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Another clause in the Alabama bill would require clinics to meet the building, equipment and staffing standards of ambulatory surgery centers, which would require some clinics to spend millions of dollars altering buildings, and buying beds and monitoring equipment, for what they say is no relevant medical purpose.
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States can pass laws that require fertility clinics to be accredited (California does; Ohio does not) or regulate some aspects of fertility treatment services. .
To keep certification as a rural clinic, federal rules require that clinics be audited annually and that full-time doctors handle at least 4,200 patient visits annually.
Cuccinelli's legal opinion empowers the Board of Health, if it chooses, to require the clinics to meet hospital-type standards.
Other restrictions include measures that require abortion clinics to have hospital-level facilities, which effectively closed a slew of clinics.
Federal health officials should require local clinics that get federal aid to confer with local law enforcement.
And five states besides Texas require abortion clinics to meet the standards of an ambulatory surgical center.
The regulations require abortion clinics to have the same physical building standards as newly constructed hospitals, including specific hallway widths, ventilation systems and janitor's closets.
The measure would require these clinics to have doctors on staff who have admitting privileges at a local hospital.
These laws often require abortion clinics to undergo extensive and costly renovations in order to become ambulatory surgical centers, which are essentially mini-hospitals.
Some of those laws require clinics to be equipped to the standards of ambulatory surgical centers, and doctors who perform abortions to have admitting privileges at hospitals, despite the fact that there is no medical reason for either rule.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com