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          leisure time

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          Elizabeth Warren speaks behind a podium with a sign that reads "ABORTION RIGHTS FOR ALL"
          Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) J. Scott Applewhite/AP

          WASHINGTON — Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is launching a fresh round of questioning on states’ limits to abortion rights as a battle on medication abortion hangs in the balance at a federal court.

          Warren and three other Democratic senators sent letters late last week to five major health care worker and pharmacy groups interrogating how last year’s U.S. Supreme Court decision reversing national abortion rights has affected health care access and providers’ treatment of patients.

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          It’s not the first time the Massachusetts Democrat has aimed questions at these organizations, which include the American Medical Association, Physicians for Reproductive Health, National Nurses United, the American Pharmacists Association, and the American Hospital Association. She asked the same set of groups last summer how the U.S. Supreme Court’s overturn of Roe v. Wade impacted women’s health care, and reported in October that the groups warned about “diminished access” to pregnancy care and abortion bans that “will exacerbate existing health inequities.”

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