Plaintiffs appeal as of right from the circuit court’s order granting defendants’ motion for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(0(10), dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint for injunctive and declaratory relief, and denying plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. On appeal, plaintiffs contend the trial judge erred in ruling that 1987 PA 59, MCL 400.109a; MSA 16.490(19a), did not violate their right to privacy and their rights under the Due Process, Equal Protection and Antidiscrimination Clauses of the Michigan Constitution, Const 1963, art 1, §§ 2, 17. We agree in relevant part and reverse.
I. INTRODUCTION
According to plaintiffs’ complaint, Jane Doe1 was raped on or about January 15, 1989. At the time, she was a fifteen-year-old resident of this state. Her mother, Nancy Doe, also a Michigan resident, was unemployed, indigent, and a recipient of Aid to Families with Dependent Children. Both plaintiffs were eligible for state medical assistance payments through the State of Michigan’s Medicaid *497program, 1966 PA 321, MCL 400.105 et seq.; MSA 16.490(15) et seq.
As a result of the rape, Jane Doe became pregnant. On or about February 10, 1989, when Jane Doe was in the first trimester of her pregnancy, Nancy Doe sought medical assistance coverage for a therapeutic abortion for her daughter for the following reasons, as stated in the complaint:
5. Due to her age and her underlying medical condition,[2] the continuation of her pregnancy to term will entail substantial health risks for Plaintiff Jane Doe. Additionally, due to the cruel circumstances surrounding conception, as well as her age, Plaintiff is emotionally and psychologically unprepared to undergo a term pregnancy and delivery.
6. Although not necessary to save her life, a first trimester abortion is medically necessary to protect the physical and psychological health of Plaintiff Jane Doe.
Nancy Doe was advised that the Department of Social Services would not pay for the abortion pursuant to MCL 400.109a; MSA 16.490(19a), which provides:
Notwithstanding any other provision of this act, an abortion shall not be a service provided with public funds to a recipient of welfare benefits, whether through a program of medical assistance, general assistance, or categorical assistance or through any other type of public aid or assistance program, unless the abortion is necessary to save the life of the mother. It is the policy of this state to prohibit the appropriation of public funds for the purpose of providing an abortion to a person *498who receives welfare benefits unless the abortion is necessary to save the life of the mother.
As a result of the dss’ refusal, on February 23, 1989, Jane and Nancy Doe filed a complaint against defendants, Patrick Babcock, Director of the dss, and Kevin Seitz, Director of Medical Services Administration of the dss, seeking entry both of preliminary and permanent injunctions enjoining the enforcement of § 109a and of a declaratory judgment that § 109a violates the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of Const 1963, art 1, §§ 2, 17 respectively, as well as the right to privacy guaranteed under Const 1963, art 1, §23. Several organizations and individuals were allowed to intervene as parties defendant. On March 10, 1989, defendants moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (10) on the grounds that plaintiffs had failed to state a claim on which relief could be granted and that there was no genuine issue of material fact regarding the constitutionality of § 109a. On March 17, 1989, the trial court granted defendants’ motion pursuant to MCR 2.116(0(10), finding that § 109a prohibited state Medicaid funding of Jane Doe’s requested abortion and that § 109a was not violative of the Michigan Constitution. The court denied plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction and dismissed their lawsuit.
ii. Michigan’s participation in the medicaid PROGRAM
Title XIX of the federal Social Security Act, as amended, 42 USC 1396 et seq., established the Medicaid program, jointly funded by the federal and participating state governments, to enable a state to furnish medical assistance to certain cate*499gories of needy persons, if the state chooses to do so. With the enactment of 1966 PA 321, Michigan became a participant in title XIX’s medical assistance program. As a participant in the program, the state may pay only for services which the dss considers medically necessary under 42 CFR 440.230. Reed v Hurley Medical Center, 153 Mich App 71, 76; 395 NW2d 12 (1986). Moreover, the director of the dss must ensure that reimbursement is made only for "medically appropriate services,” and that the state pays only for services that are "needed or appropriate.” MCL 400.111a(3) (b), (4)(b); MSA 16.490(21a)(3)(b), (4)(b). See Reed, supra. Even certain types of cosmetic procedures are funded, provided that the attending physician certifies the reasonable medical necessity for the particular procedure. On the other hand, the availability of federal funds for particular medical care does not require the state to pay for it. See Anderson v Director, Dep’t of Social Services (After Remand), 101 Mich App 488; 300 NW2d 921 (1980). Thus, fiscal restraints may play a legitimate role in the state’s decision making with respect to Medicaid coverage. Id. at 495.
III. MICHIGAN ABORTION LAW BEFORE AND AFTER ROE v WADE
When Michigan became a medical assistance program participant, three years after the Constitution of 1963 was adopted, neither the federal Social Security Act nor 1966 PA 321 contained an express provision concerning assistance for abortions, whether elective or therapeutic, under the program. Stopczynski v Governor, 92 Mich App 191, 194; 285 NW2d 62 (1979). At that time, the performing or procuring of all elective and some therapeutic abortions was a felony in this state. *500MCL 750.14, 750.15, 750.322, 750.323; MSA 28.204, 28.205, 28.554, 28.555; MCL 338.53; MSA 14.533; Stopczynski, supra.
