Arizona has long been near the top of AUL’s Life List, which ranks how pro-life the states are based on their laws. Arizona has a pre-Roe law that prevents all abortions with an exception for the life of the mother; its enforceability, however, is the subject of ongoing litigation. In 2022, a 15-week protection similar to Mississippi’s law in Dobbs was signed into law. Arizona has taken legislative steps to support moms and families and has over 40 pregnancy resource centers compared to just a handful of abortion clinics.

2024 Arizona Abortion Ballot Initiative Passed

This November, Arizonans faced a ballot initiative entitled, the “Right to Abortion Initiative” (“Initiative”). It passed, and the Initiative now will amend the Arizona constitution to state:

A. Every individual has a fundamental right to abortion, and the state shall not enact, adopt or enforce any law, regulation, policy or practice that does any of the following:

1. Denies, restricts or interferes with that right before fetal viability unless justified by a compelling state interest that is achieved by the least restrictive means.

2. Denies, restricts or interferes with an abortion after fetal viability that, in the good faith judgment of a treating health care professional, is necessary to protect the life or physical or mental health of the pregnant individual.

3. Penalizes any individual or entity for aiding or assisting a pregnant individual in exercising the individual’s right to abortion as provided in this section.

The Initiative’s language is forthright in its goal: a constitutional right to intentionally terminate human beings in the womb (also known as elective abortion) at any point of gestation. Previous Arizona law protected preborn children after 15 weeks, with limited exceptions. In other words, even if voters had rejected this Initiative, Arizona residents could still terminate children in the womb if they are less than 15 weeks of development. Read AUL’s full legal analysis of the 2024 Arizona Ballot Initiative.

Arizona Narrowly a Pro-life State

The Arizona legislature has narrow pro-life margins in both chambers, but they have still managed to consistently enact Life-affirming legislation. They have made the state a leader on informed consent, public health reporting, and support for families.   

Arizona judges are selected through a hybrid Missouri-style judicial nomination system, whereby the governor chooses from a list of candidates created by a nominating commission. State supreme court justices are appointed to six-year terms and then retained or rejected by voters. Although Arizona residents are generally pro-life, this system tends to reinforce the pro-abortion views of members of the legal profession and other committee members. 

Arizona Governor Ducey was a pro-life Republican who was term-limited in 2022, and Arizona just went through a contentious gubernatorial race. The Attorney General agreed to pause enforcement of the state’s pre-Roe ban until 2023, which allows abortion to resume in Arizona. Arizona does inspect abortion clinics, and AUL’s Unsafe project obtained records of violations that included using expired medications on patients and prescribing chemical abortion pills without verifying that the patient was even pregnant.

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Arizona Abortion Quick Facts

  • The AZ abortion ban is currently undergoing litigation.
  • Abortion is banned after 15 weeks due to a new law passed in AZ in 2022.
  • Chemical abortion pills are tightly regulated in Arizona.

Arizona’s Pro-Life Laws Across the Spectrum

Americans United for Life advances the human right to life across the spectrum of issues confronting the dignity of the human person. AUL’s comprehensive analysis of Arizona’s state laws on human life span the full spectrum of life issues from abortion, to health and safety protections, to patient informed consent, to conscience rights and bioethics.

Arizona’s Pro-Life Laws Key

  • Yes, Arizona has this law and it is enforceable
  • Arizona has this law in place, but it is currently not in effect due to litigation
  • No, Arizona has no such law in place
  • Not Applicable
  • To Be Determined

State Constitutional Amendments and Statutes

Americans United for Life covers broad pro-life laws in this section. This includes both state constitutional amendments and state statutes designed to protect preborn human life. FOCA/RHA (or Freedom of Choice Acts/Reproductive Health Acts) are laws designed to enshrine and expand abortion and abortion businesses.

