Archive for the ‘Media Control’ Category

The end of Roe v. Wade affects more than just abortion – Vox.com

The end of Roe v. Wade will not only jeopardize access to abortion in many states, it could have wide-ranging and unpredictable consequences for medical care, including fertility treatment, contraception, and cancer care.

This post-Roe world will be, in many ways, a new era for medical care in the United States, one that could transform medical services for conditions that range far beyond pregnancy, either by making them illegal or by putting their legality in question.

The consequences are unpredictable. Michelle Banker, director of reproductive rights and health litigation at the National Womens Law Center, told me in an interview before Fridays decision that the effect on other types of health care will depend upon the answers to open and untested questions in US courts. Some of it will rest on how judges will interpret new state abortion bans. States could also be emboldened by the Supreme Courts ruling to pass new legislation that restricts other medical services.

History would suggest places that outlaw abortion tend to have less access to other reproductive care as well. In Ireland, which only recently legalized abortion, there is still less access to in vitro fertilization and certain contraceptives than in the rest of Europe, even after abortion became legal. In the US, a health system that is already fractured will become even more so, limiting access to medical care particularly for marginalized patients. Whether you can get certain health care services may be predicated on where you live (or whether you can afford to travel).

The breadth of the potential health care consequences is so broad, Banker said. The first place to start is this is going to result in the death of pregnant people.

The United States has the highest maternal mortality rates among wealthy nations; Black Americans have a significantly higher mortality rate than anywhere else in the developed world. The risk of death from carrying a pregnancy to term is much higher than the risk of death from undergoing an abortion. One estimate puts the number of forced birth in the first year after Roe is overturned at 75,000; the maternal mortality rate in the US is about 1 in 10,000.

The impact the end of Roe could have on pregnancy care could reach much further. As the Atlantics Sarah Zhang wrote, pregnant women undergo genetic and other tests throughout their pregnancy, meant to assess the health of the fetus and identify any anomalies that could be fatal or life-altering. In some cases, parents who learn about these anomalies choose abortion. But that may no longer be so simple if abortion is now outlawed or severely limited. Decisions about whether to get genetic testing and when could be affected.

By the same token, most abortion bans would carve out exceptions if the health of the mother were in jeopardy. But whether a complication represents a life-threatening risk to the mothers health is in part a judgment call on the part of her doctor and the possibility of legal consequences could make the cost of mistakes much higher.

At the very least, there may well be a chilling effect due to providers and patients uncertainty as to whether treatment could expose them to civil or criminal liability, Banker said.

Fetal personhood laws that convey constitutional protections to unborn fetuses would further limit a pregnant persons choices in medical care. Several states have attempted to pass such a law, but they have thus far been held up by the courts. This new post-Roe jurisprudence could embolden those states and others to put such measures into place. Law enforcement or private citizens, depending on the state law, could bring complaints. The recently signed Texas law, for example, deputizes private citizens by creating a financial incentive for them to take civil action against people who seek or provide abortions.

Or, in a less extreme example, what happens if a pregnant person is also receiving cancer treatment or taking mental health medication that could affect the health of their fetus? If they stop receiving that medical care, their health could be in danger. But if they continue to receive it, the fetus could be affected. What are they and their doctor supposed to do?

The laws that criminalize abortion are going to impact medical decision-making, and thats terrifying, Banker said.

Supporters of abortion rights fear that, unchained by the Supreme Court, states could push deeper and deeper into the lives of pregnant women and the decisions they make about how to conduct themselves.

People have been arrested for substance use during pregnancy, based on reasoning that they are harming the growth of the pregnancy. Tennessee passed the first law permitting the prosecution of pregnant women who use drugs. That alone is objectionable to people who oppose a criminalized approach to substance use. But they also worry that such laws are just the tip of the iceberg in a post-Roe reality. Could a pregnant woman be charged with a crime if she drinks a glass of wine? Or if she goes on a hiking trip that a complainant thinks would imperil the health of her fetus?

These questions will be answered by the specifics of state laws and the discretion of prosecutors in different places. But they are questions that were unfathomable just a few months ago.

How far down this path could states go? said Elizabeth Nash, who tracks state policy at the Guttmacher Institute, in an interview before Fridays Supreme Court ruling. That might sound a bit far-fetched to people but we have seen states take drastic actions in relation for some pregnant people.

Beyond medical care during pregnancy, the end of Roe could usher in a wave of new restrictions on access to contraception and fertility treatment.

