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Kansas Abortion Bill Would Impose Sweeping Restrictions

Kansas Abortion

First Posted: 02/ 6/2012 6:18 pm Updated: 02/ 6/2012 6:38 pm

Kansas lawmakers have been given six days to consider one of the most sweeping state anti-abortion bills to be introduced.

A Kansas House committee is scheduled to take up a bill Wednesday that would exempt doctors from malpractice suits if they withheld medical information to prevent an abortion. The measure would also take away tax credits for abortion providers, remove tax deductions for the purchase of abortion-related insurance coverage and require women to hear the fetal heartbeat. The bill includes several provisions, which passed in other states and now face federal lawsuits. The bill would also require women be told about potential breast cancer risks from abortions, even though medical experts discount such a connection.

"This is the largest and most sweeping overhaul we've seen to date," said Sarah Gillooly, public affairs manager for Planned Parenthood of Kansas, a women's health care provider that provides abortion services in some clinics.

Among the most contested provisions of the bill is the section that would exempt a doctor from a medical malpractice suit if a woman claims the physician withheld information about potential birth defects to prevent her from having an abortion. In addition, a woman would not be able to sue if she suffers health damage from a pregnancy as a result of information withheld from her to prevent an abortion. A wrongful death suit could still be filed, however, if the mother died.

The bill includes provisions similar to those found in other state laws now facing federal lawsuits, including Texas' requirement that the mother hear the fetal heartbeat, and Oklahoma's mandate that mothers be told about a potential risk of breast cancer with an abortion. It also would replicate Arizona's provision prohibiting tax deductions for abortion-related groups

The breast cancer warning requirement has been the subject of much debate, since members of the medical community have disproved a link between abortions and an increased risk of breast cancer.

One moderate Republican legislator in Kansas has come out against this aspect of the measure. "An abortion does not cause breast cancer," said state Rep. Barbara Bollier (R-Mission Hills), a retired anesthesiologist.

With language stating that anesthesia is administered to fetuses during surgery and indicating that an unborn child feels pain, the Kansas bills calls for making 20 weeks the latest time for having an abortion, a decline from the 21-week point adopted last year. Bollier said she has professional objections to this requirement, saying that medical reports show that a fetus does not feel pain until 25 to 30 weeks and that the anesthesia is administered to prevent a rapid fetal heartbeat, which she said arises as a reflex to external stimulation.

The bill also includes a provision to stop tax deductions for health savings accounts that include the purchase of abortion insurance coverage. "They are trying to keep women from buying these policies; it will hurt poor women," Bollier said.

The proposed legislation is listed as having been sponsored by a committee, a common practice in the Kansas legislature. In this case, the sponsor is the state's House Federal and State Affairs Committee.

Bollier and state Rep. Sean Gatewood (D-Topeka) said that state Rep. Lance Kinzer (R-Olathe), a vocal abortion opponent, is the driving force behind the legislation. Kinzer did not return several calls.

Gatewood believes that Kinzer had help in shaping the proposal. "I have a feeling that the governor and senior legislators have had input on this bill," he said.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback has not indicated his position on the bill but previously has said he is willing to sign anti-abortion bills. Brownback's spokesman did not return a call for comment.

Lawmakers were informed of its existence last Thursday, six days before the scheduled committee meeting.

Planned Parenthood's Gillooly said that she and other advocates are trying to dissect the complex bill and determine a plan of counterattack. Bill opponents concede the measure will likely pass the conservative-leaning House and that their chance to fight the measure may rest with the moderate Republican-led Senate. Senate GOP moderates are facing conservative opponents in the August primary. Bollier hopes that the Senate divides the bill into sections to make it easier to strike down certain portions while still allowing some of the educational components to remain.

The House GOP's priorities are "out of line" in introducing this bill, Gatewood said, noting that other large-scale legislative issues are pending, including education spending, pension reform, Medicaid and redistricting measures as well as an overhaul of the state tax code. Legislators have too much on their plates without the abortion proposal, he said, adding that Democrats would rather the legislative focus not shift to the abortion debate.

"We are used to seeing large abortion bills; last year we saw some pretty sweeping changes to the abortion laws," Gatewood said. "I have not seen anything this complex before. Only having less than a week to get my brain wrapped around it is a little much."

