HODGES, Justice.
¶ 1 The principle issue in this case is whether the district court erred in finding that sections 1-731 and 1-737 of title 63 restricting abortions to certain facilities are unconstitutional. The other issue in this case is whether the trial court erred in dismissing individual members of the Oklahoma State Board of Health (Board) as defendants and denying the petition for writ of mandamus. We find that, on the record before this Court, sections 1-731 and 1-737 are not unconstitutional and a writ of mandamus should ispue against the Commissioner of the Oklahoma State Board of Health.
I. Facts
¶2 In 1973, the United States Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade1 severely limited a state’s ability to regulate abortion particularly in the first and second trimesters. In 1978, the Oklahoma Legislature enacted legislation requiring first trimester abortions to be performed in facilities licensed by the state,2 requiring abortions performed between the end of the first trimester and pre-viability be carried out in general hospitals,3 and banning nontherapeutic 4 abortions after viability.5
¶ 3 In 1984, Oklahoma’s Attorney General opined that these restrictions on abortion were unconstitutional6 and that the Department of Health (Department) was not required to follow his opinion but was bound by the United States Constitution.7 Thereafter, the Department refused to enforce these restrictions. In 1992, the United States Supreme Court issued Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey8 which held that the right to' abortion was a liberty interest, abortions should be reviewed under an “undue burden test”, and overruled several of its previous decisions regulating abortions.
. ¶ 4 Twenty-three Oklahoma legislators, a physician practicing in Oklahoma, and a woman who allegedly had suffered injury from an abortion performed in a clinic9 (collectively, plaintiffs) filed this suit against the individual members of the Board, the Commissioner of the Department, and the Attorney General of Oklahoma, asking that the Department be compelled to enact standards regulating abortions and to enforce the Oklahoma Statutes requiring abortions be performed in certain facilities. Later, the Department was added, and the Attorney General was dismissed as a defendant.
[508]*508¶ 5 The parties stipulated to the following facts. The legislative plaintiffs have standing to bring the suit. Certain plaintiffs are members on the Board, and the Commissioner has the duty to administer and enforce the laws regarding the Department. In 1979, the Board promulgated rules for the licensure and governance of abortion facilities, but the Commissioner has not enforced either the rules or statutes since the Attorney General rendered his opinions finding Oklahoma’s statutes were unconstitutional. Currently, ambulatory surgical centers, hospitals, nursing facilities, hospices, home care agencies, birthing centers, alcoholism treatment centers, and emergency medical services are .regulated by the Department. Between 1981 and 1997, there were three abortion-related deaths in Oklahoma.
1Í.6 At the hearing, the trial judge-refused to admit petitions filed in district courts alleging malpractice by doctors performing abortions. The trial judge also refused to hear plaintiffs’ evidence regarding the need to regulate abortion facilities and the need for certain emergency equipment. Also rejected was the testimony of the plaintiff, Ms. Golmoradi, regarding the complications from her abortion. The defendants argued without presenting supporting evidence that the effect of the statutes and rules regulating abortion would create an undue burden on the right to have an abortion.10 The district court held that the individual members of the Board were not proper parties and dismissed them from the suit. The district court found that the statutes regulating abortions were unconstitutional and denied the petition for writ of mandamus..
¶ 7 The plaintiffs filed a petition in error preserving for this Court’s review the following issues: (1) whether mandamus is an appropriate remedy in this case, (2) whether sections 1-731. and 1-737 of title 63 of the Oklahoma Statutes are constitutional, and (3) whether the trial judge improperly excluded testimony of plaintiffs expert and evidence of malpractice suits filed in district courts. This Court retained the case for disposition.
II. Standing
¶ 8 Standing is based on an interest in the proceeding that is “direct, immediate and substantial.”11 The plaintiff Sharon Gol-moradi has undergone two abortions which were done in private clinics. One of the abortions resulted in her suffering physical injury in the form of hemorrhaging. The plaintiff Dr. Craig Evans is a physician who is practicing medicine in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma. Both of these plaintiffs have a direct, immediate and substantial interest in the enforcement of the statutes and regulations at issue in this case: Ms. Golmoradi because of her previous injury and Dr. Evans because of his status as a practicing physician.
