To be an abortion provider in Texas, you have to have \u201cadmitting privileges\u201d at a hospital within 30 miles of the facility. That restriction, which recently was first overturned by one judge and then, within days, upheld by the conservative Fifth Circuit Court, is essentially a fraud. Texas is not the only state taking this tack–see Mississippi<\/a>–but it’s the most recent.<\/p>\n So far, in most mainstream media reports, the effect of the admitting-privileges restriction has been well documented: It\u2019s going to force almost all abortion clinics in Texas to close, making\u2014as anti-choice advocates have hoped for\u2014abortions infinitely more difficult to get and leaving thousands of women– with legitimate reasons to terminate their pregnancies in a way sanctioned by law\u2014with no good options.<\/p>\n Left unmentioned in most media reports is an examination of the term \u201cadmitting privileges\u201d itself. Obviously, the admitting-privileges gambit is another ploy to make abortions harder\u2014in some areas virtually impossible–to get, but what is less known is that the concept of admitting privileges is an antiquated notion that is mostly irrelevant in contemporary medical care.<\/p>\n Here\u2019s a formal definition of admitting privileges, from USlegal.com<\/a>:<\/p>\n Admitting privilege is the right of a doctor, by virtue of membership as a hospital’s medical staff, to admit patients to a particular hospital or medical center for providing specific diagnostic or therapeutic services to such patient in that hospital. Each hospital maintains a list of health care providers who have admitting privileges in that hospital.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Anti-reproductive-rights advocates and legislators would have us believe that, if a medical emergency occurs during an abortion, the doctor in charge needs to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital in order to ensure the safety of the woman. On the surface, that argument sounds plausible. \u00a0But, in reality, it\u2019s a fraudulent concept\u2014and proponents know that.<\/p>\n Why? Because, when there\u2019s an emergency, admitting privileges become irrelevant. Under a 1986 federal law<\/a> known as EMTALA, hospitals are required to provide care to anyone who needs emergency care [with or without insurance, by the way.] This requirement includes pregnant women who need a life-saving abortion, are in labor, or are suffering the effects of a botched abortion. [Sadly, in 2011, a bill was passed in the U.S. House of Representatives that would have allowed hospitals to turn away patients arriving in the ER in need of a life-saving abortion or other medical help related to abortions. Fortunately, that bill went nowhere, but the fact that it was introduced at all is very disturbing. Opponents of that inhumane notion called it the \u201cLet Them Die\u201d<\/a> bill.]<\/p>\n Think of it this way: If you\u2019re walking down the street and have a heart attack, it doesn\u2019t matter who your personal doctor is, or whether he\/she has admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles of where you are: You can be taken to any hospital emergency room, get admitted, and receive treatment, even if your doctor isn\u2019t there, and even if you don\u2019t know a doctor within 30 miles of the hospital.<\/p>\n Also, if a woman is at home and experiences a pregnancy-related emergency, emergency responders will transport her to the closest hospital, regardless of where her doctor has \u201cadmitting privileges,\u201d and\u2014again, under federal law–she\u2019ll be cared for there, no admitting-privileges questions asked.<\/p>\n