Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Different Takes: The Consequences Of Overturning Roe Are Here, And They Are Terrifying
In the middle of July, three big blue billboards went up in and around Jackson, Mississippi. PREGNANT? YOU STILL HAVE A CHOICE, they informed passing motorists, inviting them to VISIT MAYDAY.HEALTH to learn more. Anybody who did landed on a website that provides information about at-home abortion pills and ways to get them delivered anywhere in the United States鈥攊ncluding parts of the country, such as Mississippi, where abortions are now illegal under most circumstances. (Yascha Mounk, 8/22)
With federal protections for reproductive rights rolled back, data privacy protections are more important than ever for healthcare and abortion access. Facebook and other tech companies routinely cooperate with police demands for information they collect, including messages and keyword searches. For the Nebraska case, Facebook claimed it wasn鈥檛 aware that the police were seeking information relevant to a person鈥檚 abortion. That raises the question: What would Facebook have done if the warrant included the word 鈥渁bortion鈥? (Cynthia Conti-Cook and Kate Bertash, 8/23)
Eight years ago, my husband and I received unimaginable news regarding our first pregnancy. Five and a half months in, due to medical complications, we were forced to decide whether to continue a pregnancy with almost no chance of infant survival. (Laurel Marlantes, 8/22)
For the rest of our lives, we鈥檒l remember where we were or what we were doing when the Roe decision was announced. (Sana Shaikh, 8/22)
One school morning, after a sleepover with my best friend, I'd woken to intense waves of nausea. Her mom ran to fetch a bottle of coke syrup out of her medicine cabinet to settle my stomach. It didn't help, but I didn't think anything of it. (Jennifer Grey, 8/22)