¶ 9 We need not address the standing of the plaintiffs which are members of the Oklahoma Legislature since we find that the other two plaintiffs have standing.12 Rather our decision rests on the standing of Ms. Golmo-radi and Dr. Evans.
III. Writ of Mandamus
¶ 10 The defendants argue that mandamus is not a proper remedy in this case because promulgation of rules and enforcement of both rules and statutes are discretionary functions and there is not a plain legal duty to perform discretionary functions.
[509]*509¶ 11 We first note that in 1979, the Board promulgated regulations governing the licen-sure of abortion facilities. The defendants have not argued that the 1979 regulations which are still effective, even though not enforced, are inconsistent with the abortion statutes or that the regulations do not meet the mandate of section 1-737. This leaves the question of whether mandamus is proper as to the enforcement of the statutes and regulations.
¶ 12 Writs of mandamus are governed by sections 1451 and 1452 of title 12 of the Oklahoma Statutes. Section 1451 provides that a writ of mandamus may issue “to any ... board or person ... to compel the performance of any act which the law specially enjoins as a duty, resulting from an office, trust or station.” Section 1452 prohibits the issuance of a writ “where there is a plain and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law.”
f 13 Here, the Commissioner has the duty to enforce the “rules, regulations and standards adopted by the State Board of Health.”13 Although the Commissioner has the discretion as to the enforcement in individual cases, he does not have the discretion to ignore valid regulations regarding licen-sure of abortion facilities.14 Because the Commissioner has the clear legal duty to enforce valid regulations, the next issue in this case is whether the statutes underlying the licensure standards are constitutional.
IV; Oklahoma’s Statutes Regulating Abortion
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HODGES, Justice.
¶ 1 The principle issue in this case is whether the district court erred in finding that sections 1-731 and 1-737 of title 63 restricting abortions to certain facilities are unconstitutional. The other issue in this case is whether the trial court erred in dismissing individual members of the Oklahoma State Board of Health (Board) as defendants and denying the petition for writ of mandamus. We find that, on the record before this Court, sections 1-731 and 1-737 are not unconstitutional and a writ of mandamus should ispue against the Commissioner of the Oklahoma State Board of Health.
I. Facts
¶2 In 1973, the United States Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade1 severely limited a state’s ability to regulate abortion particularly in the first and second trimesters. In 1978, the Oklahoma Legislature enacted legislation requiring first trimester abortions to be performed in facilities licensed by the state,2 requiring abortions performed between the end of the first trimester and pre-viability be carried out in general hospitals,3 and banning nontherapeutic 4 abortions after viability.5
¶ 3 In 1984, Oklahoma’s Attorney General opined that these restrictions on abortion were unconstitutional6 and that the Department of Health (Department) was not required to follow his opinion but was bound by the United States Constitution.7 Thereafter, the Department refused to enforce these restrictions. In 1992, the United States Supreme Court issued Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey8 which held that the right to' abortion was a liberty interest, abortions should be reviewed under an “undue burden test”, and overruled several of its previous decisions regulating abortions.
. ¶ 4 Twenty-three Oklahoma legislators, a physician practicing in Oklahoma, and a woman who allegedly had suffered injury from an abortion performed in a clinic9 (collectively, plaintiffs) filed this suit against the individual members of the Board, the Commissioner of the Department, and the Attorney General of Oklahoma, asking that the Department be compelled to enact standards regulating abortions and to enforce the Oklahoma Statutes requiring abortions be performed in certain facilities. Later, the Department was added, and the Attorney General was dismissed as a defendant.
[508]*508¶ 5 The parties stipulated to the following facts. The legislative plaintiffs have standing to bring the suit. Certain plaintiffs are members on the Board, and the Commissioner has the duty to administer and enforce the laws regarding the Department. In 1979, the Board promulgated rules for the licensure and governance of abortion facilities, but the Commissioner has not enforced either the rules or statutes since the Attorney General rendered his opinions finding Oklahoma’s statutes were unconstitutional. Currently, ambulatory surgical centers, hospitals, nursing facilities, hospices, home care agencies, birthing centers, alcoholism treatment centers, and emergency medical services are .regulated by the Department. Between 1981 and 1997, there were three abortion-related deaths in Oklahoma.
1Í.6 At the hearing, the trial judge-refused to admit petitions filed in district courts alleging malpractice by doctors performing abortions. The trial judge also refused to hear plaintiffs’ evidence regarding the need to regulate abortion facilities and the need for certain emergency equipment. Also rejected was the testimony of the plaintiff, Ms. Golmoradi, regarding the complications from her abortion. The defendants argued without presenting supporting evidence that the effect of the statutes and rules regulating abortion would create an undue burden on the right to have an abortion.10 The district court held that the individual members of the Board were not proper parties and dismissed them from the suit. The district court found that the statutes regulating abortions were unconstitutional and denied the petition for writ of mandamus..
¶ 7 The plaintiffs filed a petition in error preserving for this Court’s review the following issues: (1) whether mandamus is an appropriate remedy in this case, (2) whether sections 1-731. and 1-737 of title 63 of the Oklahoma Statutes are constitutional, and (3) whether the trial judge improperly excluded testimony of plaintiffs expert and evidence of malpractice suits filed in district courts. This Court retained the case for disposition.
II. Standing
¶ 8 Standing is based on an interest in the proceeding that is “direct, immediate and substantial.”11 The plaintiff Sharon Gol-moradi has undergone two abortions which were done in private clinics. One of the abortions resulted in her suffering physical injury in the form of hemorrhaging. The plaintiff Dr. Craig Evans is a physician who is practicing medicine in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma. Both of these plaintiffs have a direct, immediate and substantial interest in the enforcement of the statutes and regulations at issue in this case: Ms. Golmoradi because of her previous injury and Dr. Evans because of his status as a practicing physician.
¶ 9 We need not address the standing of the plaintiffs which are members of the Oklahoma Legislature since we find that the other two plaintiffs have standing.12 Rather our decision rests on the standing of Ms. Golmo-radi and Dr. Evans.
III. Writ of Mandamus
¶ 10 The defendants argue that mandamus is not a proper remedy in this case because promulgation of rules and enforcement of both rules and statutes are discretionary functions and there is not a plain legal duty to perform discretionary functions.
[509]*509¶ 11 We first note that in 1979, the Board promulgated regulations governing the licen-sure of abortion facilities. The defendants have not argued that the 1979 regulations which are still effective, even though not enforced, are inconsistent with the abortion statutes or that the regulations do not meet the mandate of section 1-737. This leaves the question of whether mandamus is proper as to the enforcement of the statutes and regulations.
¶ 12 Writs of mandamus are governed by sections 1451 and 1452 of title 12 of the Oklahoma Statutes. Section 1451 provides that a writ of mandamus may issue “to any ... board or person ... to compel the performance of any act which the law specially enjoins as a duty, resulting from an office, trust or station.” Section 1452 prohibits the issuance of a writ “where there is a plain and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law.”
f 13 Here, the Commissioner has the duty to enforce the “rules, regulations and standards adopted by the State Board of Health.”13 Although the Commissioner has the discretion as to the enforcement in individual cases, he does not have the discretion to ignore valid regulations regarding licen-sure of abortion facilities.14 Because the Commissioner has the clear legal duty to enforce valid regulations, the next issue in this case is whether the statutes underlying the licensure standards are constitutional.
IV; Oklahoma’s Statutes Regulating Abortion
¶ 14 As stated above, under Oklahoma’s statutory scheme, the Oklahoma State Board of Health has the power to adopt rules and regulations to carry out the provisions of the Oklahoma Public Health Code.15 The State Commissioner of Health is charged with enforcing the rules and regulations adopted by the Board.16
¶ 15 In 1978, the Oklahoma Legislature enacted sections 1-731(B) and 1-737 of title 63 of the Oklahoma Statutes as part of the Oklahoma Public Health Code. Section 1-731(B) provides:
No person shall perform or induce an abortion upon a pregnant woman subsequent to the end of the first trimester of her pregnancy, unless such abortion is performed or induced in a general hospital.
Section 1-737 provides:
An abortion otherwise permitted by law shall be performed only in a hospital, as defined in this article, which meets standards set by the Department. The Department shall develop and promulgate reasonable standards relating to abortions.
Section 1-732 prohibits abortions after the fetus is viable17 except for preservation of a woman’s life or health. Section 1-732 creates a rebuttable presumption that a fetus is viable 24 weeks after the pregnant woman’s last normal menstrual period.
¶ 16 Section 1-701(1) defines hospitals to include “places where pregnant females are admitted and receive care incident to pregnancy, abortion or delivery.” A general hospital is “a hospital maintained for the purpose of providing hospital care in a broad category- of illness and injury.”18
¶ 17 In 1979, pursuant to section 1-737, the Department promulgated regulations governing abortions. The abortions follow the statutory scheme established in title 63. The effect of the statutory scheme and the regulations is to permit abortions during the first trimester19 to be performed in hospi-[510]*510tais, which under section 1-701(1) includes clinics and any other place that abortions are performed. From the end of the first trimester until the fetus becomes viable, abortions are statutorily permitted but must be performed in general hospitals as defined in section 1-701(2). After the fetus becomes viable, abortion is prohibited except to preserve the life and health of the pregnant woman.
Y. United States Supreme Court Decisions Before Casey
¶ 18 In 1973, the United States Supreme Court decided Roe v. Wade,20 holding that a woman had a constitutional right to have an abortion and that a compelling state interest was necessary to advance state regulation.21 The Roe court recognized a state’s interest in ' “protecting the potentiality of human life” of the unborn child,22 in safeguarding pregnant women’s health, and appropriate medical ■standards.23 The Court addressed the interest of a state based on trimesters of the woman’s pregnancy.
¶ 19 Under Roe, these state interests became more compelling as the pregnancy progressed,24 and a state’s interest in the health of pregnant women became compelling at approximately the end of the first trimester.25 After the end of the first trimester, permissible state regulation included “the facility in which the procedure [was] to be performed, that is, whether it [had to] be a hospital or [might] be a clinic or some other place of less-than-hospital status.”26
¶20 A state’s interest in protecting potential human life became compelling at viability.27 At the point of viability, a state could not only regulate abortion but also prohibit abortion.28
¶ 21 The United States Supreme' Court decided Doe v. Bolton,29 on the same day as Roe. Doe addressed Georgia’s abortion restrictions including the requirement that abortions be performed in a hospital licensed by the Board and accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals.30 Under Georgia’s law, the definition of hospital was not sufficiently broad to include facilities, other than hospitals, which were adequately equipped to handle abortions.
¶ 22 In striking down Georgia’s hospital-related requirements, the Court noted that the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals accreditation requirement was not “reasonably related to the purposes of the Act.”31 The Court held “that the hospital requirement of the Georgia law, because it fails tó exclude the first trimester of pregnancy, ... is also invalid.”32
¶23 Then in 1983, the United Supreme Court once again faced issues relating to abortion regulations in City of Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, Inc.,33 Planned Parenthood Ass’n of Kansas City, Missouri, Inc. v. Ashcroft,34 and Simopoulos v. Virginia35. Continuing the Roe reasoning that a woman has a fundamental right to abortion, the Court in Akron recognized that a state could regulate abortion during the first trimester so long as the regulation did [511]*511not “signifieant[ly] impact on the woman’s exercise of her right” and the regulation was “justified by important state health objectives.” 36 From the beginning of the second trimester until viability, a state could adopt regulations “reasonably relate[d] to the preservation and protection of maternal health,”37 and “legitimately related to the objective the State [sought] to accomplish.”38
¶24 The Akron Court struck down as unconstitutional an ordinance requiring all abortions after the end of the first trimester to be performed only in acute-care, full-service hospitals.39 The Court relied heavily on evidence that the cost of an abortion performed in a general hospital was more than twice as much as those performed in a clinic, “second-trimester abortions were rarely performed in Akron hospitals,” and medical commentary supported that “at least during the early weeks of the second trimester .... abortions [could] be performed as safely in an outpatient clinic as in a full service hospital.”40 The Court also struck down a requirement that counseling for the purposes of obtaining informed consent had to be done by the physician and could not be delegated to an assistant.41
¶ 25 Ashcroft dealt with several Missouri abortion statutes, one of which restricted abortions after the twelfth week of pregnancy to hospitals.42 The Court adopted the definition of hospital as “a general acute-care facility.”43 Relying on Akron, the Court summarily found the Missouri statute to be unconstitutional.
¶26 In Simopoulos v. Virginia,44 a doctor was convicted for performing a second-trimester abortion outside a hospital. Under Virginia law, a hospital included outpatient hospitals.45 Virginia’s regulations defined outpatient hospitals to include facilities “which primarily provide facilities for the performance of surgical procedures on outpatients.” 46 The regulations permitted second trimester abortions in such clinics.47 With only a few exceptions, the regulations licensing the outpatient hospitals in which abortions were performed applied to all outpatient hospitals.48 The Court upheld the regulations because of Virginia’s interest in protecting its citizens, in regulating second-trimester abortions, in setting standards for medical facilities, and in having its regulations consistent with accepted medical practice.49
VI. Oklahoma Attorney General’s Opinions
¶ 27 With this as the background, Oklahoma’s Attorney General was asked whether Oklahoma’s statutory scheme regulating abortions was constitutional.50 Because Oklahoma’s requirements regarding where abortions could be performed were virtually identical to those in Akron, the Attorney General reasoned that Oklahoma’s regulations were unconstitutional.51 After the At[512]*512torney General rendered this opinion in 1984, the Department ceased enforcing sections 1-731 and 1-737 of title 63.
¶ 28 Then in 1991, the Attorney General was asked whether his. 1984 opinion was binding on the Department.52 The General answered that the 1984 opinion was advisory as to the Department, but the Department was bound to follow United States Supreme Court decisions and failure to. do so could result in a loss of qualified immunity from liability.53 The opinion concluded that the Department could follow the opinion but was not compelled to do so.54
VII. Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey 55 and Progeny
¶ 29 Until 1989, when it decided Webster v. Reproductive Health Services,56 the United States Supreme Court resisted attempts to undermine Roe57 Relying on its previous holdings that neither the states nor the federal government was required to expend public funds for nontherapeutic abortions, the Webster Court reasoned that a state could prohibit the use of public hospitals for nontherapeutic abortions as well.58 The Court also upheld a statute requiring a doctor who believes a woman to be twenty or more weeks pregnant to conduct a battery of tests to determine viability.
¶ 30 In 1992, the United States Supreme Court decided Casey and, while receding from Roe, refused to overrule it.59 Although leaving a great deal of uncertainty, Casey made clear; (1) a state may ban nonthera-peutic abortions after the fetus becomes viable,60 (2) the' fact that a regulation increases the cost or decreases the availability of an abortion is insufficient to invalidate the regulation,61 (3) a state may not impose a regulation that “has the purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus,”62 (4) a state may enact necessary regulations to protect the health of a pregnant woman so long as the regulations do not “impose an undue burden on the right” to have an abor[513]*513tion,63 and (5) regulations not reasonably related to the goal of protecting the health of the pregnant woman and the potential life of the fetus unduly burden the woman’s right to abortions.64
¶ 31 Applying these principles to the statutes at issue and overruling previous holdings including parts of Akron, the Casey Court upheld a requirement that 24 hours before an abortion, a doctor was to “inform the woman of the nature of the procedure, the health risks of the abortion and childbirth, and the ‘probable gestational age of the unborn child,”’ make available printed materials, and obtain the woman’s written consent.65 The Court struck down a spousal notification requirement citing statistics on spousal abuse and finding that the requirement was “likely to prevent a significant number of women from obtaining an abortions.” 66 In contrast, the Court found that parental consent provisions were constitutional provided there were “adequate judicial by-pass procedures.”67 It also upheld recording-keeping and reporting requirements.68
¶ 32 A review of the Casey opinion shows that legal findings regarding the constitutionality of the statutes at issue were based on the record before the Court and on the evidence of the effect of the statutes on a woman’s right to seek an abortion69 Upholding a provision requiring the physician provide certain information to the pregnant woman, the Court relied on the fact that “there [was] no evidence on [the] record that requiring a doctor to give the information ... would amount in practical terms tó a substantial obstacle to a woman seeking an abortion.”70 Then in upholding a 24-hour waiting period, the Court noted that even though the statute had the effect of “increasing the cost and risk of delay of abortions,” the district court did not find this negative effect amounted to substantial obstacles. Likewise, the Court based its decision that the spousal notification requirement was unconstitutional on extensive evidence -of spousal abuse and the abuse’s effect on a woman’s right to seek an abortion.71 Thus, the opinion made clear the decision was based on the record before it.72
¶ 33 Since the 1992 decision in Casey, the United States Supreme Court has upheld a statute requiring either that a minor’s parent be notified or a court finding that notification is not in the minor’s best interest before an abortion can be performed.73 Even before Casey, the Court held that a state may fund childbirth without funding abortion,74 and, after Casey, upheld an Arkansas statute prohibiting the expenditure of public funds except to preserve the life of the pregnant woman.-75
¶ 34 In 1997, the United States Supreme Court decided Mazurek v. Armstrong.76 In Mazurek, plaintiffs sought to enjoin the enforcement of a statute requiring abortions to be performed by physicians only. In denying a preliminary injunction, the Court found that the plaintiffs had failed to establish a likelihood of prevailing on the merits of the claim. The Court found the plaintiffs had [514]*514failed to make a clear showing that the statute had an unlawful purpose and noted that there was insufficient evidence that it caused an undue burden on. the right to abortion.77 The teaching of Mazurek is that a state has wide latitude in regulating abortion so long as the regulation’s purpose is not to prevent abortions and the regulation does not present a substantial obstacle in obtaining an abortion.
VIII. The Standard for Facial Attacks on Abortion Regulations
¶ 35 Since the Casey decision, there has been confusion on the proper standard to be applied in facial attacks of abortion regulations.78 In the United States v. Salerno,79 the United States Supreme Court stated: “A facial challenge to a Legislative Act is, of course, the most difficult challenge to mount successfully, since the challenger must establish that no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid.”80 In contrast, the Casey Court applied the “undue burden” test to a facial attack on abortion regulations.81 Thus, under the Casey standard, an abortion regulation will not be upheld against a facial attack if it “has the purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of. a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable- fetus.”82 Then concurring to a denial of injunctive relief on an attack of the North Dakota Abortion Control Act, Justice O’Connor wrote, with Justice Souter joining: • “[W]e made clear that a law restricting abortions constitutes an undue burden, and hence is invalid, if, ‘in a large fraction of the cases in which [the law] is relevant, it will operate, as a substantial obstacle to a woman’s choice to undergo an abortion.’ ”83
¶ 36 Because the challengers, the defendants in this case, do not argue that there are no set of circumstances under which sections 1-731 and 1-737 would be valid, the statutes withstand the Salerno test for a facial attack on the record before us. Thus, we analyze the validity of the statutes under the undue-burden test.
IX. Validity of Sections 1-731 and 1-737
¶37 In determining the validity of Oklahoma’s abortion restrictions, it is the duty of this Court to uphold the law and apply federal constitutional law84 but not to base a decision on our personal beliefs. As the United States Supreme Court stated:
Men and women of good conscience can disagree, and we suppose some always shall disagree, about the profound moral and spiritual implications of terminating a pregnancy, even in its earliest stage. Some of us as individuals find abortion offensive to our most basic principles of morality, but that cannot control our decision. Our obligation is to define the liberty of all, not to mandate our own moral code. The underlying constitutional issue is whether the State can resolve these philosophic .questions in such a definitive way that a woman lacks all choice in the matter, except perhaps in those rare circumstances in which the pregnancy is itself a danger to her own life or health, or is the result of rape or incest.85
¶ 38 As stated above, the Oklahoma statutes regulation abortion can be divided into three distinct phases. First, from conception [515]*515until the end of the first trimester, the abortion must be performed in a hospital which includes offices and clinics.86 Second, from the end of the first trimester until viability (presumed to be 22 weeks post-conception), abortions must be performed in a general hospital.87 Third, after viability, nonthera-peutic abortions are prohibited.88 The statute prohibiting nontherapeutic abortions after viability has not been attacked and is valid under Casey89 and this Court’s decision in In re Initiative Petition No. 349.90 Unlike Initiative Petition Number 349’s effect, the effect of sections 1-731 and 1-737 would not be to prohibit all abortions but to place restrictions on the place where abortions are performed.
