Idaho
Can Idaho ‘Force Someone Onto a Helicopter’ as the Standard of Medical Care for Accessing Health-Stabilizing Abortions? – Ms. Magazine
Under bans with no health exception for the pregnant woman, doctors are forced to decide: “Is she sick enough? Is she bleeding enough? Is she septic enough for me to do this abortion and not risk going to jail and losing my license?”
It is challenging to write about the case of Idaho and Moyle v. U.S., which was argued before the Supreme Court on Wednesday. The challenge is not because I am having trouble understanding the parties’ legal arguments. Rather, the difficulty lies in trying to grasp the abject cruelty of the position Idaho has staked out. In a nutshell, the state maintains it is not obligated under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) to provide abortions needed to stabilize an “emergency medical condition” because its Defense of Life Act only permits pregnancy terminations when “necessary to prevent the death of a pregnant woman.”
EMTALA is a 1986 federal statute that was enacted to prevent hospitals which receive Medicare funding from refusing emergency care to low-income patients—a practice commonly referred to as “patient dumping.” EMTALA’s patient-protective mandate is simple and clear.
- It requires hospitals to screen patients seeking emergency care and to provide stabilizing medical care to prevent “material deterioration” of the presenting condition through transfer to another facility or discharge.
- As a federal statute, it preempts (takes precedence over) state laws that conflict with this mandate.
Prior to the Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health overturning Roe v. Wade, state abortion laws were constitutionally required to contain both a health and life exception. Accordingly, they were effectively in sync with EMTALA’s health stabilization requirement.
However, in the wake of Dobbs, while most abortion-restrictive states have preserved the health exception, a handful of ban states, including Idaho, no longer permit abortions needed to protect a pregnant person’s health. The U.S. government charges this lack of exception in the law is in direct conflict with EMTALA’s health stabilization mandate—since for “some pregnant women suffering tragic emergency complications, the only care that can prevent grave harm to their health is termination of the pregnancy.”
Incorrectly, Idaho Solicitor General Joshua Turner claimed during oral arguments that “nothing in EMTALA requires doctors to … offer medical treatments that violate state law” by insisting they provide abortions needed to preserve pregnant person’s health.
When pressed by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Turner admitted there was “daylight” between EMTALA and the Defense of Life Act; however, he nonetheless claimed there was no conflict between them, because as long as a physician performed an abortion based on a “good faith” belief it was necessary to save a patient’s life, they were protected from prosecution.
It strains credibility to think we have gotten to the point where the Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority might greenlight Idaho’s blatant disregard for EMTALA’s health stabilization mandate.
In turn, Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar eloquently encapsulated what Justice Sotomayor referred to as the “big daylight” between the two laws:
“In Idaho, doctors have to shut their eyes to everything except death—whereas, under EMTALA, you’re supposed to be thinking about things like: Is she about to lose her fertility? Is her uterus going to become incredibly scarred because of the bleeding? Is she about to undergo the possibility of kidney failure?”
This on-the-ground reality was highlighted by the amicus brief submitted by Idaho-based St. Luke’s Medical Center, which provides a firsthand accounting of the Hobson’s choice faced by emergency departments when treating pregnant patients presenting with a medical emergency.
In short, emergency room physicians are faced with the choice to “terminate a pregnancy where necessary to prevent serious jeopardy to a patient’s health, but they may risk criminal prosecution and revocation of their licenses,” or instead wait until the “risks to the patients’ health become life-threatening.”
Dr. Jim Souza, chief physician at St. Luke’s, captured the quandary of trying to determine when intervention no longer carries the risk of up to five years in prison:
“Is she sick enough? Is she bleeding enough? Is she septic enough for me to do this abortion and not risk going to jail and losing my license? When the guessing game gets too uncomfortable, we transfer the patients out at a very high cost to another state where the doctors are allowed to practice medicine.”
These costs include “delaying care while transport is arranged, and distancing patients from their support networks, including the medical providers they know and trust.”
