The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is investigating two hospitals that violated federal law by refusing to provide emergency abortion care to a woman who was experiencing life-threatening pregnancy complications, the agency announced Monday.

The federal investigation’s findings, revealed in documents obtained by The Associated Press, are a warning to hospitals across the nation facing several new state laws that ban or severely restrict abortions. After the overturn of Roe V. Wade last year, a guidance was issued on a federal law that mandates providers continue offering emergency abortion care.

Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said Monday that the two hospitals were in violation of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, or EMTALA, the federal law that ensures public access to emergency services regardless of conflicting state laws. 

“Fortunately, this patient survived. But she never should have gone through the terrifying ordeal she experienced in the first place,” Becerra said in a statement. “We want her, and every patient out there like her, to know that we will do everything we can to protect their lives and health, and to investigate and enforce the law to the fullest extent of our legal authority, in accordance with orders from the courts.”

The EMTALA enforcement and federal investigation, the first of its kind since the overruling of Roe V. Wade, is in response to a complaint filed in November 2022 by the National Women’s Law Center on behalf of Mylissa Farmer with the CMS.

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Pregnant woman denied abortion despite risk of death

Farmer was denied care by two different hospitals — Freeman Health System in Joplin, Missouri, and University of Kansas Health System in Kansas City, Kansas, — in August 2022 when her water broke early at 17 weeks of pregnancy.