U.S. District Court Judge William Campbell issued a preliminary injunction against the state, adding another layer stopping Tennessee leadership from enforcing a portion of the laws. It included a provision requiring abortion clinics and providers to post signs and inform patients it may be possible to reverse a medication abortion. There is no medical consensus on whether reversing a medication abortion is possible or healthy for the patient, and no comprehensive study into the proposed procedure has been approved or completed, according to court testimony in the case against the law. Providers who refused to comply could have faced criminal prosecution for a Class E felony, punishable by up to six years in prison, and health centers would have faced a $10,000 daily fine for failure to display the required signs.