According to Souza, in the three months since the initial injunction on the application of Idaho’s criminal abortion ban to emergency cases was lifted, six patients were airlifted out of state, compared to only one patient in 2023.
Underscoring the grim reality on the ground, some Idaho physicians are now advising pregnant patients or those trying to become pregnant that it might be advisable to “purchase memberships with companies like Life Flight Network or Air St. Luke’s … to avoid potentially significant costs if they need air transport in an emergency.”
We have been repeatedly hit by the harsh post-Dobbs reality that, at every turn, anti-abortion activists are ready to disregard the lives and well-being of pregnant persons in favor of the unborn. Nonetheless, it strains credibility to think we have gotten to the point where the Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority might greenlight Idaho’s blatant disregard for EMTALA’s health stabilization mandate.
And while it certainly is possible that the conservative justices on the Court are truly invested in resolving the preemption question, there is no doubt but that something else is at stake here—namely, fetal personhood.
Surfacing this concern, Justice Samuel Alito, when questioning Prelogar, offered almost as an aside, “We’ve now heard … an hour and a half of argument on this case, and one very important phrase in EMTALA has hardly been mentioned. Maybe it hasn’t been mentioned at all. That is EMTALA’s reference to the woman’s ‘unborn child.’”
He immediately followed up with a pointed question, asking Prelogar, “Isn’t that an odd phrase to put in a statute that authorizes abortion? Have you ever seen an abortion statute that uses the phrase ‘unborn child’? … Doesn’t that tell us something?”
In fact, the phrase had come up several times during Justice Neil Gorsuch’s questioning of Turner, with regard to the intent behind the 1989 amendment to EMTALA requiring stabilizing healthcare to an unborn child in distress. Both concurred that the “something” was that EMTALA regards the fetus as a co-equal second patient.
As Turner opined, “It would be a strange thing for Congress to have regard for the unborn child and yet also be mandating termination of unborn children.”
Prelogar quickly disposed of the view that EMTALA regards the fetus as a rights-holding person. As she explained when grilled by Alito, Congress amended EMTALA in 1989 to ensure that when a pregnant person seeks emergency care because the fetus is in peril, they will not be turned away, as was often the case, because their life or health was not risk.
However, Alito did not buy this. In line with Gorsuch—suggesting where the conservative majority may land—he asked, “Doesn’t what I read to you [namely, EMTALA’s unborn child provisions] show that the statute imposes on a hospital a duty to the woman certainly, and also a duty to the child?”
Somewhat obliquely returning to the preemption question, he indicated that EMTALA “doesn’t tell the hospital how it is to adjudicate conflicts between these interests and it leaves that to the states.”
Of course, leaving it to the states in this way would give Idaho and other states without a health exception free rein to prioritize the rights of the fetus over those of a pregnant patient who is facing, for example, the potential loss of fertility, or permanent organ damage or the onset of seizures, or hypoxic brain injury.
If Idaho and other abortion ban states are allowed to continue to play with women’s lives, unchecked by the Court, expect (as Prelogar warned) “tragedy upon tragedy.”
Up next:
U.S. democracy is at a dangerous inflection point—from the demise of abortion rights, to a lack of pay equity and parental leave, to skyrocketing maternal mortality, and attacks on trans health. Left unchecked, these crises will lead to wider gaps in political participation and representation. For 50 years, Ms. has been forging feminist journalism—reporting, rebelling and truth-telling from the front-lines, championing the Equal Rights Amendment, and centering the stories of those most impacted. With all that’s at stake for equality, we are redoubling our commitment for the next 50 years. In turn, we need your help, Support Ms. today with a donation—any amount that is meaningful to you. For as little as $5 each month, you’ll receive the print magazine along with our e-newsletters, action alerts, and invitations to Ms. Studios events and podcasts. We are grateful for your loyalty and ferocity.
