State officials have said other clinics can absorb the Planned Parenthood caseload in the Tulsa area when the contract ends.
Planned Parenthood does not perform abortions in Oklahoma, but it does refer women to clinics where abortions are carried out. It also dispenses the so-called "morning after" pill, which abortion opponents decry as abortion-inducing drugs.
State health officials have said politics played no part in ending an 18-year relationship with Planned Parenthood to help provide services under the federal Women, Infant and Children's (WIC) program. It provides prenatal and postnatal counseling for mothers and food vouchers for children aged 5 and younger.
State officials say half the newborns in Oklahoma are enrolled in the WIC program.
At a preliminary injunction hearing last week, Oklahoma Health Commissioner Terry Cline, a defendant in the lawsuit, denied the move was made due to political pressure from anti-abortion forces in the state legislature. A bill there formally to prohibit the state from contracting with Planned Parenthood failed.
Cline and others cited poor performance by the Planned Parenthood clinics as the only reason for cutting ties with the group.
(Reporting by Ian Simpson; Editing by Paul Simao)
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