In 1972, a panel of this Court considered the constitutionality of one of Michigan’s abortion statutes, MCL 750.14; MSA 28.204, in two cases, one involving a licensed physician, People v Nixon, 42 Mich App 332; 201 NW2d 635 (1972), remanded 389 Mich 809 (1973), rev’d on remand 50 Mich App 38; 212 NW2d 797 (1973), and the other involving an unlicensed abortion practitioner, People v Bricker, 42 Mich App 352; 201 NW2d 647 (1972), aff'd 389 Mich 524; 208 NW2d 172 (1973). After discussing the nature and history of the statute, the Court in Nixon, supra at 335-337, concluded that the statute was not intended to protect the rights of the unquickened3 fetus, but rather was intended to protect the pregnant woman, having been enacted at a time before the advent of antiseptic surgery. Acknowledging the great advancement of medical science, the Court noted that not only were therapeutic abortions reasonably safe, but also it was safer for a woman to have a first-trimester therapeutic abortion than to bear the child. Id. at 339. Concluding that the intended purpose of MCL 750.14; MSA 28.204 no longer existed as it applied to licensed physicians in a proper medical setting, the Court explained:
There is no longer a sufficient state interest to justify continued prosecution of licensed physicians for the mere act of artificially inducing a miscarriage of an unquickened fetus. What state interest there is in the continued protection of the woman *501is counterbalanced and offset by the superior right of the woman and her physician to undertake such medical treatment as is deemed appropriate. The question of whether any given woman should be given a therapeutic abortion during the first trimester is a question which is properly addressed to the discretion of the physician in the exercise of his professional duties.
Not only has the present Michigan abortion statute become unproductive of the end for which it was originally intended, i.e., the health and safety of the woman, but it would appear that it has become counter-productive. Since In re Vickers, 371 Mich 114 [123 NW2d 253] (1963), recognized that the woman could not be prosecuted under the present statute for either a self-induced abortion or as an aider and abettor in an abortion performed upon her, the law has, at least to some extent, indicated that the woman has a right to abort. To recognize the woman’s right to abort and simultaneously deny her the right to seek proper medical aid, except where necessary to preserve her life, does not encourage and promote the health and safety of the woman; but rather, it encourages the woman to place herself in the hands of those not properly skilled. Such an anomaly is not only illogical, but also is fatal to the continued application of the statute. See Beecham v Leahy, 130 Vt 164; 287 A2d 836 (1972). [Id. at 339-341.]
Of particular interest here is the Court’s acknowledgment of the woman’s right to possess and control her body:
There can be no question as to the right of the woman to possess and control her body as she sees fit, in the absence of an expressed compelling state interest, for as the Court stated in Union Pacific R Co v Botsford, 141 US 250, 251; 11 S Ct 1000, 1001; 35 L Ed 734, 737 (1891):
"No right is held more sacred, or is more care*502fully guarded, by the common law, than the right of every individual to the possession and control of his own person, free from all restraint or interference of others, unless by clear and unquestionable authority of law.”
See, also, Terry v Ohio, 392 US 1; 88 S Ct 1868; 20 L Ed 2d 889 (1968). The Court in Griswold v Connecticut, 381 US 479; 85 S Ct 1678; 14 L Ed 2d 510 (1965) recognized this right of personal privacy to be constitutionally protected, and, as such, one which could not be encroached upon to any significant extent in the absence of some compelling state interest. [Id. at 340, n 17.]
Although the Court held that a licensed physician was not subject to prosecution for performing an induced, first-trimester abortion in a hospital or appropriate clinical setting, the Court affirmed the defendant’s conviction under the statute, because he had performed the abortion on the complainant with little or no consultation regarding her state of health and in his office under conditions conducive to inducing infection. Id. at 341-342.
In Bricker, supra at 354, the same panel concluded that the abortion statute was a valid exercise of the state’s power as it applied to persons not licensed to practice medicine in Michigan, because
the state’s interest in making medical care by an unlicensed person a criminal act is sufficient to overcome any assertion that the woman has the "right” to seek such medical care (if "medical care” is the appropriate term for the type of unskilled butchery so often practiced by these persons) from anyone she so desires.
The Court of Appeals reasoning in Nixon foreshadowed by mere months the United States Supreme Court’s decisions in Roe v Wade, 410 US *503113; 93 S Ct 705; 35 L Ed 2d 147 (1973), reh den 410 US 959 (1973), and Doe v Bolton, 410 US 179; 93 S Ct 739; 35 L Ed 2d 201 (1973), reh den 410 US 959 (1973). In Roe, supra at 152-153, the Court concluded that the right of privacy under the United States Constitution included, as a fundamental right, a woman’s decision to terminate her pregnancy. However, that right is not absolute, and must bow to the state’s interests in the protection of health, medical standards, and prenatal life, when those interests become paramount. Id. at 153-155. As Justice Blackmun, writing for the majority, explained:
[T]he State does have an important and legitimate interest in preserving and protecting the health of the pregnant woman, whether she be a resident of the State or a nonresident who seeks medical consultation and treatment there, and that it has still another important and legitimate interest in protecting the potentiality of human life. These interests are separate and distinct. Each grows in substantiality as the woman approaches term and, at a point during pregnancy, each becomes "compelling.” [Id. at 162-163.]