Idaho
Delicious New Menu Item Expected To Hit Idaho Costcos Soon
There’s something special and timeless about the Costco food court.
Having a Costco Card doesn’t just mean you unlock your grocery shopping there but you now get to go to the best food court known to man: The Costco Foodcourt.
Everyone loves their great prices and great options. Whether you’ve wanted to get a pizza to share with your family or one of their beloved giant hot dogs everyone’s got a good reason to go to the Costco Foodcourt.
Costco has been adding a lot of new menu items recently including fun ice cream flavors. Now they have yet again added something new to their menu.
Idaho Costcos
Where to find Costcos in Idaho.
Gallery Credit: Shannon Buccola
Costco has added a new menu item that everyone is already going crazy for. In a new viral Instagram reel an influencer revealed that Costco food courts around the country would be adding chicken strips to their menu! This feels like the perfect addition to the already extremely popular Costco food court and we can already see everyone going crazy over this new menu item.
Credit: Instagram/costcohotfinds
As of right now it appears the chicken tenders are going to be 6.99 and include 5 chicken strips. They also seemingly have a new sauce that is going to be paired with these chicken strips and it looks delicious!
Credit: Instagram/costcohotfinds
You’ll have to check out all of the local Idaho Costcos for when these hit stores because they just look delicious!
Look at those chicken tenders:
Costco Foodcourt’s New Item
It’s a Caramel Brownie Sundae!!!
Gallery Credit: Shannon Buccola
Change Complete at Costco’s Food Courts
Who would have thought that an age old debate would bring out such a reaction in Costco shoppers!?
Gallery Credit: Mateo, 103.5 KISS FM
Idaho
This is How to Identify an Idaho Christian Nationalist
You’ve heard that our federal Constitution was made for a moral people. The line is attributed to the founding father and second President, John Adams. Notice he said “moral,” not “Christian.” One of my friends was a graduate of Liberty University, a prestigious Christian school. His mission in life was to evangelize, but he always cautioned his listeners that our founders spoke of a Creator, and not Jesus. Some of our early leaders were devout Christians. Many of them were also womanizers, drinkers, and gave religion no more than lip service. They were people who wanted to be left alone, and if they practiced faith, it was personal, and they didn’t believe it was the government’s role to dictate morality.
They Mock Good People of Other Faiths
I’m reminded of a story about the 2024 Republican National Convention. Harmeet Dhillon, a rising star in the party, spoke. She referenced her Sikh faith, and someone in the crowd felt compelled to shout “Jesus is Lord!” Now, maybe a majority believes that, but are you sure He wants you to taunt good and moral people? Or would God prefer a gentler approach? For instance, you could pray for conversions.
Where does the Great Commission instruct you to be rude to people of good moral character?
Idaho’s Glenneda Zuiderveld was an alternate delegate, and when a seatmate said the man was rude, the state senator dismissed the argument. “We’re all going to be judged,” she said. What’s a Senator’s purpose in politics?
The Pot Calling the Kettle Black
A few days ago, a local church had a men-only event for candidates. A group of liberal women demonstrated outside. I don’t know why they can’t organize their own event instead, but apparently, they would rather be confrontational. They’ve accomplished nothing more than preening and making a claim that they’re more virtuous, but the church is within its rights to hold a men-only event. If you want a women’s only event, I’m not bothered. Let me add a caveat. Some of the men involved believe that it’s okay to berate members of the LDS Church as they enter the temple. I wouldn’t say screaming at someone that they’re going to hell is a sign of moral people. Again, if you think they’re wrong, then pray for them.
Some people wonder why they’re called Christian nationalists. Do we need to draw them some pictures?
Brad Little Through The Years
Gallery Credit: Kevin Miller
Idaho
Local non-profit fills Mother’s Day baskets for NICU moms across Idaho
KUNA — A sister-duo is filling baskets with blankets, snacks and handwritten notes to spread some extra love to moms spending Mother’s Day in the hospital with their newborns.
