In oral arguments on Wednesday, the state of Idaho told the Supreme Court that the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) doesn’t protect the actions of emergency care practitioners from the state’s abortion ban — even when abortion is the medically indicated treatment. In making its argument, Idaho made multiple statements that I found troubling, especially as an emergency medicine physician practicing in a neighboring state.
Idaho made multiple statements that I found troubling, especially as an emergency medicine physician practicing in a neighboring state.
EMTALA is a federal law that requires emergency departments to provide treatment for any emergency condition until it is resolved or stabilized. Among other things, Idaho argued that EMTALA’s requirements of stability can be determined by individual states; that because abortion isn’t specifically mentioned in the federal law, this treatment isn’t protected by it; and because the law requires an emergency department to provide treatments that are “available” at that hospital, abortion can simply be considered unavailable because it’s been made illegal.
All those arguments are flawed. But I’ll focus here on what may be the most awful argument Idaho made: that its abortion ban doesn’t conflict with EMTALA, because it allows a narrow exemption if abortion is necessary to prevent death.
There are some beliefs embedded in this argument that gravely misunderstand what we do in the emergency room and the ethics that guide our work.
This defense of Idaho’s law presumes that preventing death is the only outcome that matters to us and to our patients. Such a defense presumes that we physicians can predict with accuracy the single moment when a risk to a patient’s health becomes a risk to that patient’s life. And this argument imagines a world where physicians would, or should, purposefully allow people to be patently at risk of death before intervening.
Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, arguing for the U.S. government, told the justices Wednesday, “In Idaho, physicians have to shut their eyes to everything but death.”
Neither emergency medicine practice, nor EMTALA in particular, is just about preventing death. The law requires us “to provide such medical treatment of the condition as may be necessary to assure, within reasonable medical probability, that no material deterioration of the condition” is likely to occur. In medicine, the standard that we are held to by our profession, our ethics and public expectation is to prevent harm and to treat illness as early as possible.
Idaho wants to redefine what it means to acceptably skirt death, but emergency medicine is not a “let’s see what happens” practice. We are a “let’s take care of this before it gets out of hand” practice.
Imagine someone is having a stroke, a heart attack or internal bleeding from a traumatic organ injury and a doctor knows the clear treatment but waits to see if the condition becomes “deadly” before acting. Acting immediately not only produces the best chance of survival, but it’s also our best chance of preventing suffering, organ damage, disability and a prolonged recovery.
In medicine, we use maxims like “Time is Brain” (for rapid treatment of stroke) and “Time is Myocardium” (for rapid treatment of heart attacks) for a reason. Rapid treatment to optimize patient care is the emergency standard of care, no matter which state you’re in; delays in diagnosis or treatment are not only anathema to our practice, but they’re among the most common reasons doctors are sued.
Idaho wants to redefine what it means to acceptably skirt death, but emergency medicine is not a “let’s see what happens” practice. We are a “let’s take care of this before it gets out of hand” practice.