The right to contraception is currently upheld by two previous Supreme Court decisions: Griswold v. Connecticut enshrined the right for married people and Eisenstadt v. Baird did the same for unmarried people.

But the current Court is clearly not bound by those precedents if they are willing to overturn Roe v. Wade. And some prominent Republicans, such as Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), have referred to those prior court decisions as constitutionally unsound in the days since the Alito draft leaked.

That puts case law in jeopardy because it relies on this idea that rights not specifically named in the Constitution are only entitled to special protection if they are deeply rooted in the nations traditions, Banker said.

Other experts I spoke to agreed. The stage is very much set for state legislators to ban contraception if they want to, Sean Tipton, who works on policy issues at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, told me before the Supreme Court ruled.

Would state legislators want to ban condoms or even birth control pills? Maybe not. But new laws or even state abortion bans could target other kinds of birth control.

Many of these states want to define the beginning of life as early as possible in the biological process. Oklahoma, for one, passed a law that recognized an unborn childs life as beginning at fertilization. Other states describe the moment of conception. But, as Tipton pointed out, the early stages of pregnancy are, medically speaking, a process. There is not a single moment of conception.

But if states define life in such a way, then contraceptives that could prevent a fertilized egg from becoming implanted could be under threat.

IUDs and the morning-after pill would be threatened under such a legal regime. In the vast majority of cases, IUDs work by preventing fertilization: the sperm and the egg never meet in the first place. But they also might prevent implantation under certain circumstances. There is also some controversy about whether Plan B, the morning-after pill, prevents fertilization in the first place or whether it blocks the implantation of a fertilized egg. The latter could arguably be illegal in states that recognize life at fertilization. Lawmakers in Idaho, for example, announced hearings on whether to ban emergency contraceptives and possibly IUDs before the Supreme Court had even issued its final ruling.

Then there are fertility treatments particularly in vitro fertilization that depend on fostering a larger number of eggs but typically only use a small number of them. If an embryo is conferred the same rights as a toddler, are those procedures suddenly illegal?

As Tipton put it to me, what if a doctor puts 199 embryos in a freezer for IVF treatment, and 198 of them come out of the freezer okay? Does that mean a homicide has been committed? he said.

Experts imagine other possible restrictions on procedures like IVF, particularly in states that define life as beginning at conception or fertilization. That alone could put IVF in legal jeopardy. States could also institute new restrictions on those procedures, now that the right to privacy has been redefined. Maybe the number of embryos could be limited. Maybe state legislators restrict which people are allowed to avail themselves of those services to only straight married couples, for example.

And while there is a tension between ostensibly pro-life politicians restricting access to fertility care, there is an expectation that anti-abortion advocates would be willing to let these medical services be collateral damage in order to achieve the goal of outlawing abortion.

Most right-to-life proponents are not interested in doing anything to hurt fertility patients, Tipton said. But theyre very willing to throw those patients under the bus to end abortion.

The new jurisprudence could also affect access to health care that has nothing to do with pregnancy or reproduction, experts say.

Medical care for people undergoing a gender transition would be one possible casualty. The decision in particular puts gender-affirming care in its crosshairs, Banker said.

In the opinion, Alito cited a 1974 decision, Geduldig v. Aiello, that takes what Banker calls a very narrow and cramped view of what constitutes sex discrimination. For Alitos purposes, that narrow view of sex discrimination supports the argument that banning abortion would not constitute discrimination against pregnant people on the basis of sex.

But Banker says the same logic could be applied to gender-affirming health care such as surgery or hormonal treatments. If the Supreme Courts definition of sex discrimination is now much narrower than it used to be, then opponents of those services could argue that denying a person gender-affirming medical care is not actually discriminatory.

Those arguments are easily refuted under modern precedent, Banker told me. But the drafts language and citation to Geduldig raises concerns that we may see those arguments gain more traction.

Old battles over medical research or treatment could also resurface, Tipton said. Modern science has developed treatments for spinal cord injuries, myelofibrosis, and even certain cancers by relying on stem cells. More treatments are in clinical trials right now. But their prospects could be compromised if access to those materials is limited. Some stem cells are collected from adult body tissue, but others come from embryos.

Much of this will depend on how aggressive anti-abortion advocates decide to be, and on the success of abortion rights advocates in mounting a political and legal response to a ruling overturning Roe.