According to Roe, supra at 163, the state’s interest in the health of the mother becomes compelling when, "in the light of present medical knowledge,” the abortion procedure becomes a health- or life-threatening one. The state’s interest in the protection of potential life becomes compelling when the fetus has developed the capacity for meaningful life outside of its mother’s womb, i.e., at the point of "viability.” Id. at 163-164. In concluding that the Texas criminal abortion statute under review, which excepted from criminality only those abortions necessary to save the mother’s life, was violative of the Due Process Clause of *504the Fourteenth Amendment, the Court weighed the competing rights and interests and determined: (1) prior to approximately the end of the first trimester of pregnancy, a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy is paramount, and thus the decision to abort must be left to the medical judgment of her attending physician; (2) subsequent to approximately the end of the first trimester, the state’s interest in promoting the mother’s health increases to the point where the state may regulate abortion to further that interest; and (3) subsequent to the fetus’ viability, which may occur after twenty-four to twenty-eight weeks’ gestation, the state’s interest in promoting potential human life becomes so compelling that it may "regulate, and even proscribe, abortion except where it is necessary, in appropriate medical judgment, for the preservation of the life or health of the mother.” Id. at 160, 164-165.
In Doe v Bolton, supra at 183, the Court considered Georgia’s less restrictive criminal abortion statute. Consistent with its decision in Roe, the Court rejected the appellants’ argument that a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy was absolute and recognized that, although the state had previously focused on the preservation of the woman’s life, it had "the right to readjust its views and emphases in the light of the advanced knowledge and techniques of the day” in order to protect its interest in the preservation of fetal life. Id. at 189-191. The Court found requirements for approval by only certain accredited hospitals and by two independent physicians, as well as a state residency requirement, violative of the Fourteenth Amendment. Id. at 201.
Bricker, supra, and Nixon, supra,4 reached our *505Supreme Court shortly after Roe v Wade was decided. In People v Bricker, 389 Mich 524, 527; 208 NW2d 172 (1973), the Court acknowledged that, under the Supremacy Clause, it was bound by the United States Supreme Court decisions in Roe v Wade and Doe v Bolton. Although the Court acknowledged that Michigan’s criminal abortion statute could not stand under the principles enunciated in Roe and Doe, the question before it was whether Michigan’s Penal Code proscribed the conduct of a person not licensed as a physician, notwithstanding Roe and Doe. Bricker, supra. The Court noted that Roe and Doe did not purport to construe Michigan’s abortion statutes and pointed out that it was "duty bound under the Michigan Constitution to preserve the laws of this state and to that end to construe them if we can so that they conform to Federal and state constitutional requirements.” (Emphasis added.) Bricker, supra at 528. The Court recognized that the Legislature adopted the statutes prohibiting most abortions when there was little or no reason to question their constitutionality, and well in advance of the medical developments which influenced the decisions in Roe and Doe. Bricker, supra at 529. The Court also confirmed that the central purpose of the abortion statutes was clear: "to prohibit all abortions except those required to preserve the health of the mother.” (Emphasis added.) Id. Thus, although the Court avoided a direct confrontation with the issue resolved by the Court of Appeals by construing Roe v Wade as delimiting the Michigan, as well as the federal, constitutional rights *506involved, the Court agreed with central points on which the Court of Appeals had based its decision.
In Larkin v Wayne Prosecutor, 389 Mich 533; 208 NW2d 176 (1973), decided on the same day as Bricker, our Supreme Court recognized the state’s interest in protecting the life of an unborn, viable child. After finding the criminal abortion statutes, MCL 750.15, 750.322; MSA 28.205, 28.554, constitutional notwithstanding Roe and Doe, the Court considered the effect of those decisions on MCL 750.323; MSA 28.555, which provides:
Any person who shall administer to any woman pregnant with a quick child any medicine, drug or substance whatever, or shall use or employ any instrument or other means, with intent thereby to destroy such child, unless the same shall have been necessary to preserve the life of such mother, shall, in case the death of such child or of such mother be thereby produced, be guilty of manslaughter.
The Court considered the import of the statute’s purpose in designating its violation as manslaughter:
[Manslaughter] is a serious crime both at common law and under our statutes because manslaughter involves the destruction of viable human life.
There can be no manslaughter of an inanimate object. Neither can manslaughter be predicated upon the destruction of any form of animal life which is not human.
It follows that statutes proscribing manslaughter by abortion are designed to protect human life and carry the necessary implication that that life, the destruction of which is punishable as manslaughter, is human life. [Larkin, supra at 540.]
By using the term "quick child” in MCL 750.323; *507MSA 28.555, the Legislature intended to protect the life of a child discernibly moving in útero. Id. at 541. The Court defined "child,” as used in MCL 750.322 and 750.323; MSA 28.554 and 28.555, as
a viable child in the womb of its mother; that is, an unborn child whose heart is beating, who is experiencing electronically measurable brain waves, who is discernably moving, and who is so far developed and matured as to be capable of surviving the trauma of birth with the aid of the usual medical care and facilities available in the community. [Id. at 541-542.]
Leaving the issue of viability as a question of fact for determination in each prosecution under those statutes,5 the Court stated:
By reason of Roe v Wade, we are compelled to rule that as a matter of Federal constitutional law, a fetus is conclusively presumed not to be viable within the first trimester of pregnancy. [Id. at 542.]