The effort is led by “Helping Hands for NICU Moms,” a nonprofit co-founded by sisters Tiffany and Alyssa Higbee. The organization was born from Alyssa’s own experience spending months in the NICU with her firstborn.
Alyssa’s son was initially in the NICU for about two weeks, then was put back in for about 3.5 months. During that time, several holidays passed, making it especially hard as a first-time mom.
“There was people in companies who would bring us stuff and try and cheer up your day, and it really helped, and so when my son was about 6 months old, we decided that it would be best to try and help moms in the NICU somehow,” Alyssa Higbee said.
That inspiration led the sisters to create Mother’s Day gift baskets filled with items to bring comfort and encouragement to moms facing the same journey.
WATCH: Learn more about “Helping Hands for NICU Moms”
Local non-profit fills Mother’s Day baskets for NICU moms across Idaho
The sisters have a 12-year age gap. Tiffany was fresh out of high school when they started the nonprofit in 2023, which meant she had more time to dedicate to the project. Alyssa noted that because of the age gap, they didn’t get to spend a lot of time together growing up, so the project has brought them closer.
“Hopefully, this can bring some hope that you can get out of it … that NICU period, that scary initial phase, it does get easier,” Alyssa Higbee said.
ALSO READ | Fragile beginnings to bright futures: NICU ‘Wall of Hope’ inspires families with stories of strength
Alyssa’s son, who was born in the NICU at St. Luke’s in Twin Falls, is now 3-years-old and healthy. Tiffany said watching her nephew go through the NICU was hard, but seeing him now — jumping, tackling her, and doing everything a little boy does — makes the work even more meaningful.
“It’s cool to see the difference because I know that some kids don’t make it to where he is when they’re in the NICU, and it’s just cool to see that he did,” Tiffany Higbee said.
This year’s baskets are packed with items donated by nearly 25 local companies — up from just 5 donors in the first year. The baskets include soaps from Wild Highland Soaps, claw clips, bibs, hair bows, chapsticks, socks, lotions, hand sanitizers, coloring books, colored pencils, snacks, minky blankets, and stuffed puppies from Scheels.
Gift cards and coupons are also included from Dutch Bros, Flying M Coffee, a pizza company, Wendy’s (free meal coupons for breakfast and lunch), Albertsons, and a $10 coupon to a baby store.
Tiffany started collecting donations for this year’s baskets as early as November of last year, spending a few hours every week for the past 6 to 8 months to prepare — reaching out to companies, picking up donations, and organizing everything.
The assembly process includes last-minute tasks like ironing vinyl onto bags, opening boxes, and putting together gift card envelopes before the full baskets are assembled and delivered.
“We start putting the bags together, making sure we have everything in there, and then we deliver them on Mother’s Day,” Alyssa Higbee said.
The baskets are delivered before noon on Mother’s Day to avoid missing moms who may be discharged after doctors do their rounds. Currently, the organization delivers to St. Luke’s Children’s Hospital in downtown Boise.
Tiffany said delivering the baskets is one of the most rewarding parts of the work.
“I love seeing the moms sometimes we get to watch them come out with their baskets, and they’ll be going through it, and they look really excited and happy,” Tiffany Higbee said.
“Seeing how happy they are or knowing how I cheered them up a little bit for their Mother’s Day because it’s a big holiday, it’s their first with that baby at least,” Tiffany Higbee said.
The first year, the project was funded mostly out of their own pockets. Three years later, as an official nonprofit, they said they no longer have to rely heavily on their own funds thanks to their new partnerships.
The organization accepts both monetary donations via Venmo and their website, as well as in-kind donations of physical items like soaps, claw clips, and other basket items — year-round.
The organization’s future goal is to expand to all the different NICUs in the area, and potentially the PICUs (Pediatric Intensive Care Units) as well, since that was also part of Alyssa’s experience.
To learn how you can donate or get involved with “Helping Hands for NICU Moms,” you can visit their website by clicking here.
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