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Kansas lawmakers have been given six days to consider one of the most sweeping state anti-abortion bills to be introduced. A Kansas House committee is scheduled to take up a bill Wednesday that wo...
Kansas lawmakers have been given six days to consider one of the most sweeping state anti-abortion bills to be introduced. A Kansas House committee is scheduled to take up a bill Wednesday that wo...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patty Flaherty
The new comment format is awful!
01:04 AM on 02/05/2013
Abortion is legal under Roe v Wade! Squirm, cry, thump your bible, beat your dog, it is still legal. Bring it on!!
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Patty Flaherty
The new comment format is awful!
12:59 AM on 02/05/2013
The Hippocratic oath clearly states that above all, do no harm. It seems that Kansas should take the Hypocrite's oath.
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01:43 AM on 04/01/2012
Another example of balanced reporting. I'm wondering if this is insightful or inciting?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:39 AM on 04/01/2012
Gatewood: "We are used to seeing large abortion bills; last year we saw some pretty sweeping changes to the abortion laws," Gatewood said. "I have not seen anything this complex before. Only having less than a week to get my brain wrapped around it is a little much."

Boy, I'm wondering what she would have said about trying to absorb a rammed through ACA at 2400 pages.
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01:35 AM on 04/01/2012
Article states: The bill also includes a provision to stop tax deductions for health savings accounts that include the purchase of abortion insurance coverage. "They are trying to keep women from buying these policies; it will hurt poor women," Bollier said.

In one sense, is the bill not allowing better availability to care to poor women in that those who can "plan their parenthood" do not have to pay extra for abortion coverage and also still keep the tax deduction? Or is she saying that poor women can't control their bodies or do not understand insurance and other aspects of living? Please explain if you can control yourself without ranting.

I sort of agree with the statement about keeping women from buying the policies, but better said, it is abortion that is to be prevented, not restricting freedom of women to buy policies.

This is NOT a war on women as the loudmouths claim. It is a war on religious liberties vs a war on abortion (murder).....simple bigotry against religion vs the science of procreation.
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Patty Flaherty
The new comment format is awful!
12:51 AM on 02/05/2013
What?
08:41 PM on 03/21/2012
I see LIberals adopting hard to adopt children. I rarely see a Conservative adopting hard to adopt children.
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Patty Flaherty
The new comment format is awful!
12:53 AM on 02/05/2013
There are thousands of same sex couples who want to adopt, but are prevented from doing so.
02:26 AM on 02/05/2013
True..that.
08:10 PM on 03/20/2012
Aside from being abhorrent because it clearly violates rights, people are missing a smaller, but very important point. If a doctor doesn't tell a woman that her child has a problem, she cannot prepare correctly to bring that child into the world. This is in no way beneficial to the woman, the child, or families in general.
09:36 PM on 03/16/2012
If I am understanding this, a doctor need not tell the pregnant woman of the risks for her health if she continues her pregnancy. He cannot be sued for withholding the information unless the woman dies.
Doctors are required to tell the pregnant woman that she is at greater risk for breast cancer if she aborts although this has been proven to be incorrect by all reputable cancer experts. The government of Kansas really wants to take over peoples lives and choices, even to the point of making women unknowingly risk their lives. Unbelievable.
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Michael Kenney
12:08 PM on 03/16/2012
If descriptions of the content of this bill are accurate, the anti-choice legislators responsible for it are over-reaching both politically and ethically. Anti-choice forces have become so extreme in their passion that they now appear willing to endorse dishonesty in their cause. It is hard for me to believe that supporting dishonesty is part of a religious creed, especially when it interferes with a patient's right to know what is happening with their body, or a potential child's body. The truth is, we make life and death choices everyday in America. They are gut-wrenching and should not be made lightly, but doctors and families make decisions about continuing or ending life on a daily basis. The anti-choice believers have tried to extend their control into this area as well, and have only retreated from it with the heart-wrenching, and politically disastrous, case of Terri Schiavo. That is part of the irony of the anti-choice cause- they champion the rights of the unborn "person" (I don't know how to say for certain when "personhood" starts- it is a complex medical, ethical, and spiritual question) but then insist that a terminally ill, suffering person must never choose to end their suffering by ending their life. This reveals the ultimate core of their passion- a religious belief- which they ardently insist on imposing on others, regardless of the misery they insist others must experience to meet this religious conviction of a minority of people.
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04:01 AM on 04/01/2012
It's the pro-abortion that have been using lies and poorly constructed judicial opinion to stay on legal since 1973. Mississippi is a specific example of the lies against the personhood bill. Planned Parenthood is a lie in action as well as the name. Reading a history of Roe vs Wade yields a variety of unsubstantiated or changed opinions including pseudo named Roe woman, the head of a national abortion group, and even some of the justices that originally agreed with the decision. The pro-life opinion is only marginally based in religion, but primarily in science, medicine, and American majority (depending of course how the question is skewed). Even the original Roe opinion admitted there is no possible way to determine when life begins except at conception, that any line drawn after that is arbitrary.
02:43 PM on 03/10/2012
Vote these dangerous fanatics out of office!
05:47 PM on 03/09/2012
These people are in way over their heads! How can non-medically-trained legislators be allowed to make life and death decisions that even trained physicians would have difficulty with? And how can you ask doctors to lie to patients? About breast cancer? And most reprehensibly, about something being wrong with the fetus? I thought it couldn't get worse than transvaginal ultrasounds! But being so fanatical about abortion that you make a decision that is not yours to make by withholding vital information from the parents of the child? And because I have a loved one who is an ob-gyn, what are you doing to a doctor who, according to the law, must LIE to his patient? There is nothing pro-life about these positions. People are intruding in the lives of others by making decisions having to do with their families. And let's face it: we don't do the greatest job in the world providing healthcare for our children. So how can you make decisions for people -- and they have to live with the consequences?
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oklaliberal
Don't worry, I got this. I'm a ninja
09:37 AM on 03/09/2012
I've had about a gutful of this nonsense. I hope all women are noticing and will speak up.
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Patty Flaherty
The new comment format is awful!
01:11 AM on 02/05/2013
Doing my best against a tide of ignorance. Men need to speak us also.
Boopsie2008
Hold the Vision-Trust the Process: Obama/Biden
06:46 PM on 03/01/2012
I'm stunned by the wave of apparent hatred of women that spawns these bills. Underlying them is the notion that women are just plain getting too uppity with their careers and all, and should just stay home, spread their legs, and become baby-making machines.

