Operation Rescue, a national pro-life organization, will ask the Iowa Board of Medicine to mandate that Planned Parenthood’s dispensing of abortion pills to rural Iowa clinics, via a remote controlled system be halted, reports the Des Moines Register:
SEE RELATED:Officials with Operation Rescue, an anti-abortion group headquartered in Kansas, also said Thursday they have filed complaints with county attorneys in 10 Iowa counties, including Polk County, seeking criminal prosecution of Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, which has its headquarters in Des Moines.
Operation Rescue contends the system violates an Iowa law requiring that all abortions be performed by a physician. Operation Rescue had asked Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller in June to open a criminal investigation of Planned Parenthood. But Eric Tabor, Miller’s chief of staff, responded in a letter last week that the jurisdiction to prosecute criminal cases of this type lies with the appropriate county attorney.
But Eric Tabor, Miller’s chief of staff, responded in a letter last week that the jurisdiction to prosecute criminal cases of this type lies with the appropriate county attorney.
Cheryl Sullenger, Operation Rescue’s senior policy adviser, said Thursday that activists plan to speak today during the medical board’s public comment period to reinforce their view that the use of telemedicine to provide abortions is unsafe and inappropriate.
Planned Parenthood’s system, the first of its kind in the nation, allows a physician in Des Moines to interact via computer with patients who are seeking abortions in small-town clinics.
Once the doctor is satisfied that the patient meets the criteria, he or she enters a computer command that opens a drawer in front of the patient.
The patient then reaches into the drawer, retrieves the abortion pills and takes the first dose as the doctor watches.
More than 1,500 Iowa patients have used Planned Parenthood of the Heartland’s videoconferencing system to obtain abortion drugs in the past two years.
The medication is available only to women in their first nine weeks of pregnancy.Fifteen Iowa clinics are on Planned Parenthood’s telemedicine network.
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