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Planned Parenthood to restart medication abortion following Jackson County court ruling

Planned Parenthood in Columbia.
Mitchell Kaminski/KMIZ
Planned Parenthood in Columbia.

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

After a weeks-long trial and months of court deliberations, appointments for medical abortions are now accessible in Missouri.

According to the ACLU, starting Monday, patients seeking an abortion can book their appointment online at plannedparenthood.org. Patients can also call 1-800-230-PLAN to schedule their appointments.

This restart comes after Jackson County Circuit Court judge Jerri Zhang ruled in favor of Planned Parenthood on Thursday evening.

"Since Missourians voted for abortion access in 2024, it has been impossible to access the full spectrum of abortion care in our own state. That ends today," Margot Riphagen-Dunn, the CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Rivers, said Friday in a statement.

Missouri Attorney General Catherine Hanaway said in a Thursday press release that her office plans to appeal the ruling to the Missouri Supreme Court.

"This radical decision gives abortion providers a free pass to police themselves," Hanaway said in the statement, "None of this is what Missourians voted for."

Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe on Friday agreed with Hanaway's statement and stood by the office's decision to appeal the ruling.

"Yesterday’s ruling in Jackson County is disappointing, dangerous, and puts the safety of Missouri women in jeopardy," Kehoe said in a statement.

Abortion access was initially approved by voters back in November 2024 through Amendment 3, with Zhang temporarily blocking state abortion restrictions. Abortions were set to resume in February 2025.

The Missouri Supreme Court later overruled Zhang in May 2025, with Zhang blocking the ruling in July 2025, leading to January's court proceedings.

During the trial, Planned Parenthood argued that the current state regulations were unreasonable and difficult to achieve, and unfairly unique to Missouri abortion clinics only. The state argued that Missouri laws were in place for the physical and mental health and safety of patients.

The Missouri General Assembly also wrote and passed several joint resolutions to repeal Amendment 3 in May 2025. The resolutions created a new Amendment 3 now with exceptions, only allowing abortions up to 12 weeks in cases of rape, incest and medical emergencies, and when there is a fetal anomaly. Voters are set to decide on the measure in November 2026.

Check back for updates.

Article Topic Follows: Missouri

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Marie Moyer

Marie Moyer joined ABC 17 News in June 2024 as a multimedia journalist.

She graduated from Pennsylvania State University in May 2024 with a bachelor’s degree in broadcast journalism and a minor in sociology.

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