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Texas Telemedicine Ban (SB 97)
This law was last updated on Oct 14, 2013
Number
SB 97
Status
Failed to Pass
Proposed
Nov 12, 2012
Sponsors
Co-authors: 1
Bill Authors: 1
Total Sponsors: 2
Full Bill Text
SB 97 would have prohibited dispensing abortion-inducing drugs (mifepristone-misoprostol regimen) by anyone other than a physician.
The bill would have required that the woman and physician both be present at a licensed abortion facility when the drugs are administered, and that the administration of the drugs follow FDA protocols as outlined on the final printed label of the abortion-inducing drug.
The bill also would have required the physician to schedule a follow-up visit not more than 14 days after the administration or use of the drug. The physician would have been required to make a reasonable effort to ensure that the woman returns for the follow-up visit and to document such efforts by including in the woman’s medical record the date, time, and name of the person making the effort.
The bill provides for disciplinary action or assessment of an administrative penalty against a person who violates the law but would have prohibited assessment of a penalty against a pregnant woman who receives a medical abortion.
STATUS
The provisions of this bill are included in Texas’ omnibus abortion bill HB 2, which was signed by Gov. Rick Perry on July 18, 2013.
People
Co-author
Bill Author
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