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FL Planned Parenthood Inspections Find Violations

No one was at the St. Petersburg Planned Parenthood Clinic cited this week in a state inspection. It is normally closed on Thursdays.
Lottie Watts
/
Health News Florida
No one was at the St. Petersburg Planned Parenthood Clinic cited this week in a state inspection. It is normally closed on Thursdays.

Florida officials say three of the 16 Planned Parenthood facilities inspected last week were performing procedures beyond their licensing authority, and one facility was not keeping proper logs relating to fetal remains.

However, none of 16 clinics were found to be illegally selling or transferring fetal tissue or parts.

The Agency for Health Care Administration released its Wednesday. It says clinics in St. Petersburg, Fort Myers and Naples were performing second-trimester abortions when they were only licensed to perform first-trimester abortions. The report also found that a Pembroke Pines clinic was not following its own procedures for the labeling and dating of the disposal of fetal remains.

The three facilities that received notices from the state telling them to stop performing second term abortions are:

路  Planned Parenthood  of Southwest & Central Florida,  8950 Dr. MLK J. Street North, St. Petersburg, FL 33702 (25 second trimester abortions between July 2014 and June 2015)

路   Planned Parenthood  of Southwest & Central Florida,   8595 College Parkway, Suite 250, Fort Myers, FL 33919 (21 second trimester abortions between July 2014 and June 2015)

路   Planned Parenthood of Collier County, Inc. 1425 Creech Road, Naples, FL 34103 (19 second trimester abortions between July 2014 and June 2015)

The facilities are licensed to perform abortions during the first trimester.

Florida Alliance of Planned Parenthood Affiliates Executive Director Laura Goodhue said in a prepared statement Wednesday night that the licensing violations resulted from the AHCA changing its definitions of gestational periods and that the centers were operating in compliance with Florida law.

鈥淚n the health centers AHCA reported on we only perform first trimester abortions, which we measure according to accepted medical guidelines and in accordance with Florida regulations as up to 13 weeks and six days from a woman鈥檚 last menstrual cycle,鈥 Goodhue said in the release. 鈥淭his, as defined by rules, is still the first trimester. AHCA has never before indicated any different interpretation of this 鈥 including at inspections performed as recently as two weeks ago. AHCA鈥檚 new interpretation is grossly inconsistent with years of previous inspections and outside of both the regulations and accepted medical standards.鈥

Goodhue鈥檚 statement didn鈥檛 address the improper logs at one clinic.

Gov. Rick Scott ordered the inspections last week. He said he was troubled by recent videos describing the organization鈥檚 procedures for providing tissue from aborted fetuses for research.

鈥淲e did the right thing in our state by making sure they are complying with the law,鈥 Scott said during a Florida Cabinet meeting Wednesday.

When asked whether the inspections were politically motivated, he said, 鈥淭he videos are pretty disturbing. So the right thing to do is to let the public know we are responding by doing an investigation to make sure they are complying with the law. It鈥檚 against the law to sell body parts.鈥

Planned Parenthood has come under national attention and congressional scrutiny in recent weeks after the release of two stealthily recorded videos that showed officials discussing how they provide aborted fetal organs for research. Abortion opponents say the videos show the organization is illegally harvesting and selling organs.

Planned Parenthood鈥檚 president, Cecile Richards, has said the group has done nothing illegal and is the target of a political smear campaign. The videos were part of longer discussions, and Richards said the longer videos showed doctors repeatedly saying that Planned Parenthood does not profit from the tissue donations and it receives only reimbursements for costs of providing tissue donated by women.

Goodhue previously noted that Florida doesn鈥檛 even have a tissue donation program.

Lottie Watts is a producer and reporter with in Tampa. WUSF is a part of , which receives support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Copyright 2020 WUSF Public Media - WUSF 89.7. To see more, visit .

Lottie Watts covers health and health policy for Health News Florida, now a part of WUSF Public Media. She also produces Florida Matters, WUSF's weekly public affairs show.
Associated Press
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