Dеfendant-appellant Attorney General of the State of New Hampshire, Peter Heed, acting in his official capacity (“Attorney General”), appeals the district court’s order declaring unconstitutional and enjoining the enforcement of the Parental Notification Prior to Abortion Act (the “Act”), 2003 N.H. Laws 173, codified at N.H.Rev.Stat. Ann. (“RSA”) § 132:24-28 (2003).
I. Background
In June 2003, the New Hampshire legislature passed “AN ACT requiring parental notification before abortions may be performed on unemancipated minors,” which states that:
No abortion shall be performed upon an unemancipated minor or upon a female for whom a guardian or conservator has been appоinted pursuant to RSA 464-A because of a finding of incompetency, until at least 48 hours after written notice of the pending abortion has been delivered in the manner specified in paragraphs II and III.
RSA 132:25,1. 1 Paragraph II specifies that “written notice shall be addressed to the parent at the usual place of abode of the parent and delivered personally to the parent by the physician or an agent.” RSA 132:25, II. Paragraph III allows for notification by certified mail with return receipt requested and with restricted delivery to the addressee. RSA 132:25, III.
The notice requirement is waived if (a) The attending abortion provider certifies in the pregnant minor’s medical record that the abortion is necessary to prevent the minor’s death and there is insufficient time to provide required notice; or
(b) The person or persons who are entitled to notice certify in writing that they have been notified.
RSA 132:26,1.
If a minor does not want her parent or guardian notified, she may request a state judge, after a hearing, to “authorize an abortion provider to perform the abortion if said judge determines that the pregnant minor is mature and capable of giving informed consent to the proposed abortion,” or if the judge determines that “the performance of an abortion upon her without notification of her parent, guardian, or cоnservator would be in her best interests.” RSA 132:26, II. In these proceedings, the pregnant minor may act on her own behalf or be appointed a guardian ad litem, and she must also be advised that she has a right to request court-appointed counsel. RSA 132:26, 11(a). The court proceedings “shall be confidential and shall be given such precedence over other pending matters so that the court may reach a decision promptly and without delay so as to serve the best interest of the pregnant minor.” RSA 132:26, 11(b). Specifically, “[i]n no case shall the court fail to rule within 7 calendar days from the time the petition is filed.” RSA 132:26, 11(b). The judge must also “make in writing specific factual findings and legal conclusions,” and order a record of the evidence to be maintained. RSA 132:26,11(b).
If the minor’s petition is denied, an “expedited confidential appeal shall be avail *56 able,” and the appellate court must rule within seven calendar days of the docketing of the appeal. Access to the trial and appellate courts for the purposes of these petitions “shall be afforded such a pregnant minor 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.” RSA 132:26,11(c).
Violation of the Act can result in criminal penalties and civil liability:
Performance of an abortion in violation of this subdivision shall be a misdemean- or and shall be grounds for a civil action by a person wrоngfully denied notification. A person shall not be held liable under this section if the person establishes by written evidence that the person relied upon evidence sufficient to convince a careful and prudent person that the representations of the pregnant minor regarding information necessary to comply with this section are bona fide and true, or if the person has attempted by reasonable diligence to deliver notice, but has been unable to do so.
RSA 132:27. The Act was to take effect on December 31, 2003. 2003 N.H. Laws 173.
On November 17, 2003, plaintiffsappellees Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, Concord Feminist Health Center of Portsmouth, Feminist Health Center of Portsmouth, and Wayne Goldner, M.D. (“plaintiffs”) filed a complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Act is unconstitutional and a preliminary injunction to prevent its enforcement once it became effective. 2 The district court merged the preliminary and permanent injunction proceedings and, on December 29, 2003, issued an order holding the Act unconstitutional and permanently enjoining its enforcement.
The district court found unconstitutional both (1) the lack of an explicit exception to protect the health of the pregnant minor, and (2) the narrowness of the Act’s exeep *57 tion for abortions necessary to prevent the minor's deаth. Having found the Act fatally flawed in these respects, the district court declined to rule on the constitutionality of the Act’s failure to provide specific protections for the confidentiality of a minor seeking a judicial waiver.
The Attorney General, acting in his official capacity, appeals.
II. Analysis
We review the district court’s decision regarding the constitutionality of a statute
de novo. United States v. Lewko,
The Attorney General argues that in deciding whether the Act is facially invalid we should apply the “no set of circumstances” standard set forth in
United States v. Salerno,
Despite the Supreme Court’s clear application of the undue burden standard in
Casey
and
Stenberg,
it has never explicitly addressed the standard’s tension with
Salerno.