But it will undoubtedly be a new era for health care in the United States, with potentially devastating consequences for patients with a wide array of medical needs.

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The end of Roe v. Wade affects more than just abortion - Vox.com

Update on Ericsson’s proposed acquisition of Vonage – Ericsson

Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) continues to work closely with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States as it reviews its proposed acquisition of Vonage Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ: VG). The merger has cleared all other requisite foreign and US regulatory approval requirements, and the parties are working to conclude the regulatory process as expeditiously as possible. Ericsson and Vonage remain fully committed to this transaction and are working towards closing before end of July, 2022.

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Update on Ericsson's proposed acquisition of Vonage - Ericsson

Interview: Infectious outbreaks may lead to discrimination. Here’s why we should avoid that. – Capital Public Radio News

The current monkeypox outbreak can remind us of historically harmful lessons weve learned from past public health crises, such as when politicians and media outlets unfairly blamed the HIV-AIDS epidemic on the LGBTQ community. These scars still hurt the community today.

Sometimes when a new or rare disease starts to spread, communication around it can become negative, causing stigmatization in certain groups. The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic found people often targeting Asian communities in the U.S., which shows us that as a society, we may not be past blaming some communities for disease outbreak.

The U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports 4,106 cases of monkeypox globally as of June 27. The U.S. has about 200 of those cases, 51 of which are in California.

While the virus can spread to anyone via close skin-to-skin contact, it is not a sexually transmitted disease.

The World Health Organization and the CDC have focused some of their messaging on gay and bisexual men, after some cases were identified in that community. But that opens a historically vulnerable group to becoming stigmatized once again.

Sacramento LGBT Center CEO David Heitstuman said the organization is doing outreach but feels parallels to the HIV crisis.

Were sort of coordinating and thinking about communicating with other LGBT organizations across the country who are sort of seeing whats happening in their communities, Heitstuman said. A lot of people are harkening back to the beginning of the HIV epidemic when public health wasnt paying super close attention.

Heitsuman and Alexis Sanchez, director of advocacy and training at the Sacramento LGBT Center, met with Insight Host Vicki Gonzalez to discuss how to talk about monkeypox while reducing harm.

Note: The WHO is working on developing a new name for this poxvirus, given that name can be seen as discriminatory and stigmatizing.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Interview Highlights

On how the outbreak is being communicated

Heitsuman: So for us, were sort of coordinating and thinking about communicating with other LGBT organizations across the country who are sort of seeing whats happening in their communities.

And really, a lot of people are harkening back to the beginning of the HIV epidemic when public health wasnt paying super close attention. People didnt think they could get it.

And so, right now, were really focused on just doing some general education with communities members about what to look for and what the symptoms are, and how it spreads, and to make sure that if they are experiencing any symptoms or they suspect that they might have been in contact with someone, that they contact their health care provider and really be a self-advocate for what might be going on.

On what stands out about how monkeypox is being talked about

Sanchez: I think it really is balancing community awareness with not perpetuating any negative stereotypes about the community and also communicating accurate information of how monkeypox is being transmitted and how it is prevented.

And the thing that Ive been talking about with many of our community members is that the interventions that work to prevent HIV and the spread of COVID are going a long way towards preventing monkeypox.

There is a higher prevalence of COVID-19, especially in our community right now, and there is still a high prevalence of HIV in certain communities in Sacramento.

So if we are doing things such as getting tested regularly [for monkeypox], if were doing things such as using barriers and other forms of protection, thats going to go a long way towards preventing monkeypox.

I think theres space for nuance, right? With monkeypox, we have to talk about fomite transmission and sweat and other things like that, but generally broad strokes, we are really leaning into a general prevention message across all three diseases.

On how labeling a group as a potential vector can cause harm

Sanchez: So something that we saw in the early stages of the HIV/AIDS epidemic was the disease was labeled as a gay disease, right?

So we had bisexual men who were transmitting. We had cisgender heterosexual couples that were contracting HIV and not understanding that they could still spread it to other individuals.

So really talking about how [monkeypox] spreads from skin-to-skin contact, from sweat, and saying that it could really affect really anyone is really, really, really important.

On if theres concerns that LGBTQ+ groups will be discriminated once again

Heitsuman: I want to be hopeful that thats not going to be the case, and at the same time, I think its really important that there be a strong partnership between public health and community-based organizations that are really looking to ensure that we respond very quickly to these kinds of outbreaks.