¶ 39 We must then look to the record before us as the source of information to determine whether the evidence shows that restricting abortions performed during the first trimester to hospitals, including clinics and offices, and restricting abortions performed during the second trimester before viability to general hospitals places an undue burden on a woman’s right to seek an abortion during these periods of her pregnancy.91 An increase in cost, the risk of delay, a limit on a physician’s discretion, and particularly burdensome effects do not necessarily place an undue burden on the right to have an abortion.92 These effects, must amount to substantial obstacles before the restrictions will be invalidated.93
¶ 40 The evidence in this case is insufficient to show that the restrictions place an undue burden on a woman’s right to abortion. In striking down a spousal notification requirement in Casey, the Court relied on evidence that the requirement would allow “the husband to wield an effective veto over his wife’s decision.”94 There is no evidence in the present case that Oklahoma’s location restrictions on abortion place a substantial obstacle on the right to have an abortion.
¶41 In A Woman’s Choice-East Side Women’s Clinic v. Newman,95 the court addressed the proof necessary to successfully challenge an “abortion restriction under the undue burden test.”96 The court noted “that the evidence of a law’s likely effects may be so strong that the ‘undue burden’ for a significant fraction of women will be evident enough even before the law takes effect.”97
¶42 In Casey, the .United States Supreme Court upheld an informed consent requirement based on the lack of evidence in the record that the requirement “would amount in practical terms to a substantial obstacle to a woman seeking an abortion.”98 The Court also noted: “While at some point increased cost could become a substantial obstacle, there is no such showing on the record before us.”99 The defendants in the present case have not presented any evidence that Oklahoma’s restrictions will amount to a substantial obstacle to a woman seeking an abortion. While at some point the negative impact of sections 1-731 and 1-737 may become a substantial obstacle, there is no evidence of such on the record before this Court.
¶43 The defendants urge that the decision in Akron controls the present case. The Casey decision addressed some of the issues raised in Akron and explicitly overruled parts of the Akron decision although it did not address the requirement that second-[516]*516trimester abortions be performed in hospitals. The United Supreme Court in Casey rejected the rigid standard of review endorsed in Roe and on which the Akron decision was based. After a review of the Casey decision and subsequent decisions, we disagree that Akron retains its validity. For these reasons, the Casey decision, not the decision in Akron, controls the present case.
X. Conclusion
¶ 44 In 1979, the Board promulgated standards regarding the licensure of abortion facilities. The application for a writ of mandamus to require the Board and its members to promulgate standards is moot. Thus, we need not address whether the individual members are proper parties to this action. The district court correctly dismissed the individual members of the Board. Further the district court correctly refused to issue a writ of mandamus against the Board because it is has promulgated standards regarding abortion facilities as requested in the application.
¶45 The Commissioner is charged with enforcement and has refused to enforce regulations regarding abortion facilities based on opinions of the Oklahoma Attorney General that the underlying statutes, sections 1-731 and 1-737 of title 63, are unconstitutional. On the record before us, we find that sections 1-731 and 1-737 are not invalid. Mandamus is proper against the Commissioner to require that he enforce these statutory provisions subject to his prosecutorial discretion.
JUDGEMENT OF DISTRICT COURT AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART; WRIT OF MANDAMUS IS GRANTED AGAINST COMMISSIONER OF OKLAHOMA STATE BOARD OF HEALTH.
¶ 46 HODGES, LAVENDER, HARGRAVE, OPALA and WATT, JJ., concur.
¶ 47 KAUGER, C.J., and SUMMERS, V.C.J., concur in result.
¶ 48 WILSON, J., concurs in part, dissents in part.
¶ 49 SIMMS, J., dissents.