In the instant case, while recognizing that this court has yet to address the issue, the district court followed the majority of circuits that apply the
Casey
and
Stenberg
stаndard to legislation regulating abortion. The Attorney General notes that the Supreme Court applied the
Salerno
standard in the abortion context prior to
Casey, see, e.g., Ohio v. Akron Ctr. for Reprod. Health,
Complementing the general undue burden standard, the Supreme Court has also identified a specific and independent constitutional requirement that an abortion regulation must contain an exception for the preservation of a pregnant woman’s health.
See Stenberg,
The instant case thus presents three questions: whether New Hampshire’s Act contains an adequate health exception, whether it contains an adequate death exception, and whether it places an undue burden on unemancipated minors who wish to obtain an abortion. A state’s decision to require parental notification for minors seeking an abortion is not constitutionally infirm
per se. See Lambert v. Wicklund,
A. Health exception
The Attorney General and amici suggest that parental notification laws are shielded from the health exception requirement reiterated in
Stenberg
on account of the interests they aim to protect.
5
Parental notification laws are enacted not only in furtherance of the state’s “interest in the potentiality of human life,”
Roe,
The Attorney General and amici also argue that our decision should be controlled by
Hodgson v. Minnesota,
*61
Since
Stenberg,
at least two circuit courts have applied the health exception requirement to parental notice or consent laws. In
Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains Services, Corp. v. Owens,
Acknowledging that the Act contains no explicit health exception, the Attorney General argues that other provisions of New Hampshire law provide a functional equivalent. None of the proffered statutes, however, is adequate. RSA 153-A:18 precludes civil liability for health professionals who render emergency medical care without consent, but it does not preclude criminal liability. RSA 676:6, VII(b) permits physicians and their assistants to use force in prоviding emergency medical care when no one competent to consent to such care is available. While RSA 676:6, YII(b) may preclude criminal liability for assault, it would not insulate a physician from criminal liability for violating the Act’s notification provisions. See RSA 132:27 (providing that violation of the Act’s notice requirement is a misdemeanor). Moreover, the proffered statutes insulate medical personnel from civil liability or assault charges that arise from giving treatment without consent; they do not provide such protection when the legal action arises from giving treatment to a consenting minor without first providing forty-eight hours’ notice to her parent.
For the first time, in this appeal, the Attоrney General also cites RSA 627:3, I, which codifies the “competing harms” defense to criminal liability for those who violate the law in order to avoid harm that “outweigh[s], according to ordinary standards of reasonableness, the harm sought to be prevented” by the criminal provision. Although this provision has the potential to protect against criminal liability under the Act, it cannot preclude civil liability. Moreover, the provision would leave providers uncertain whether, in any given circumstance, providing an abortion in violation of the Act would meet the “ordinary standards of reasonableness.”
Even if these statutes could be cobbled together to preclude аll civil and criminal liability for medical personnel who violate the Act’s notice requirements in order to preserve a minor’s health, we would not view them as equivalent to the constitutionally required health exception. The basic canons of statutory construction in New Hampshire require us to look first to a statute’s plain meaning, and when it is clear and unambiguous, to apply the statute as written.
See, e.g., Appeal of Astro Spectacular, Inc., 138
N.H. 298,
Finally, the Attorney General argues that the Act’s judicial bypass mechanism allows prompt authorization of a health-related abortion without notice. The Act provides that such proceedings “shall be given such precedence over other pending matters so that the court may reach a decision promptly and without delay,” provides minors 24-hour, 7-day access to the courts, and provides for expedited appeal. RSA 132:26, II(b)-(c). However, the Act allows courts seven calendar days in which to rule on minors’ petitions, and another seven calendar days on appeal. Delays of up to two weeks can therefore occur, during which time a minor’s health may be adversely affected. Even when the courts act as expeditiously as possible, those minors who need an immediate abortion to protect their health are at risk. Due to this delay, the Act’s bypass provision does not stand in for the constitutionally required health exception.
See Thornburgh,
The New Hampshire Act contains no explicit health exception, and no health exception is implied by other provisions of New Hampshire law or by the Act’s judicial bypass procеdure. Thus, the Act is facially unconstitutional.
