Corbett Announces Immediate Changes in Depts. of State, Health to Improve Monitoring of Abortion Clinics

HARRISBURG – Saying the state failed to properly oversee a Philadelphia abortion clinic at which one woman died and others were seriously injured, Gov. Tom Corbett announced sweeping changes in the two departments responsible.

“This doesn’t even rise to the level of government run amok. It was government not running at all. To call this unacceptable doesn’t say enough. It’s despicable,’’ Corbett said.

On Corbett’s first full day in office, a Philadelphia County grand jury report was released to the public, revealing the horrors found inside the Women’s Medical Society, a clinic run by Dr. Kermit Gosnell.

At least two women died as a result of botched late-term abortions, according to the grand jury report, some babies were born alive and then killed by having their spinal cords snipped by scissors and untrained personnel performed medical procedures, sometimes using unsterilized implements that spread venereal disease from patient to patient.

Gosnell and several employees have been charged with murder and numerous other offenses in the case.

In addition to the gruesome description of the clinic, the grand jury also revealed that complaints about unsafe and unsanitary conditions went unheeded for more than a decade until drug investigators finally put a stop to the business in February 2010.

“It will be up to a jury to decide Dr. Gosnell’s guilt or innocence. It is up to me to decide how to stop such horrors from taking place again,’’ Corbett said.

After receiving the report, Corbett ordered his nominees for Secretary of Health, Dr. Eli Avila, and Secretary of State, Carole Aichele, to review the grand jury’s recommendation, identify the problems and come up with a plan of action to change the system that failed these women.

And, Corbett ordered that the people responsible be held accountable.

Seven individuals – employees from the Department of Health, as well as the

Bureau of Professional and Occupational Affairs, a branch of the Department of State – are no longer employed by the state, having either resigned or been terminated since the situation came to light, Corbett said. In addition, four other former employees named in the grand jury investigation had previously resigned.

In addition, Corbett today announced changes in the Department of Health and Department of State, including new controls and conditions designed to protect the health and safety of women who use these facilities in the future. Corbett also outlined some of the specific changes in each department.

At the Department of State:

At the Department of Health:

 Registered nurses from the Department of Health will be trained to inspect these types of facilities for quality assurance and enforce regulations.

Together, the two departments will:

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