Right now, most of the cases had been [with] folks who have been connected to an LBGT-focused event in Europe This isnt a disease that discriminates, and so it can infect any person and very likely will if we dont get it under control right away.

On how stigmatizing marginalized communities harms everyone

Sanchez: I think that I, as an advocate, can only do so much, but it really comes down to everyone really educating themselves and not perpetuating stigma towards particular groups and particular individuals.

When I talk about and do advocacy for transgender women and transgender women of color my own background is in public health. I like to talk about the social determinants of health and why marginalized communities tend to have higher risks for certain illnesses.

Its not because they have certain behaviors, but its more about the built environment and less access to primary care, less access to all sorts of resources that are going to keep a person healthy.

And so when Im talking about prevention, not perpetuating stigma in communities, Im also talking about what puts certain communities at higher risk as well and what we can do to address some of those things.

Originally posted here:
Interview: Infectious outbreaks may lead to discrimination. Here's why we should avoid that. - Capital Public Radio News

Social Media Swirls With Unsupported Claims About Cause of Justin and Hailey Bieber’s Medical Conditions – FactCheck.org

Justin Bieber and Hailey Bieber attend the Grammy Awards on April 3, 2022, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo by Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic via Getty Images.

Other studies have reported a small number of people who have had VZV reactivations following vaccination, including a set of 10 patients with rheumatic diseases in Taiwan.

But case reports are not proof of anything.

Its purely speculative when you look at a single case report and try to conclude causation or even an association, Dr. Maria Nagel, a neurologist and neurovirologist who studies VZV at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, told us. Saying theres a link would be like a few people reporting that they stubbed their toe after vaccination and we conclude that [the] vaccine causes stubbed toes.

The fact that somebodys gotten the vaccine and then gotten Ramsay Hunt, what youd have to do is demonstrate not only a temporal relationship, but the fact that it occurs at a higher rate in that population than in the population in general, Berger said. You cant use anecdote as data.

The results from larger epidemiological studies about COVID-19 vaccination and shingles or VZV reactivations have been mixed. A few, including an analysis of data from a health care organization in Israel, have identified an association, but others have not.

Data from safety monitoring systems in the U.S. do not suggest a connection.

CDC has detected no unusual or unexpected patterns of Ramsay Hunt syndrome following immunization that would indicate COVID-19 vaccines are causing or contributing to this condition, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spokesperson told us in an email. Evidence at this time does not support a causal association between COVID-19 vaccination and the development of Ramsay Hunt syndrome or herpes zoster (shingles). Safety monitoring for these outcomes is ongoing.

The evidence is pretty thin, Berger said, adding that he was skeptical of a meaningful association between vaccination and Ramsay Hunt.

The available evidence also does not support a connection between COVID-19 vaccination and Bells palsy, a more common and less severe form of facial paralysis than Ramsey Hunt that is sometimes thought to be due to VZV reactivation, although more often is thought to be due to reactivation of herpes simplex virus. In the vaccine trials for the two COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, there were a few more people who developed Bells palsy in the vaccinated versus the placebo groups, but the frequency was similar to what would be expected in the general population. Subsequent monitoring has not revealed safety concerns.

Given that large-scale studies are inconclusive about a possible link between COVID-19 vaccination and VZV reactivation and the lack of such a safety signal in the U.S., the claim that there is a link or that the vaccine is responsible for Biebers condition is unsupported.

Even if vaccination does increase a persons risk of VZV reactivation, the risk would likely be low, and would not mean the risks of the vaccine would outweigh the benefits, contrary to posts that attempt to use Biebers case to argue against vaccination. Indeed, even many of the published papers that propose a possible link to Ramsay Hunt or shingles are careful to note this.

Its not fully understood what causes VZV reactivations, such as with shingles and Ramsay Hunt syndrome, but is thought to primarily be the result of the immune systems inability control the virus.

Older people and those with weakened immune systems are at higher risk, and medications, infections and stress are possible triggers.

But sometimes there is no obvious cause.

We also see it in individuals that are otherwise perfectly healthy, immunologically, who are young, Berger said of shingles. It just is one of those things that can occur without there being a known precipitant or a good explanation.

Nagel said that if she saw a younger patient, such as 28-year-old Bieber, with Ramsay Hunt, she would first ask when he had chickenpox as a child.

If youre four years old or under, you dont have good immune memory. And those kids tend to flare up virus at a younger age, she said. They might get shingles, also known as herpes zoster, when theyre 12 years old, or in their 20s.

She said shed also ask about recent infections and other medical conditions or medications that weaken the immune system.

Bieber, notably, had a mild case of COVID-19 in mid-February.

Multiple case reports have suggested that COVID-19 increases the risk of VZV reactivation, but as with the case reports of events following vaccination, these reports do not mean anything on their own. One large study found that among adults 50 years of age and older, those who had had COVID-19 were 15% more likely to develop shingles than those who had not been sick with the coronavirus. But another large study the Israeli one that found an association between the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine and shingles did not observe an increased risk of shingles with COVID-19.

Berger, who said he usually sees a couple of cases of Ramsay Hunt a year, said he has not seen an uptick in cases during the pandemic or with the rollout of vaccines.

Regardless of the cause, if someone is experiencing facial paralysis or other symptoms of Ramsay Hunt, Berger and Nagel both said to seek medical attention as soon as possible.

The longer you wait, the more likely there is to be permanent damage to the nerve, Berger said. Ramsay Hunt is typically treated with antiviral medications and steroids to reduce swelling, he said, and about half of patients fully recover, but it can take months.

There are chickenpox and shingles vaccines that can reduce the risk of VZV infection or reactivation, and thereby lower the risk of Ramsay Hunt syndrome.

The chickenpox vaccine is a two-dose vaccine made from weakened, or attenuated, varicella-zoster virus, which is around 90% effective in preventing the disease. While some people who are vaccinated get shingles later, the CDC says this is much less common after vaccination than after chickenpox disease.

The chickenpox vaccine was first used in the U.S. in 1995 as a single-dose vaccine. Bieber, who is Canadian, likely was never vaccinated, as the vaccine wasnt licensed there until 1998 and was not part of routine childhood immunization programs until 2000 or later, when he was 6.

Older people 50 and above and immunocompromised adults 19 years of age and older are eligible to receive the shingles vaccine, which prevents shingles and long-term nerve pain due to shingles called postherpetic neuralgia. The vaccine, known by its brand name Shingrix, is a two-dose vaccine that does not contain live virus and is 85% effective or more, depending on age, in healthy people.

In addition to Justins Ramsay Hunt syndrome, social media posts have without evidence blamed Hailey Biebers transient ischemic attack, or TIA, on COVID-19 vaccination.

As we have written, only one of the FDA-authorized vaccines, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, has been linked to blood clots, but it is a very particular and rare problem known as thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome, or TTS. In the condition, which has occurred in about 4 cases per million doses of vaccine administered, blood clotting occurs together with low levels of platelets.

Haileys description of her clinical case, however, bears no suggestion that she suffered from TTS, nor is there evidence that she was even vaccinated with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

In an April 27 YouTube video, Hailey described her experience in detail, never mentioning COVID-19 vaccination and in fact giving other reasons why doctors suspect she had a blood clot in her brain.

According to her account, her doctors attributed the clot to a perfect storm of three factors.

One was that I had just recently started birth control pills, which I should have never been on because I am somebody who suffered from migraines anyway, and I just did not talk to my doctor about this, she said.

The second thing was I had recently had COVID, and that was something that they thought was a contributing factor, she continued. And the third thing was that I had recently gone on a really long flight I had flown to Paris and back in a very short amount of time and I slept through the whole flight both ways, didnt get up and move around, never thought about wearing compression socks.

Haileys doctors also discovered she had a natural opening between the two chambers of her heart called a patent foramen ovale, which she had been born with and had likely allowed the clot to travel to her brain and cause the TIA. She has since had surgery to close the hole.

Its unclear when she had COVID-19, but numerous studies have now shown there is an increased risk of clotting and cardiovascular problems after infection with the coronavirus.

Dr. Adam Cuker, a hematologist with expertise in blood clots at Penn Medicine, told us that her case did not raise any concerns about the vaccines.

It sounds like she developed a DVT and then a piece broke off, traveled through the hole in her heart and into her brain, he said, referring to the deep vein thrombosis, the technical term for a blood clot. This process is called paradoxical embolism.

If she did have TTS as a result of the J&J vaccine, Cuker said, her platelets would have been low something that he thought was highly likely to have been checked and anti-platelet factor 4 antibodies would also be elevated. Bieber mentions neither, but does say in her video that while at the hospital her doctors ran a lot of tests, including blood tests to see if I had a clotting disorder.

