CLEVELAND, Ohio (WEWS) — Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost has been in the national spotlight since a Monday night interview with Fox News in which he cast doubt on the story of a 10-year-old Ohio girl who sought an abortion in Indiana because of the state's new six-week abortion ban.
That story turned out to be true, and he changed his tune when an arrest in the case was announced Wednesday.
At the end of the interview, Yost said he wanted to correct something that the national media outlets were getting wrong in their coverage.
“Ohio’s heartbeat law has a medical emergency exception, broader than just the life of the mother,” he said. “She did not have to leave Ohio for treatment.”
Yost is correct that there is a medical emergency exception in the law. The law then refers to Ohio Revised Code for a definition of “medical emergency.” According to paragraph F of ORC Section 2919.16:
"Medical emergency means a condition that in the physician's good faith medical judgment, based upon the facts known to the physician at that time, so complicates the woman's pregnancy as to necessitate the immediate performance or inducement of an abortion in order to prevent the death of the pregnant woman or to avoid a serious risk of the substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function of the pregnant woman that delay in the performance or inducement of the abortion would create."
That doesn’t clarify how the 10-year-old would have qualified for an abortion under this exception.
Professor of Law and Bioethics Sharona Hoffman from Case Western Reserve University said the law isn't clear.
“The language here is 'medical emergency', which would suggest that the person does not have time to go to another state,” Hoffman said.
There are concerns about how doctors will be able to treat their patients under this law. Since much of the medical emergency exception is left up to a doctor’s discretion, there’s a gray area. Doctors could face a fifth-degree felony charge if someone questions their decision down the line, putting them in a tough spot.
“They have to engage in a calculus,” Hoffman said. “They have to balance the patient’s best interests against their own best interest and think about whether doing a procedure will result in a risk of prosecution for themselves. And that is very dangerous.”
This story was originally reported by Amanda Merrell on news5cleveland.com.