Following new Idaho law, doctors delayed the pelvic exam of a pregnant 13-year-old girl because they couldn’t locate her homeless mother

In a 6-3 vote on June 27, 2024 the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the previous order that allowed a near-total abortion ban to take effect in the state of Idaho. Credit: Chris Allen, Black Voice News
In a 6-3 vote on June 27, 2024 the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the previous order that allowed a near-total abortion ban to take effect in the state of Idaho. Credit: Chris Allen, Black Voice News
[Mom-to-be Aleah], 36 weeks pregnant, was having mild but frequent contractions…. In most cases, physician Caitlin Gustafson would have begun a pelvic exam to determine whether labor had started. This time, she called the hospitalโ€™s lawyers.

[U]nder a new Idaho law requiring parental consent for nearly all minorsโ€™ health care, Gustafson could be sued for treating her because the girl had been brought in by her great-aunt.

What followed were more than two frantic hours of trying to contact Aleahโ€™s mother, who was living in a car, and her grandmother, who was the teenโ€™s legal guardian. The grandmother finally gave verbal consent for the exam โ€” from the Boise-area jail where she was incarcerated on drug charges.

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Critics say the law โ€” which also grants parents access to minorsโ€™ health records, doing away with confidentiality that providers and teen advocates call crucial โ€” ignores the reality that parents arenโ€™t always present or trustworthy. Three months after its implementation, they contend it is hindering adolescentsโ€™ ability to access counseling, limiting evidence collection in sexual assault cases, and causing schools to seek parental permission to treat scrapes with ice packs and Band-Aids.

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