 21-2573

likelihood of success on the merits, and that the State failed to
carry its burden with respect to the remaining criteria for a
stay.
    I therefore respectfully dissent from the decision to order
a stay of the court’s injunction.