Much more likely, she developed a garden variety DVT with the risk factors of hormonal contraception, long-haul travel, and possibly recent COVID, he said. There is nothing here that suggests a link with this event and vaccination.

Editors note:SciChecks COVID-19/Vaccination Projectis made possible by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The foundation hasno controlover FactCheck.orgs editorial decisions, and the views expressed in our articles do not necessarily reflect the views of the foundation. The goal of the project is to increase exposure to accurate information about COVID-19 and vaccines, while decreasing the impact of misinformation.

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The rest is here:
Social Media Swirls With Unsupported Claims About Cause of Justin and Hailey Bieber's Medical Conditions - FactCheck.org

Poll: Majorities oppose Supreme Courts abortion ruling and worry about other rights – Houston Public Media

Protesters fill the street in front of the Supreme Court after the courts decision to overturn Roe v. Wade in Washington, June 24, 2022. Public opinion on abortion is nuanced, but polling shows broad support for Roe and for abortion rights.

Majorities of Americans say they disagree with the Supreme Courts decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, think it was politically motivated, are concerned the court will now reconsider rulings that protect other rights, and are more likely to vote for a candidate this fall who would restore the right to an abortion, according to the latest NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll.

Still, a majority opposes expanding the number of justices who could sit on the Supreme Court.

In overturning Roe on Friday, the Supreme Court reversed 50 years of precedent that had made abortion a right in this country. The right to regulate abortion now is in states hands, and about half the states have already moved to severely curtail access to an abortion or ban the procedure outright.

The issue is personal to most Americans. Two-thirds of people responding to the poll say they or someone they know has had an abortion. That was true of three-quarters of independents, 7-in-10 Democrats and 55% of Republicans.

Surveys have for years shown consistently that most Americans wanted to keep Roe in place and to see restrictions on when abortions could take place. What the court did is clearly outside the mainstream of public opinion, and that is reflected again in the NPR poll.

The survey of 941 respondents, conducted Friday after the decision through Saturday, has a margin of error of +/-4.9 percentage points.

By a 56%-to-40% margin, respondents oppose the courts decision, including 45% who strongly oppose it.

Almost 9-in-10 Democrats and a slim majority of independents (53%) are against the decision. Three-quarters of Republicans, on the other hand, support it.

There is a massive split by education 69% of college graduates oppose the decision while those without degrees are split. Half of whites without degrees support the decision, while two-thirds of whites with college degrees oppose it.

A majority of men and women are against the decision, though a slightly higher percentage of women oppose it (59% vs. 54%).

Along racial lines, 60% of non-whites and 54% of whites oppose the decision. (There were too few people surveyed to break out individual racial groups any further without margins of error getting too high.)

By a 57%-to-36% margin, respondents said the decision was mostly based on politics as opposed to the law. And by a 56%-to-41% margin are concerned that the overturning of Roe will be used by the Supreme Court to reconsider past rulings that protect contraception, same-sex relationships, and same-sex marriage.

Just 39% said they have a great deal or quite a lot of confidence in the Supreme Court; 58% said they have not very much or no confidence at all in the institution. Thats a low in the poll.

But few want to change the size of the court in the wake of the decision. Only a third of respondents said they were in favor of expanding the Supreme Court; 54% percent said they oppose that move.

Sixty-two percent of Democrats said they are in favor of doing so, but 57% of independents and nearly 9-in-10 Republicans were opposed.

This issue presents volatility into the 2022 midterms, because 78% of Democrats say the courts decision makes them more likely to vote this fall, 24 points higher than Republicans.

A bare majority of 51% say they would definitely vote for a candidate who would support a federal law to restore the right to an abortion, while 36% would definitely vote against such a candidate.

That could be a shot in the arm for Democrats if they mobilize around this issue, though Republicans are still favored at this point to take back the House this fall because of high inflation and gas prices.

Democrats have regained the favor of voters to control Congress, with 48% saying they are more likely to vote for a Democratic candidate in the fall and 41% more likely to vote for a Republican. In April, Republicans led on that question in the poll 47% to 44%, which was within the margin of error. However, the lead for Democrats may not translate into maintaining control due to the way voters are geographically distributed and how boundaries of congressional districts are drawn.

President Biden gets a 40% approval rating, while 53% disapprove of the job he is doing.

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Poll: Majorities oppose Supreme Courts abortion ruling and worry about other rights - Houston Public Media