IV. THE MICHIGAN CONSTITUTION AFFORDS WOMEN A RIGHT TO ABORTION, AND MICHIGAN HAS ESTABLISHED INTERESTS IN PROTECTING THE HEALTH BOTH OF PREGNANT WOMEN AND OF VIABLE UNBORN CHILDREN
Our review of Michigan statutes and case law concerning abortion leads us to conclude that our state has a strong, long-established interest in protecting the lives and health of its pregnant women, both through the criminalization of abor*508tions which undermine that , interest and through the regulation of the members of the medical profession who perform abortions. The state also has an expressed interest in protecting the lives and health of viable, unborn children. These interests are consistent with Const 1963, art 4, § 51, which provides:
The public health and general welfare of the people of the state are hereby declared to be matters of primary public concern. The legislature shall pass suitable laws for the protection and promotion of the public health.
We also conclude that our constitution affords a right to an abortion. The United States Supreme Court in Roe v Wade recognized that the right to an abortion was one of those rights within constitutionally protected "zones of privacy,” emanating from specific constitutional guarantees. Id. at 152. As Justice Blackmun noted, the Court or individual justices had found at least the origins of the right to personal privacy in the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments, as well as in the "penumbras” of the Bill of Rights, see Griswold v Connecticut, 381 US 479, 484-485; 85 S Ct 1678; 14 L Ed 2d 510 (1965).
Our own Supreme Court acknowledged that right under the United States Constitution and also found it to be a right under the Michigan Constitution:
This Court has long recognized privacy to be a highly valued right. De May v Roberts, 46 Mich 160; 9 NW 146 (1881). No one has seriously challenged the existence of a right to privacy in the Michigan Constitution nor does anyone suggest that right to be of any less breadth than the guarantees of the United States Constitution.
*509The United States Supreme Court has recognized the presence of constitutionally protected "zones of privacy.” Griswold v Connecticut, 381 US 479, 484; 85 S Ct 1678; 14 L Ed 2d 510 (1965); Roe v Wade, 410 US 113; 93 S Ct 705; 35 L Ed 2d 147 (1973). These zones have been described as being within "penumbras” emanating from specific constitutional guarantees. Often mentioned as a basis of the right to privacy are the 1st, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 9th and 14th Amendments to the United States Constitution. The people of this state have adopted corresponding provisions in art 1 of our Constitution. [Advisory Opinion on Constitutionality of 1975 PA 227 (Questions 2-10), 396 Mich 465, 504-505; 242 NW2d 3 (1976).]
Roe v Wade provided an analytical framework within which a woman’s fundamental right to an abortion, the state’s interest in protecting the lives and health of its women, and the state’s interest in protecting the lives and health of its viable, unborn children could be afforded protection commensurate with their weight and significance at a given stage of pregnancy. That weight and significance may change with advances in our understanding of such matters as the point at which a fetus becomes viable, the importance of the mother’s physical and mental health to the development of the fetus, and the association between the mother’s mental health and her physical health. We also recognize that, while the rights and interests involved may be competing in some situations, they may also be in accord in others. Thus, in addressing plaintiffs’ claims, our concerns include Jane Doe’s right6 to choose the medical treatment *510of abortion, the state’s interest in her life and health in the third week of her pregnancy, and the state’s interest in the life and health of a non"viable” fetus.
V. SECTION 109a VIOLATES THE EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE OF THE MICHIGAN CONSTITUTION
We consider plaintiffs’ claim that § 109a violates Michigan’s Equal Protection Clause dispositive in this case.
Const 1963, art 1, § 2 provides:
No person shall be denied the equal protection of the laws; nor shall any person be denied the enjoyment of his civil or political rights or be discriminated against in the exercise thereof because of religion, race, color or national origin. The Legislature shall implement this section by appropriate legislation.
As the United States Supreme Court has acknowledged, and we find equally true under our state constitution, the Equal Protection Clause, like the Due Process Clause, "is not susceptible of exact delimitation. No definite rule in respect of either, which automatically will solve the question in specific instances, can be formulated.” Louisville Gas & Electric Co v Coleman, 277 US 32, 37; 48 S Ct 423; 72 L Ed 770 (1928). Although the "equal protection” provision of our constitution is not a clause with precise definition, we recognize it can be violated by legislation that either affects a fundamental interest, as in this case, or creates a suspect classification, and that cannot be justified by any compelling interest of the state. Manistee Bank & Trust Co v McGowan, 394 Mich 655, 668; 232 NW2d 636 (1975). In a case that does not *511involve a fundamental interest or a suspect class, a determination whether the legislation violates the Equal Protection Clause is made under the rational basis test, which requires that the party challenging the statute show it is without reasonable justification. Id.
The circuit court held that Const 1963, art 1, § 2 is no broader in scope than the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and, applying the rational basis test, concluded that § 109a did not violate that provision. For several reasons, we reach a contrary conclusion.
A. MICHIGAN’S EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE PROVIDES GREATER PROTECTION THAN THE FEDERAL EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE.
A state court is free to read its own state’s constitution more broadly than the United States Supreme Court reads the federal constitution, or to reject the mode of analysis used by the United States Supreme Court in favor of a different analysis of the state’s corresponding constitutional guarantee. City of Mesquite v Aladdin's Castle, Inc, 455 US 283, 293; 102 S Ct 1070; 71 L Ed 2d 152 (1982); PruneYard Shopping Center v Robins, 447 US 74, 81; 100 S Ct 2035; 64 L Ed 2d 741 (1980). See also People v Thompson, 424 Mich 118, 125; 379 NW2d 49 (1985). As the Supreme Court of Hawaii explained in State v Kaluna, 55 Hawaii 361, 369, n 6; 520 P2d 51 (1974):
While this results in a divergence of meaning between words which are the same in both the federal and state constitutions, the system of federalism envisaged by the United States Constitution tolerates such divergence where the result is greater protection of individual rights under state law than under federal law.
*512The Bill of Rights, major portions of which are made applicable to the states by virtue of the Fourteenth Amendment, is derived from state constitutional provisions which predate the adoption of the federal constitution. As the court said in People v Brisendine, 13 Cal 3d 528, 550; 119 Cal Rptr 315; 531 P2d 1099 (1975):
It is a fiction too long accepted that provisions in state constitutions textually identical to the Bill of Rights were intended to mirror their federal counterpart. The lesson of history is otherwise: the Bill of Rights was based upon the corresponding provisions of the first state constitutions, rather than the reverse. "By the end of the Revolutionary period, the concept of a Bill of Rights had been fully developed in the American system. Eleven of the 13 states (and Vermont as well) had enacted Constitutions to fill in the political gap caused by the overthrow of British authority. . . . [f ] . . . Eight of the Revolutionary Constitutions were prefaced by Bills of Rights, while four contained guarantees of many of the most important individual rights in the body of their texts. Included in these Revolutionary constitutional provisions were all of the rights that were to be protected in the federal Bill of Rights. By the time of the Treaty of Paris (1783) then, the American inventory of individual rights had been virtually completed and included in the different state Constitutions whether in separate Bills of Rights or the organic texts themselves.” (Italics added.) (1 Schwartz, The Bill of Rights: A Documentary History (1971) p 383; see generally 2 id., p 1204.) . . .
We need not further extend this opinion to trace to their remote origins the historical roots of state constitutional provisions. Yet we have no doubt that such inquiry would confirm our view of the matter. The federal Constitution was designed to guard the states as sovereignties against potential abuses of centralized government; state charters, however, were conceived as the first and at one *513time the only line of protection of the individual against the excesses of local officials.
Furthermore, we are not breaking new ground in asserting that a provision of our state constitution which is, in relevant part, phraseologically indistinguishable from its federal counterpart, should be construed more broadly than the United States Supreme Court considers appropriate for federal jurisprudential purposes. See Delta Charter Twp v Dinolfo, 419 Mich 253, 276-277, n 7; 351 NW2d 831 (1984) (zoning ordinance limiting occupation of residential property); People v Jackson, 391 Mich 323, 337-338; 217 NW2d 22 (1974) (right to counsel at photographic identification); People v White, 390 Mich 245; 212 NW2d 222 (1973) (constitutionality of same transaction test under Double Jeopardy Clause); People v DenUyl, 318 Mich 645, 650-651; 29 NW2d 284 (1947) (scope of privilege against self-incrimination); People v Victor, 287 Mich 506, 514; 283 NW 666 (1939) (constitutionality of prohibition on giving premiums with sale of gas). See also People v Neumayer, 405 Mich 341, 363, n 16; 275 NW2d 230 (1979). The Michigan Supreme Court has even accorded a more liberal construction to a facially narrower provision of the state constitution. People v Beavers, 393 Mich 554; 227 NW2d 511 (1975), cert den 423 US 878 (1975). Thus, the provisions of the Michigan Constitution may compel a different result, independent of any of the provisions of the federal constitution.
It is a fundamental principle of statutory construction, which generally applies to the construction of the constitution, see Detroit Bd of Ed v Superintendent of Public Instruction, 319 Mich 436; 29 NW2d 902 (1947); Council 23, AFSCME v Wayne Co Civil Service Comm, 32 Mich App 243; 188 NW2d 206 (1971), that every word should be *514given meaning, and no word should be treated as surplusage or rendered nugatory if at all possible. State Bar of Michigan v Galloway, 422 Mich 188; 369 NW2d 839 (1985); Soap & Detergent Ass’n v Natural Resources Comm, 415 Mich 728; 330 NW2d 346 (1982); Swift v Kent Co, 171 Mich App 390; 429 NW2d 605 (1988). Application of this principle to the Equal Benefit and Equal Protection Clauses of the Michigan Constitution leads us to conclude that those clauses provide greater protection than does the federal Equal Protection Clause alone.
In Naudzius v Lahr, 253 Mich 216, 222; 234 NW 581 (1931), a decision preceding the adoption of the Constitution of 1963 by thirty-two years, our Supreme Court stated:
The equality of rights protected by our Constitution is the same as that preserved by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. In re Fox’s Estate, 154 Mich 5 [117 NW 558 (1908), rev’d on other grounds 159 Mich 420; 124 NW 60 (1909).]
The Court in Naudzius was dealing with the Constitution of 1908, which contained no equal protection clause equivalent to Const 1963, art 1, § 2. Thus, we conclude that the Court was referring, both in Naudzius and in the cited case of In re Fox Estate, to Const 1908, art 2, § 1, which provided:
All political power is inherent in the people. Government is instituted for their equal benefit, security and protection.
It follows that our Supreme Court considered the "equal benefit” language of that section to import the equal protection principles of the Fourteenth *515Amendment into Michigan jurisprudence. The "equal benefit” provision of the Constitution of 1908 has been carried forward, with no change in language, and is now Const 1963, art 1, § 1.
It would violate basic precepts of constitutional adjudication, as it would under similar circumstances breach the doctrines of statutory construction, to treat the equal protection language of Const 1963, art 1, § 2 as adding nothing to those rights of the people already afforded by the Equal Benefit Clause of Const 1963, art 1, § 1 and its predecessor, Const 1908, art 2, § 1. This is particularly true because, at the time of the adoption of the Constitution of 1963, the equivalence of the "Equal Benefit” Clause to the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment had long been recognized and established. In addition, the convention comment to Const 1963, art 1, § 2 clearly stated, "This is a new section.”
Furthermore, in cases of doubtful construction of the provisions of the constitution, we may look to the debates of the Constitutional Convention for guidance. Union Steam Pump Sales Co v Secretary of State, 216 Mich 261; 185 NW 353 (1921). In submitting Committee Proposal 26 to the Committee of the Whole on February 1, 1962 (which became Const 1963, art 1, §2), the Chairman of the Committee on Declaration of Rights, Suffrage and Elections noted:
[T]here has been a distinct trend in recent State Constitutions to incorporate equal protection or civil rights clauses to apply to all persons as well as those singled out for special attention because of more apparent discrimination. ... In short, the incorporation of civil rights provisions is in accord with the contemporary trend in state constitution writing. [Emphasis supplied. 1 Official Record, Constitutional Convention 1961, p 740.]
*516Thus, the convention advocated the adoption of an equal protection clause, not simply parroting the equivalent provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment but creating rights broader in scope than those afforded under its federal counterpart. To hold otherwise would render the Equal Protection Clause surplusage and duplicative of the Equal Benefit Clause of art 1, § 1, and it would negate the avowed intention of the convention to recognize the historical role of state constitutional provisions as both distinct from and more all-encompassing than their federal counterparts, even when the phraseology may be equivalent or identical.
Relying upon Moore v Spangler, 401 Mich 360; 258 NW2d 34 (1977), Fox v Employment Security Comm, 379 Mich 579, 588; 153 NW2d 644 (1967), and Doster v Estes, 126 Mich App 497, 512; 337 NW2d 549 (1983), the circuit court reached the contrary conclusion advanced by defendants on appeal that Michigan’s Equal Protection Clause is coextensive with that of the federal constitution. In Moore, supra at 368-370, the plaintiff argued that she had been denied her right to equal protection of the law by the circuit court’s refusal to allow oral argument on her appeal from the district court, in the face of GCR 1963, 819.1, which guaranteed a right of oral argument to parties appealing from circuit court to the Court of Appeals. In rejecting the plaintiff’s claim, our Supreme Court merely quoted from Naudzius, 253 Mich 222, that " '[t]he equality of rights protected by our Constitution is the same as that preserved by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.’ ” Moore, supra at 370. In Fox, supra at 585, the plaintiff contended that the unreasonable classification of persons applying for unemployment compensation benefits under the Em*517ployment Security Act denied him equal protection of the laws. In finding that the challenged classification violated equal protection, our Supreme Court stated:
This Court has held numerous times that the Michigan Const 1908, art 2, § 1, secures the same right of equal protection as does its counterpart in the Constitution of the United States. Gauthier v Campbell, Wyant & Cannon Foundry Company, 360 Mich 510, 514 [104 NW2d 182 (1960)], and cases therein cited. The same provisions in Const 1963, art 1, §§ 1 and 2, must likewise be held to afford the same rights as the Federal equal protection clause, [id. at 588.]
In Doster, supra at 512, a panel of this Court simply relied upon Fox for the proposition that the same rights were afforded by both the Michigan and federal Equal Protection Clauses.
We are not persuaded that our Supreme Court’s statement in Fox requires us to alter our conclusion that Michigan’s Equal Protection Clause provides more protection than that of the United States Constitution. In the context of the facts and issues of that case, the Court saw no need to construe Const 1963, art 1, § 2 more broadly than the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. There was no suggestion that, under certain circumstances, Const 1963, art 1, § 2 could not be construed more expansively than its Fourteenth Amendment counterpart. Moreover, neither in Fox nor in Moore did the Court consider the expansive effect the enactment of the Constitution of 1963, with the addition of art 1, § 2, had on the scope of protection already afforded by the equal benefits provision. We cannot conclude that, by its bare statement in Fox, our Supreme Court intended to relinquish the freedom of our state courts, under *518all circumstances, to read our state’s Equal Protection Clause more broadly than the federal Equal Protection Clause.
B. MICHIGAN COURTS ARE FREE TO ANALYZE STATE CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS DIFFERENTLY THAN FEDERAL COURTS ANALYZE FEDERAL CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS.
Beyond our freedom to read our own state’s Equal Protection Clause more broadly than that of the United States Constitution, we are also free to reject the method used by the United States Supreme Court in analyzing the federal Equal Protection Clause in favor of a different analysis of Michigan’s Equal Protection Clause. See Aladdin’s Castle, Inc, 455 US 293.
The United States Supreme Court does not have a monopoly on correct constitutional interpretation. This fact is a cornerstone of federalism, justifying substantive disagreement by state courts. Although factors such as textual differences between the federal and state constitutions can certainly contribute to a state court’s reasoning, the presence of these factors should not be viewed as a necessary condition precedent to independent analysis, under state constitutions, of claims rejected by the United States Supreme Court.
A state court may certainly be justified in declining requested relief in a suit raising state constitutional challenges. Such a result, however, should be based upon state constitutional analysis and not upon misplaced reliance upon Supreme Court federal constitutional interpretations. The latter approach constitutes an unwarranted delegation of state power to the Supreme Court and a resultant abdication of state judicial responsibility. By the same token, state court dissenters remain *519free to criticize the majority’s reasoning and result, but they should not blindly advocate allegiance to Supreme Court interpretations of a different Constitution. [Williams, In the Supreme Court’s Shadow: Legitimacy of State Rejection of Supreme Court Reasoning and Result, 35 SC L R 353, 402-404 (1984).]
As our Supreme Court pointed out in Delta Charter Twp v Dinolfo, 419 Mich 276-277, n 7, in which the Court rejected the United States Supreme Court’s conclusion in Village of Belle Terre v Boraas, 416 US 1; 94 S Ct 1536; 39 L Ed 2d 797 (1974):
In People v Victor, 287 Mich 506; 28 NW 666 (1939), we found a statute prohibiting the giving away of drinking glasses at gas stations to be unreasonable and arbitrary and in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Michigan Constitution, despite that in Rast v Van Deman & Lewis Co, 240 US 342; 36 S Ct 370; 60 L Ed 679 (1916), the United States Supreme Court had upheld a similar law which banned the giving away of trading stamps. We applied the same rationality test, but we reached a different conclusion. We did not there and we do not now hesitate to reach a conclusion different from that reached by the United States Supreme Court when it is warranted.
For the benefit of the parties to this case and for any future review, we offer the following "plain statement.” As should be clear from our outright rejection of Belle Terre, our decision here is based solely on the Due Process Clause of the Michigan Constitution, art 1, § 17, notwithstanding the use of a standard originally developed in the federal system.
See also People v Smith, 420 Mich 1, 7, n 2; 360 NW2d 841 (1984).
*520C. THE FEDERAL EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE IS NOT VIOLATED BY STATE REGULATIONS LIMITING MEDICAID FUNDING FOR ABORTIONS.
The approach of the United States Supreme Court in determining the extent of federal constitutional protection of privacy rights in the context of Medicaid funding restrictions became apparent only a few years after Roe v Wade was decided. The United States Supreme Court considered whether the United States Constitution required a state participating in the title XIX Medicaid program to pay for nontherapeutic abortions when it pays the costs of childbirth.7 Maher v Roe, 432 US 464; 97 S Ct 2376; 53 L Ed 2d 484 (1977). In that case, indigent women of Connecticut claimed that their state was required to afford equal treatment to both abortion and childbirth and was not allowed to express a policy preference by funding only those medical expenses incident to childbirth. Id. at 470. After finding that no discrimination against a suspect class was involved, the Court considered whether the regulation impinged upon the fundamental right to abortion, which it recognized as protecting "the woman from unduly burdensome interference with her freedom to decide whether to terminate her pregnancy.” Id. at 473-474. The Court concluded that the Connecticut regulation did not impinge upon that fundamental right, reasoning:
The Connecticut regulation places no obstacles— absolute or otherwise — in the pregnant woman’s path to an abortion. An indigent woman who desires an abortion suffers no disadvantage as a *521consequence of Connecticut’s decision to fund childbirth; she continues as before to be dependent on private sources for the service she desires. The State may have made childbirth a more attractive alternative, thereby influencing the woman’s decision, but it has imposed no restriction on access to abortions that was not already there. The indigency that may make it difficult — and in some cases, perhaps, impossible — for some women to have abortions is neither created nor in any way affected by the Connecticut regulation. We conclude that the Connecticut regulation does not impinge upon the fundamental right recognized in Roe. [Id. at 474.]
Applying the rational basis test, the Court recognized that the state’s strong and legitimate interest in encouraging normal childbirth was rationally furthered by the funding limitation; therefore, it did not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the federal constitution. Id. at 478-479.
Subsequently, in Harris v McRae, 448 US 297; 100 S Ct 2671; 65 L Ed 2d 784 (1980), reh den 448 US 917 (1980), a majority of the Supreme Court relied extensively on its reasoning and decision in Maher, supra, in holding that the Hyde Amendment, which limited federal funds to only certain medically necessary abortions,8 did not impinge on the "due process liberty recognized in Wade” and did not violate the equal protection component of the Fifth Amendment. Harris, supra at 318, 322.
On the same day Harris was decided, the Supreme Court upheld a state statute prohibiting *522state medical assistance payments for all abortions not necessary to preserve the life of the woman seeking an abortion. Williams v Zbaraz, 448 US 358; 100 S Ct 2694; 65 L Ed 2d 831 (1980), reh den 448 US 917 (1980). The Court relied on its majority decision in Harris and held that the statute did not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.9
D. SECTION 109a DIRECTLY IMPINGES UPON A FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT UNDER THE MICHIGAN CONSTITUTION.
Clearly, if the issues presented were to be adjudicated under the federal constitution, whether under the Equal Protection or Due Process Clauses *523of the Fourteenth Amendment, or some "right of privacy” extracted from the First, Third, Fourth, or Ninth Amendments, plaintiffs’ challenges to the constitutional validity of MCL 400.109a; MSA 16.490(19a) would be rejected. However, the question before us concerns provisions of our state constitution, which we are free to read more broadly and analyze differently than those of the federal constitution. See Aladdin’s Castle, Inc, 455 US 293. With that established, we consider whether, under the circumstances of this case, § 109a impinges on a pregnant woman’s fundamental right to an abortion under the Michigan Constitution. Contrary to both the circuit court’s ruling and the decisions of the United States Supreme Court in Maher and Harris, we conclude that it does.
