North Dakota 2025-2026 Regular Session

North Dakota House Bill HB1488

Introduced
1/20/25  
Refer
1/20/25  

Caption

Abortion restrictions.

Impact

The bill amends various sections of the North Dakota Century Code, aiming to tighten abortion regulations and create a more structured framework for approving abortion procedures. It revokes older restrictions while simultaneously enacting new ones, including stringent consent requirements for minors and clear definitions around what constitutes a medical emergency for the purpose of obtaining an abortion. This creates a more centralized system of oversight that critics argue could infringe upon a woman's right to choose and complicate access to abortion services.

Summary

House Bill 1488 introduces significant changes to the regulation of abortion procedures within North Dakota. The bill establishes an 'abortion approval committee' in licensed hospitals that must assess and approve any proposed abortion based on the woman's medical records and current pregnancy status. This committee, composed of board-certified physicians, is tasked with determining the medical necessity of an abortion and must render a decision within a specified timeframe. Additionally, the bill outlines that abortions may only be performed in licensed healthcare facilities and sets strict guidelines regarding the gestational limits for abortion, permitting procedures up to 15 weeks without special approval, and extending that limit only in medically necessary cases beyond 15 weeks, subject to committee approval.

Contention

Opposition to HB1488 centers on the belief that it could restrict access to abortion services and impose undue burdens on women. Critics argue that requiring approval from a medical committee could delay access to necessary procedures, especially in time-sensitive situations. Further, the bill’s provisions surrounding informed consent, particularly for minors, raise concerns about parental involvement and young women's autonomy in their healthcare decisions. Supporters, however, justify these measures as necessary to ensure the safety and legitimacy of abortion practices, framing the changes as protective rather than prohibitive.

Companion Bills

No companion bills found.

Similar Bills

KY SB35

AN ACT relating to exceptions to restrictions on maternal healthcare.

KY HB203

AN ACT relating to abortion.

PA HB26

In provisions relating to abortion, repealing provisions relating to short title of chapter and to legislative intent, further providing for definitions, repealing provisions relating to medical consultation and judgment, to informed consent, to parental consent, to abortion facilities, to printed information, to Commonwealth interference prohibited, to spousal notice, to determination of gestational age, to abortion on unborn child of 24 or more weeks gestational age, to infanticide, to prohibited acts and to reporting, further providing for publicly owned facilities, public officials and public funds and for fetal experimentation and repealing provisions relating to civil penalties, to criminal penalties, to State Board of Medicine and State Board of Osteopathic Medicine and to construction; providing for reproductive rights; repealing provisions relating to compliance with Federal health care legislation as to regulation of insurers and related persons generally; and imposing penalties.

KY HB759

AN ACT relating to abortion.

AZ HB2746

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KY HB414

AN ACT relating to perinatal palliative care.

AZ SB1398

Abortion; waiting period; authorized providers

TX HB51

Relating to human sexuality and health, including the regulation of abortion; providing a civil penalty.