New CA Bill Introduced to Allow Nurse Practitioners to Perform Abortion Without Doctor Supervision

New CA Bill Introduced to Allow Nurse Practitioners to Perform Abortion Without Doctor Supervision
Protesters hold signs as they rally in support of Planned Parenthood and pro-choice and to protest a state decision that would effectively halt abortions by revoking the center's license to perform the procedure, near the Old Courthouse in St. Louis, Missouri, May 30, 2019. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)
City News Service
3/3/2022
Updated:
3/7/2022

SAN DIEGO—A bill allowing nurse practitioners meeting specified criteria to practice without physician supervision—including first-trimester abortion—has been introduced by Senate President Pro Tempore Toni G. Atkins (D-San Diego), she announced on March 3.

Atkins said Senate Bill (SB) 1375 is intended to help address the shortage of health care professionals and complement recommendations from the California Future of Abortion Council as a way to strengthen abortion services.

“With an increasing shortage of providers, far too many Californians are struggling to get the care they need, when they need it,” she said. “Patients—especially pregnant people considering abortion—don’t have time to waste. That’s why it is so important that highly skilled, qualified nurse practitioners have the opportunity to practice independently, including the ability to provide first term abortions.”

The bill would widen access and affordability to abortion services and health care by increasing the number of nurse practitioners able to perform an abortion, especially among underrepresented and lower-income communities. It would clarify provisions set forth in law by Assemblyman Jim Wood’s (D-Santa Rosa) Assembly Bill 890 and Atkins’s own Assembly Bill 154, which was signed into law in 2013.

SB 1375, the new bill, would clarify that nurse practitioners who have been practicing for three or more years satisfy the requirement established in AB 890, and could also utilize prior practice experience to satisfy the requirement.

“Senate President Pro Tempore Atkins has long been a champion of increasing access to health care, especially women’s reproductive rights,” said Wood, a principal co-author on SB 1375. “Given that too many states are passing laws restricting a woman’s right to choose, I am proud to coauthor SB 1375, which will maximize the ability of our professional nurse practitioners to help women get the care they need.”

The new bill would expand on Atkins’s AB 154, which increased the types of trained health professionals who can provide early abortions by allowing nurse practitioners, certified nurse-midwives, and physician assistants to perform early abortions safely within the terms of their licenses.

The new bill would also update statutes relating to early abortion services to allow nurse practitioners qualified to practice independently to provide first-trimester abortion.

Joyce Kuo contributed to this report.