A federal judge has dealt with the RFK JR.

A federal judge has dealt with the RFK JR.

AP25199436408258-e1753720586264 A federal judge has dealt with the RFK JR.

A federal judge spent on Monday that family planning clinics across the country must continue to compensate due to the financing of Medicid as the largest abortion provider in the country fighting the administration of President Donald Trump for the efforts made by the organization in his tax legislation.

The new matter is replaced by a former decree presented by the American boycott judge, Indira Talwani, in Boston last week. Talwani Initially, it was granted a preliminary judicial order specifically The government is to reduce Medicaid payments to family planning members who did not provide abortion or not fulfilled a threshold of at least $ 800,000 in paying a mandate in a specific year.

“It is possible that patients will suffer from harmful health consequences, as care or lack of care is disrupted,” Talawani wrote on Monday. “In particular, restricting the ability of organs to provide health care services threatens an increase in unintended pregnancy and associated complications due to low access to effective contraceptives, and an increase in sexually transmitted diseases.”

A ruling on the Trump Tax Bill in the Federal Government to end the medical aid payments for a year for abortion providers who received more than $ 800,000 from Medicaid in 2023, even for those such as family planning that provides medical services such as birth control, pregnancy tests and testing sexually transmitted diseases.

Although family planning is not specifically called in the statute, which came into effect on July 4, the organization’s leaders say it was supposed to affect nearly 600 centers in 48 states. However, a Mainean medical provider Others may also have been injured.

On Monday, Talwani said that the court “does not ask the federal government to organize abortion and does not direct the federal government to finance optional abortion or any health care service that is not qualified to cover medical aid.” Instead, Talwani said its decision would prevent the federal government from excluding groups such as family planning from Medicaid compensation when they showed a great possibility of success in their legal challenge.

In the caseThe family planned that they would be at risk of closing nearly 200 clinics in 24 states if it was cut off from Medicaid money. They have estimated that this would lead to the loss of more than a million patients.

“We are the Trump administration on this targeted attack on the health centers of the planned paternity and the patients who rely on them on care,” Alex Mac Jill Johnson, President and CEO of the Family Organization said in a statement on Monday. “This condition revolves around ensuring that patients who use Medicaid insure them to obtain birth control, cancer shows, a STI test and treatment can continue to do so at the local family health center, and we will clarify this in court.”

The lawsuit was filed earlier this month against the Minister of Health and Humanitarian Services Robert F. Kennedy Junior by the American Family Planning Federation and its member organizations in the state of Massachusetts and Utah.

The Federal Ministry of Health did not immediately respond to suspension requests.

In the past, the ministry said it strongly opposed something that allows the first judge that allowed some family planning members to receive medical aid financing.

“The states should not be forced to finance the organizations that have chosen the political invitation to care for patients,” said Andrew Nixon, the ministry’s communications director, said. He said he “undermines the flexibility of the state” and “concerns about accountability.”

Medicaid is a governmental health care program that serves millions of Americans with low and disabled income. Almost half of the family planning patients depends on medical aid.

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