  • Constitutional amendment stating no right to abortion
  • Constitutional amendment preventing state funding of abortion
  • Conditional law prohibiting abortion when Roe is overturned
  • Pre-Roe abortion ban that will take effect when Roe is overturned
  • FOCA/RHA, codifying an abortion right in state law

Mother-Child Gestational and Procedural Protections

States can protect both mother and child by limiting abortion by gestational age or prohibiting gruesome abortion methods. This category also includes life-saving care requirements for a child born-alive after an abortion, and health and safety requirements for a woman undergoing a chemical abortion.

 

  • Gestational protections by age/week for preborn children
  • Basic medical care for infant children born alive during attempted abortions
  • Partial-birth (D&X) abortion ban
  • Dismemberment (D&E) abortion ban
  • Telemedicine abortion ban
  • Follow up scheduled with patient for abortion pills complications

Prenatal Non-Discrimination (PRENDA) Protections

Increasingly states are enacting laws to protect unborn babies from eugenic abortions based on gender, disability, or race. Some states provide life-affirming resources for families who receive a diagnosis of a possible genetic anomaly like Down syndrome so they know that they’ll be supported.

 

  • Protection against discrimination based on gender
  • Protection against discrimination due to prenatal diagnosis
  • Protection against discrimination based on race
  • State-provided life-affirming resources for parents and families

Informed Consent Laws

Many states require a woman to give informed consent to an abortion, which holds abortion to a similar standard as other medical procedures. These protections include the disclosure of an abortion procedure’s nature and risks, the performance of an ultrasound to date the pregnancy and allow a woman to meet her unborn child if she chooses, and the time for a woman to reflect on this grave decision.

 

  • Basic informed consent for mothers concerning abortion
  • Patient signature or written confirmation of informed consent from provider
  • Patient is provided state-sponsored informed consent website/information
  • Reflection period (48 hours) protecting a mother’s discernment and choice
  • An ultrasound is required to give a mother the opportunity to meet their child
  • Information on risks of abortion procedure
  • Information on the possibility of abortion pill reversal care

Abortion Reporting in Public Health Data

Reporting requirements ensure the government and public have a comprehensive view of abortion in the state when making important public policy decisions. This data includes basic information on instances of abortion, the gestational age of the aborted unborn child, demographics, procedure type, and complications.

 

  • Basic reporting on instances of abortion
  • Abortion reporting includes gestational age data
  • Abortion reporting includes demographic information
  • Abortion reporting includes procedure type
  • Complication reporting
  • Anonymized/aggregate data is made available to the public
  • Anonymized/aggregate data is submitted to the CDC

Parental Rights and Protection of Minors

States protect a minor considering abortion by involving her parents in her life-changing decision, but also provide guidelines for judicial bypass to parental involvement when it is necessary. Other laws included in this section are safe haven laws which create a safe pathway to give up an infant and prevent child abandonment, and the dissemination of information on perinatal hospice to parents of unborn children with fetal anomalies.

 

  • Parental consent before a minor obtains an abortion
  • Parental notice of a minor obtaining an abortion
  • Judicial bypass limits
  • Mandatory reporting of suspected abuse
  • Safe haven protections (72 hours)
  • Perinatal hospice resources

Basic Health and Safety Standards

These laws bring abortion businesses up to the health and safety standards of medical facilities. States may limit both chemical and surgical abortion procedures to physicians, require the physician be licensed by the state, and require emergency transfer agreements or admitting privileges for the physician or the facility to protect a patient if she suffers post-abortion complications.

 

  • Established health and safety standards for abortion businesses
  • Basic regulatory inspections for abortion businesses
  • Only physicians can perform abortions (all methods)
  • Physicians required to be licensed in the state
  • Emergency transfer/admitting privilege patient protections
  • Physician’s license/credentials are disclosed to patients

Legal Recognition of Human Dignity for Preborn Persons

This section covers the ways states recognize the human dignity of unborn children. States increasingly require dignified disposition of fetal remains, whether from abortion or miscarriage. The law may provide for the issuance of a fetal death or stillbirth certificate. States may also protect the dignity of unborn children by prohibiting fetal experimentation and banning the sale or transfer of human fetal remains.