Where is all this coming from? Santorum's raving about how sex these days "isn't the way it's supposed to be"?
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01:11 AM on 03/09/2012
They act like its all the womens decesion to get an abortion. There is a prominate buisness owner in the Kansas city kansas area who proudly claims he has paid for women to get 9 abortions. Talk about taking advantage of abortion as birth control. This is a man and several women. Not 1 woman who just couldn't keep the 'asprin between her legs'. They all seem to act like its all the women who support and desire to use it in a manner that is unethical but I bet more men talk women into getting abortions then the republican christian legislative terrorist would have us believe.
06:47 PM on 02/29/2012
I live in Kansas. If you want to understand the Kansas mentality (oxymoron) view a movie named:
"A Flock of DoDos". Sort of says it all.
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Whats Inaname
Karma: What Goes Around Comes Around
05:56 PM on 02/29/2012
Okay, I have offered proposals for Virginia and Alabama which would apply to all Re/TeapubliCANTs but here I will make the exception and exempt the one Republican in the State Senate, unless he later supports it.

Before I start, as a man, I want to tell the following to all men, "STAY OUT OF A WOMAN'S WOMB/VAGINA UNLESS THEY INVITE YOU IN".

Ok, I propose that all Re/TeapubliCANT's have a rectal exam prior to voting on any law. It should be done so that they can see where their head is. It should also be done with the regular ultrasound instrument and/or transvaginal instrument some are trying to use to invade/take away women's rights. If they chose the transvaginal instrument they get a clearer picture of where their head is. Also, in these cases, doctors are not to inform them of any negative findings (i.e. prostate cancer). This procedure will include women Re/TeapubliCANT's in favor of these laws. IMO, they should use the regular instrument as it is wider. I would suggest psychiatric examinations but I believe that will only prove their insanity which, IMO, is a given.

Why is the Re/TeapubliCANT Party so intent on taking this country back to the days prior to 1926 when women were actually given the right to vote?

KARMA: “WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND”.