B. Death exception
Just as it requires a health exception, the Constitution also requires an exception to abortion restrictions when the life of a pregnant woman is in danger.
Stenberg,
A minimum of forty-eight hours is necessary for comрliance with the Act’s notification requirement. RSA 132:25, I. Dr. Wayne Goldner, a named plaintiff in this case, provided unopposed testimony that physicians cannot predict with adequate precision what course medical complications will take, and thus cannot always determine whether death will occur within this time window. Consequently, the time component of the Act’s death exception forces physicians either to gamble with their patients’ lives in hopes of complying with the notice requirement before a minor’s death becomes inevitable, or to risk criminal and civil liability by providing an abortion without parental notice.
See
Declaration of Wayne Goldnеr, M.D., at ¶ 17 (“[T]he Act will force me to choose between following the law and letting my patient’s condition deteriorate, possibly past the point of being able to save her life at all, and alternatively providing appropriate medical care to my patient and risking criminal prosecution and being sued by her parents.”). The threat of such sanctions will have a “profound chilling effect on the willingness of physicians to perform abortions” when a minor’s life is at risk.
Colautti,
The Attorney General apparently concedes that an abortion provider must be able to rely on his or her good faith medical judgment in determining whether her patient’s life is in danger.
See Colautti,
As the district court held, we cannot construe the Act to preclude liability for good faith judgments “unless such a construction is reasonable and readily apparent.”
Heed,
Because its time requirement is drawn too narrowly, and because it fails to safeguard a physician’s good-faith medical judgment that a minor’s life is at risk against criminal and civil liability, the Act’s death exception is unconstitutional.
C. Confidentiality
The Act provides for judicial bypass of its notice provisions if, after a hearing, a judge “determines that the pregnant minor is mature and capable of giving informed consent to the proposed abortion,” or, if she is not capable of giving infоrmed consent, that “the performance of an abortion upon her without notification of her parent, guardian, or conservator would be in her best interests.” RSA 132:26, II;
cf. Bellotti v. Baird,
Inadequate confidentiality provisions “raise the specter of public exposure and harassment of women who choose to exercise their personal, intensely private, right, with their physician, to end a pregnancy.”
Thornburgh,
*65
Confidentiality provisions must “take reasonable steps to prevent the public from learning of the minor’s identity,” but the Supreme Court has “refuse[d] to base a decision on the facial validity of a statute on the mere possibility of unauthorized, illegal disclosure by state employees.”
Akron Ctr.,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the district court’s order dеclaring the Act unconstitutional and enjoining its enforcement.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Act defines an abortion as:
the use or prescription of any instrument, medicine, drug, or any other substance or device intentionally to terminate the pregnancy of a female known to be pregnant with an intention other than to increase the probability of a live birth., to preserve the life or health of the child after live birth, or to remove an ectopic pregnancy or the products from a spontaneous miscarriage.
RSA 132:24, I.
. Citing
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
. In
Salerno,
the Court considered a facial challenge to the Bail Reform Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3142(e), which permits pretrial detention on the ground of dangerousness. The Court held that the provision in question, which was accompanied by strict procedural safeguards, did not constitute a facial violation of the Due Process or Excessive Bail clauses of the Constitution.
Salerno,
. Only the Fourth Circuit has been sympathetic to the
Barnes
approach, indicating that it might continue to apply
Salerno. See Manning v. Hunt,
. Amicus Bishop of Manchester argues that
Stenberg
should be limited to cases in which a particular method of abortion is banned outright. This argument misreads the Court’s discussion of the regulation at issue in that case. The majority did emphasize its prior caselaw "invalidating] statutes that in the process of regulating the
methods
of abortion, impose[] significant health risks,”
. A review of the
Hodgson
briefs indicates only one instance in which the impact of the parental notification statute on minors in need of an abortion for health reasons is discussed. In response to Minnesota's cross-petition to appeal the Eighth Circuit's determination that a two-parent notice requirement was unconstitutional in the absence of a judicial bypass, Cross-Respondents discussed the lengths to which some minors would go to avoid having to notify a parent. This might include delaying or foregoing abortion even when "serious health problems ... necessitate an immediate abortion.” Brief for Cross-Respondents at 15,
Minnesota v. Hodgson,
. The plaintiffs correctly identify that the Act, as currently formulated, would require a physician to use procedures that pose more risk to her patient’s health in order to comply with the necessity provision of the death exception.
See Colautti v. Franklin,
