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Georgia disbands current maternal mortality committee over leaked abortion information

Georgia's top health official dismissed all members of a state committee that investigates pregnancy-related maternal deaths after a committee member presumably released information about two such deaths.

Georgia's top health official dismissed all members of a state committee that investigates pregnancy-related maternal deaths after a committee member presumably released information about two such deaths.

In a letter and dated Nov. 8, state public health commissioner Dr. Kathleen Toomey said whoever shared the information violated state law and a confidential agreement signed by committee members. An agency investigation wasn't able to identify who disclosed the details.

reported in September that internal reports showed the Georgia Maternal Mortality Review Committee determined the deaths of were preventable, but found that doctors were hesitant to perform a procedure that could have saved their lives because of the state's strict abortion policies.

The cases drew national attention and became a central theme in Vice President ' presidential campaign. Harris has been outspoken on abortion rights ever since the Supreme Court鈥檚 decision more than two years ago that overturned Roe v. Wade.

The Georgia committee works to identify what caused women to die during pregnancy or soon after childbirth, seeking to prevent other deaths or health crises.

The decision to disband the committee seems 鈥渧ery abrupt,鈥 said Monica Simpson, executive director of SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective, one of the groups that Georgia over the state's abortion ban beyond six weeks of pregnancy. A judge initially the ban, but Georgia's Supreme Court halted the ruling in October, restoring the law.

"To have any time where we don鈥檛 have this committee in place difficult to fathom, realizing that we may lose access to really important data and information that could help us make better decisions and organize better around what we need for the state," Simpson said.

Toomey wrote that reconstituting the committee 鈥渨ill not result in a delay鈥 of the committee's responsibilities.

The Georgia Department of Public Health will open applications for new members in the 鈥渃oming weeks,鈥 Toomey said in the letter, but will work to make sure there is more oversight and confidentiality in its review of cases.

"This is a scare tactic meant to stop full investigations into the circumstances of pregnant women鈥檚 deaths across the state," Alicia Stallworth, Director of Georgia Campaigns at Reproductive Freedom for All, said in a statement. "Now more than ever, it鈥檚 important to mobilize against anti-abortion extremists like Governor Kemp, who are responsible for these deadly bans.鈥

Republican Gov. Brian Kemp doesn't appoint or release members of the committee because it's overseen by the Department of Public Health, Kemp spokesperson Garrison Douglas said. Kemp signed into law in 2019 a ban on abortions once the fetal heartbeat is detected, which can be as early as six weeks.

A spokesperson for the health department declined to provide additional comment and said the letter 鈥渟peaks for itself.鈥

The Associated Press