 

  • Dignified disposition of fetal remains required
  • Parents may request dignified disposition
  • Human fetal death or stillbirth certificate issued to recognize the life of human persons (20 weeks)
  • Sale or transfer of human fetal remains prohibited
  • Fetal experimentation banned

Fetal Homicide and Wrongful Death/Life

Fetal homicide laws establish criminal penalties for the death of an unborn child. Wrongful death suits provide a civil cause of action for the death of an unborn child. A prohibition on wrongful life/birth suits affirms that no life is “unwanted.”

 

  • Fetal homicide criminalization
  • Fetal homicide law in place from the moment of conception
  • Wrongful death suits
  • Prohibition on wrongful life/birth suits

Assisted Suicide and Patient Care

These laws protect end-of-life patients from physician-assisted suicide, a practice that exploits vulnerable patients, has little government oversight, and undermines modern medicine. The Life-Sustaining Care Act ensures healthcare professionals may not override a minor patient or her surrogate’s decision to obtain or continue life-sustaining care. States with patient nondiscrimination acts protect patients from age or disability discrimination.

 

  • Assisted suicide prohibition
  • Life-sustaining care act
  • Patient non-discrimination on the basis of age or disability

Bioethics, Human Cloning, and Embryo Research

As medical technology evolves, states increasingly enact pro-life bioethics policies to reaffirm human dignity and ban cloning. These laws also require ethical medical practices, ban destructive embryo research, and regulate assisted reproductive technology.

 

  • Bans human cloning
  • Bans taxpayer funding for human cloning
  • Bans destructive embryo research
  • Encourages ethical alternatives to embryo research
  • Requires informed consent for assisted reproductive technologies
  • Regulates egg harvesting

Healthcare Freedom of Conscience

These laws protect the freedom of conscience of healthcare professionals, institutions, and pharmacists against forced participation in assisted suicide and abortion. States also safeguard the conscience rights of healthcare professionals and institutions against unethical medical research.

 

  • Individuals protected against abortion participation
  • Public/Private institutions protected against abortion participation
  • Pharmacists protected against abortion participation
  • Individuals protected against participation in unethical research
  • Private/public institutions protected against participation in unethical research
  • Individuals protected against participation in assisted suicide
  • Private/public institutions protected against participation in assisted suicide
  • Pharmacists protected against participation in assisted suicide

Arizona Abortion Inspection Initiative

AUL submitted a public records request, under the Arizona Public Records Law, A.R.S. § 39.101 et seq., to the Arizona Department of Health Services and received numerous inspection reports in response. In 2013, the state medical board reprimanded Dr. Goodrick of Camelback Family Planning for prewriting prescriptions for the dangerous opioid Percocet and leaving bottles of Percocet and oxycodone unsecured, even telling an employee to take a full bottle of Percocet home overnight. The department found 51 pills missing from the medication log. Inspection reports cited multiple examples of missing documentation of vital signs, medication logs, sterilization of instruments, and staff training and certification. Expired and mislabeled medications were being used on patients including Demerol, fentanyl, Narcan, oxycodone, and Percocet. Recently, an Arizona court ordered Planned Parenthood of Arizona to pay $3 million to a former Planned Parenthood director and employee of the year, Mayra Rodriguez, for wrongfully firing her after nearly 17 years of employment for reporting that the organization was endangering the health and safety of its patients.

NUMBER OF REPORTS: 59 
DATE RANGE: 2010–2018

Arizona Pro-Life Legislation Tracker

Americans United for Life (AUL) advances the human right to life in Arizona and across the nation. AUL’s Pro-Life Legislation Tracker tracks the movement of every pro-life law. Learn about Arizona’s currently proposed legislation here: