logo
Idaho agrees not to prosecute doctors for out-of-state abortion referrals

Idaho agrees not to prosecute doctors for out-of-state abortion referrals

Reuters9 hours ago
July 17 (Reuters) - Idaho, which has a near-total ban on abortion, agreed not to prosecute or take away licenses of doctors who refer patients out of state to obtain the procedure, under a consent decree approved by a federal judge on Thursday.
The decree prevents Idaho's Republican Attorney General Raul Labrador and county prosecutors from prosecuting healthcare providers who refer, counsel or otherwise provide information to patients seeking abortions in other states.
A local Planned Parenthood affiliate sued Idaho in April 2023 to block enforcement, after Labrador said the referrals could violate state law and require license suspensions for doctors who make them.
Planned Parenthood said the restriction violated the U.S. Constitution by infringing doctors' First Amendment free speech rights and regulating lawful out-of-state reproductive health services.
A federal appeals court blocked enforcement last December. During oral arguments, a lawyer for Labrador said the attorney general would not prosecute people for making the referrals.
Idaho makes it a crime to perform or attempt to perform abortions, or for healthcare providers to assist in abortions, with narrow exceptions.
The decree covering Planned Parenthood and two doctors was approved by U.S. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill in Boise.
"Idaho's strong pro-life laws remain fully in effect, and we remain proud to defend the rights of mothers and their unborn children," Labrador said in a statement.
"This settlement simply affirms what our office already made clear in court: we do not have the authority to prosecute referrals for out-of-state services."
Rebecca Gibron, chief executive of Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawaii, Alaska, Indiana, Kentucky, said in a statement that the decree "affirms something every patient deserves: open, honest care from a provider they trust."
The U.S. Supreme Court eliminated the federal constitutional right to abortion in 2022, overturning the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision.
Eighteen Republican-led states have total abortion bans or ban abortions at or before the 12th week of pregnancy, according to the nonprofit Guttmacher Institute, which focuses on reproductive health.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

MSG to use AI to help doctors spend more time with patients
MSG to use AI to help doctors spend more time with patients

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

MSG to use AI to help doctors spend more time with patients

Guernsey's specialist medical care provider is to use artificial intelligence (AI) to help doctors spend more time with patients and less on smart AI assistant, known as Heidi, helps doctors by taking notes during patient visits and automatically creating documents, such as referral letters and patient summaries, which the doctor checks and signs chief executive of the Medical Specialist Group (MSG), Dr Farid Fouladinejad, said this will save doctors significant was piloted in June by 10 MSG consultants and their admin colleagues and is now set to be gradually rolled out for all outpatient consultations. "Right now, doctors spend around 40% of their time writing and checking notes, letters, and reports. While this work is important, it takes them away from seeing patients," said Dr Fouladinejad."There's a lot of excitement about AI in medicine, but we must be careful and sensible in how we use it. "One of the first ways MSG is using AI is to help our doctors in writing up and summarising their notes and letters. "This could help them see more patients and reduce waiting times."Dr Michelle Le Cheminant said the technology will hopefully give the best experience to MSG's patients."When you've thought about any change within medicine, for example, you take the dictaphone, the typewriter, we need to move forwards and this is part of that journey," she Le Cheminant says patients will not even notice the technology being used because Heidi works in the background "via a web browser on our computer or via an app on the doctor's phone.""The main difference that patients will notice when they are in the clinic room is that we won't be having to produce a lot of handwritten notes, we won't be having to type a lot on the computer, so really the difference is that focus on the patient and that interaction."

Royal Caribbean cruise turns into nightmare as 140 passengers get sick
Royal Caribbean cruise turns into nightmare as 140 passengers get sick

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Royal Caribbean cruise turns into nightmare as 140 passengers get sick

A Royal Caribbean cruise turned into a health crisis for over 140 people aboard the luxury cruise line after a mysterious gastrointestinal illness struck during a voyage. Seven crew members and 134 passengers aboard the Navigator of the Seas reported symptoms like vomiting, stomach cramps, and diarrhea during the week-long cruise from Los Angeles to Mexico, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The exact cause of the outbreak remains undetermined, leaving health officials to investigate. In response, the popular cruise company implemented enhanced cleaning measures, including isolating those affected and increasing onboard sanitation protocols, the CDC confirmed. 'The health and safety of our guests, crew, and the communities we visit are our top priority,' a spokesperson for Royal Caribbean Group, the line's parent company, told USA TODAY. 'To maintain an environment that supports the highest levels of health and safety onboard our ships, we implement rigorous cleaning procedures, many of which far exceed public health guidelines,' the statement continued. This incident is part of a broader trend, with 18 gastrointestinal outbreaks reported on cruise ships in 2025 that met the CDC's threshold for public notification - when at least 3 percent of the crew or guests have any highly contagious symptoms. However, most of these outbreaks have been linked to norovirus - a very contagious virus that causes vomiting and diarrhea. 'Norovirus is often a cause of gastrointestinal illness outbreaks on cruise ships, but we don't always know the cause of the outbreak when we begin an investigation. Finding the agent that caused an outbreak (causative agent) can take time,' the CDC said in a statement. Royal Caribbean is no stranger to such outbreaks. In February 2025, over 90 passengers on a different Royal Caribbean cruise - Radiance of the Seas - also experienced symptoms of gastrointestinal illness. Despite the prevalence of such incidents on cruise ships, the CDC maintains that these outbreaks represent only 1 percent of all reported gastrointestinal illnesses. However, with a newly dominant strain of norovirus circulating both on land and at sea, health officials are closely monitoring the situation. 'CDC data show a newly dominant strain is currently associated with reported norovirus outbreaks on land,' the agency said in an emailed statement. 'Ships typically follow the pattern of land-based outbreaks, which are higher this norovirus season.'

This PT has trained hundreds of clients and says this is exactly how to ‘change your life' with just 1% of your week
This PT has trained hundreds of clients and says this is exactly how to ‘change your life' with just 1% of your week

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

This PT has trained hundreds of clients and says this is exactly how to ‘change your life' with just 1% of your week

In the fitness world, if something sounds too good to be true, it usually is. The advice below can be viewed as one of a select few exceptions. Completing just two time-efficient strength training sessions per week – taking roughly 1 per cent of the 168 hours on offer – will provide the stimulus most people need to make life-changing improvements to their health, fitness and physical capacity. This is what experienced certified strength and conditioning coach Danny Matranga stresses to clients; and he has helped hundreds of them since he started working on gym floors as an 18-year-old. In fact, he adds, less is usually more for those newer to this type of training. 'From just two sessions of resistance training a week, you will have better blood sugar, better bone density, better cognition and better motor control,' Matranga says. 'Physically, you'll have more muscle, probably less body fat, and less pain in your joints. Aesthetically, you'll probably look way better in your clothes – you'll see areas like your arms, thighs, glutes and tummy start to change. 'That's an amazing return from just a few hours per week; you are going to get the most unbelievable benefits from that first hour of exercise. [But after a point], with each additional hour, we get into what we call diminishing marginal returns.' Below, he explains why this is the case and shares a sample dumbbell-only workout you can use to build full-body strength – among a plethora of other benefits. Science says beginners shouldn't train too much 'When people look at the fitness industry, they see people in incredible shape working out six or seven days per week and think, 'Wow, that must be what I need to do,'' Matranga explains. 'But for somebody who is currently doing nothing, or very little, you're actually better off working out one to three times per week.' The reason for this, in his words, is that 'you're only going to make progress equal to the amount of work you can recover from, and a new exerciser can't recover from an advanced routine'. Strength training provides the stimulus for positive physical adaptations; more muscle, less fat, increased physical capacity, better cognition, improved heart health, the list goes on. But these changes don't happen during the workouts themselves – they happen in the time between sessions when you're recovering. Because the strength training stimulus is new to novice exercisers, any amount will act as a jolt to the system, and it doesn't take much to trigger impressive results. But when you give your body more exercise than it can handle, which for fresh exercisers is usually a fairly low threshold, you will quickly hit a point of 'diminishing marginal returns'. In layman's terms: your body will reach a point where it can no longer positively adapt to the volume of exercise you're asking of it, leading to limited benefits relative to the extra time you're putting in. Less really is more, and for newer exercisers, most of the magic lies in the first hour or two of work you do each week. Of course, over time, consistent and progressive exercise can increase your work capacity – a term defined to me by endurance swimmer Ross Edgley as 'your body's ability to perform and positively tolerate training at a given intensity or duration'. When you start to spot evidence of this progress, you may want to consider upping your weekly training volume. But work capacity takes time to develop, so for time-efficient training, two or three strength sessions per week (alongside some form of regular aerobic activity such as walking) offer optimal ROI for those in their first few years of lifting weights. How to use this advice to improve your fitness If you want to implement this advice, Matranga recommends starting with full-body workouts – sessions that recruit every major muscle group; the chest, back, shoulders, arms, legs and core – twice per week. 'When you're a novice, you can go into the gym and do a pushing exercise and a pulling exercise for your upper body, something like a squat for the front of your legs, something like a deadlift for the back of your legs, and then you can walk away after four exercises having trained every single muscle in your body,' he says. 'The average person wants the most results from the least amount of time in the gym, and I respect that – the gym isn't everybody's happy place. If time is of the utmost importance and you want the most gains from the least number of trips to the gym, total body programmes are very effective.' The gym isn't a prerequisite for this plan of action either. Strength training involves using your muscles to overcome an external load, but as long as this load is challenging enough to stimulate the desired adaptations (more on this below), the body won't mind whether it comes from resistance machines, dumbbells, barbells, kettlebells, resistance bands or even your own body weight. A sample full-body dumbbell workout All you need to complete this session is a pair of dumbbells, and you can use it twice per week as your strength training workouts – if you do, complete the dumbbell overhead press in one session and the press-up in the other to bias the shoulders and chest muscles respectively. You can also do it at the gym, in your living room or at the park – your muscles don't care where you are, just that you're giving them a good workout. The common denominator behind an effective strength-boosting, muscle-building, joint-bolstering session is something called mechanical tension. To achieve this, you need to ensure the target muscles are working hard enough during each set to achieve the stimulus needed for positive adaptations. A good way to check for this is, by your last two or three reps, your form should remain immaculate but your movements should be involuntarily slowing down due to the accumulated fatigue in the muscles. If the last couple of reps feel easy, the exercise wasn't challenging enough. This is why Matranga prescribes a goal of 12-15 repetitions, rather than giving you an exact number to gun for – stop when you can't complete another rep with perfect form, rather than hitting the breaks when you reach the listed rep target. If you don't have access to dumbbells heavy enough to feel challenging for 12-15 reps, Matranga advises completing the exercises non-stop for a set amount of time (such as 30 or 60 seconds) or continuing until you feel 'it burning in the target muscle' instead. However, a rep goal of 12-15 per set is his favourite for beginner lifters. This is because a higher target number of reps allows you to challenge yourself with lighter weights, while also practising the movement more times – lifting weights is a skill, after all, like any physical activity. 'In golf, if you wanted to learn how to swing the driver, you wouldn't go to the driving range, swing it one time as hard as you can and then leave,' Matranga explains. 'You would take a bunch of swings, and after a lot of practice, you would eventually start hitting the ball straight. 'For new lifters, I like aiming for 12 to 15 reps because you use less weight, which allows you to practise and rehearse the form while still getting close to failure. Sometimes you get a little bit of an aerobic benefit from a little more reps too, and let's be honest, most people could use a cardiovascular benefit from their exercise.' When you become more comfortable with an exercise and fine-tune your technique, you can then start increasing the weight you're lifting and lowering the target number of repetitions to increase strength, Matranga adds. 10-second takeaways Two weekly strength training workouts per week is enough to trigger impressive results in beginners, including improved strength, joint health, mobility, heart health, body composition and cognition. Beginners will enjoy maximal return on investment from fewer workouts as they need less of a stimulus to trigger positive adaptations, and they are unable to positively tolerate advanced exercise routines. Full-body workouts are the most time-efficient option as they allow you to train each major muscle group (those of the chest, back, shoulders, arms, legs and core) more frequently. An example of an efficient dumbbell-only full-body workout is the goblet squat, dumbbell Romanian deadlift, dumbbell overhead press and single-arm dumbbell bent-over row, each performed for two to three sets of 12 to 15 repetitions, with 60 seconds of rest between each set.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store