Supreme Court

  • Read more: Texas, Self-Induced Abortion, and an Ode to Justice Powell

    Texas, Self-Induced Abortion, and an Ode to Justice Powell

    By Gregory M. Lipper With the Supreme Court ready to review the constitutionality of restrictions on abortion providers in Texas, new research from the Texas Policy Evaluation Project suggests that between 100,000–240,000 Texas women ages 18 to 49 have attempted to terminate a pregnancy on their own (that is, without help from a licensed medical professional)….

  • Read more: The Supreme Court and Contraceptive Coverage—Take 2

    The Supreme Court and Contraceptive Coverage—Take 2

    By Gregory M. Lipper Today the Supreme Court granted review in seven challenges to the accommodation offered to those with religious objections to the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive coverage regulations. I won’t rehash my earlier posts about why I (and seven of eight federal appeals courts) think that these challenges, brought under the Religious Freedom Restoration…

  • Read more: Hell Hath No Fury Like An ACA Opponent Scorned

    Hell Hath No Fury Like An ACA Opponent Scorned

    By Gregory M. Lipper Over the weekend, Ted Cruz again lamented the role played by John Roberts in rejecting the plaintiffs’ arguments in King v. Burwell, the recent attempts to undermine the Affordable Care Act in the Supreme Court. After Chief Justice Roberts wrote the Supreme Court’s 6–3 opinion in the case, the emerging narrative…

  • Read more: Little Sisters: Cato Institute Targets the Affordable Care Act—Yet Again

    Little Sisters: Cato Institute Targets the Affordable Care Act—Yet Again

    By Gregory M. Lipper Fresh off its unsuccessful attempt to gut the Affordable Care Act in King v. Burwell, the Cato Institute is back for more. This time, Cato has filed an amicus brief in support of Supreme Court review in Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged v. Burwell. This is one of…

  • Read more: More Than Just the ACA at Stake in King v. Burwell

    More Than Just the ACA at Stake in King v. Burwell

    By Erin Fuse Brown[Cross-posted from Center for Law, Health and Society Blog] Commentators have been weighing in since the Supreme Court decided it would hear King v. Burwell, the case challenging the ability of millions of Americans to receive subsidies to purchase health insurance on federally operated Exchanges under the ACA.  Debate swirls over whether a decision striking down…

  • Read more: Video Now Available: “Gene Patenting, the Supreme Court’s Myriad Decision, and the Future of Biotechnology”

    Video Now Available: “Gene Patenting, the Supreme Court’s Myriad Decision, and the Future of Biotechnology”

    In case you missed it live on Monday evening, video from the Petrie-Flom Center’s event “Gene Patenting, the Supreme Court’s Myriad Decision, and the Future of Biotechnology” (co-sponsored by the Broad Institute) is now available here. 09/27/13 UPDATE: Our intern Fatima Mirza also wrote up this summary: At this event, a distinguished panel of law and…

  • Read more: Art Caplan on the Myriad Decision: Patenting natural DNA never made sense

    Art Caplan on the Myriad Decision: Patenting natural DNA never made sense

    By Arthur Caplan Bill of Health contributor Art Caplan weighed in on the Supreme Court’s decision in the Myriad case with an opinion piece at NBC: “The Supreme Court has finally done what should have been done years ago — declared that genes which naturally exist in all of us cannot be patented.  For years…

  • Read more: Sebelius v. Auburn Regional Medical Center: Hospitals Allege Medicare Intentionally Underpaid Providers–And Got Away With It

    Sebelius v. Auburn Regional Medical Center: Hospitals Allege Medicare Intentionally Underpaid Providers–And Got Away With It

    By Katie Booth In the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Auburn Regional Medical Center, the Court held that a suit against HHS by eighteen hospitals alleging intentional underpayment of Medicare reimbursements was barred by a 180-day internal agency deadline for appeals of reimbursement decisions. The rub is that the hospitals only found out about the…