A pregnant woman in this state has a fundamental right to procreative choice, which includes the right to an abortion as well as the corollary fundamental right to bear her child. Before the enactment of § 109a, all Michigan women, rich and poor alike, were able to exercise those fundamental rights. Those indigent pregnant women who met the financial resource limitations set for the Medicaid program were able to obtain the medically necessary care recommended by their physicians, including abortion, throughout their pregnancies. Consistent with this state’s long-established interest in the health of its pregnant women, the state made such care available, not without regard to the woman’s financial status, but because of her indigency, which was a requirement for her receipt of Medicaid funding for her pregnancy.
Plaintiffs are indigent women, otherwise qualified to receive the benefits of the Medicaid program. The effect of the adoption of § 109a was to *524impinge on Jane Doe’s right to choose to terminate her pregnancy. If such a Medicaid-qualified pregnant woman exercises her fundamental right to bear her child, the state must, by statute, provide funding for her medically necessary care during her pregnancy. However, if such a woman chooses to have an abortion, even where medically necessary or required to terminate a pregnancy resulting from rape or incest, § 109a directly prevents the state from providing funds for that care. It is the woman’s exercise of one fundamental right— the right to an abortion — which triggers § 109a’s restrictions. Her right to bear the child is not similarly impinged upon.
We recognize that, while the woman’s indigency also acts as a barrier to her freedom of choice, the state is not required to remedy that condition. But the state itself, by adoption of § 109a, has created a direct barrier to the woman’s exercise of her right to an abortion.
There is thus an inequality within the program, with the distinction based on an indigent pregnant woman’s exercise of an option which the constitution vouchsafes to her individually. If she exercises her constitutional right to abortion, she is excluded from a program for which she is otherwise qualified; if she elects not to exercise that constitutional option, she may continue to receive the benefits of this statutory program.
Fundamentally, indigent pregnant women are burdened in the exercise of their constitutional right of procreative choice, because they are the only people unable to obtain the "medically necessary” therapeutic service of abortion under the Medicaid program. This inequality is exacerbated on the facts of this case, where Jane Doe became pregnant as a result of rape, a criminal act. The indigent victim of a mugging who suffers another *525type of physical injury is not prevented from obtaining necessary medical treatment for the injury through the Medicaid program. But because Jane Doe chose to exercise her constitutional right to terminate her pregnancy, the state denied her the funds for that medically necessary treatment. That denial results in a curious public policy which necessitates a crime victim’s carrying of a rapist’s child to term, and then either mothering that child through its minority, quite probably at state expense, or making the child available for adoption.
E. ABSENT A COMPELLING STATE INTEREST, § 109a IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
(1) Having concluded that § 109a directly impinges upon a fundamental right under the Michigan Constitution, we consider whether that infringement renders the statute unconstitutional. As our Supreme Court has acknowledged:
The right to privacy includes certain activities which are fundamental to our concept of ordered liberty. Rights of this magnitude can only be abridged by governmental action where there exists a "compelling state interest.” Roe, supra, 152, 155. Kropf v Sterling Heights, 391 Mich 139, 157-158; 215 NW2d 179 (1974). [Advisory Opinion 1975 PA 227, 396 Mich 505.]
Therefore, we apply the strict scrutiny test, under which the state is required to show a compelling interest which justifies its legislative action. Manistee Bank & Trust Co, 394 Mich 668.
Defendants describe the goals of § 109a as the protection of potential human life and the encouragement of normal childbirth. Defendants admit, as it cannot be denied, that fiscal restraints do not *526play a role in the restriction of funding for abortions under § 109a. The costs for an abortion, particularly at an early stage of pregnancy, are much less than the costs for childbirth. In addition, once the child is born into an indigent family, the state funds much of the costs associated with promoting the child’s welfare. Thus, it is clear that § 109a’s restrictions are not cost effective, but increase the state’s financial burden to some extent.
The state’s interest in protecting human life must be measured by considering the degree to which the human life at issue has potentiality. Larkin, 389 Mich 541-542. The likelihood that a human life will result from a fetus depends on various factors, including the genetic viability of the fetus, the changing health status of the mother and the growing fetus, and circumstances outside of the mother’s womb. The protection of potential human life is not a compelling state interest, which may constitutionally impinge upon a woman’s right to an abortion, before the fetus is a "child,” or constitutes viable human life, as defined by our Supreme Court in Larkin.
We recognize that, when the state creates a right that did not exist at common law, such as the Medicaid program, it may impose reasonable procedural conditions as a prerequisite to the benefits of the program. Grand Rapids Independent Publishing Co v Grand Rapids, 335 Mich 620; 56 NW2d 403 (1953); Finkelstein v Dep’t of Revenue, 312 Mich 186; 20 NW2d 154 (1945). It is said that "where the grant of a substantive right is inextricably intertwined with the limitations on the procedures which are to be employed in determining that right, a [person] in the position of [appellants] must take the bitter with the sweet.” Arnett v Kennedy, 416 US 134, 153-154; 94 S Ct 1633; 40 L Ed 2d 15 (1974), reh den 417 US 977 (1974),
*527However, unconstitutional substantive conditions may not be imposed. In many areas, the Michigan judiciary has declared that burdening the exercise of a constitutionally protected right, People v Snow, 386 Mich 586, 593; 194 NW2d 314 (1972); People v Earegood, 383 Mich 82, 85; 173 NW2d 205 (1970); People v Guest, 47 Mich App 500, 502-503; 209 NW2d 601 (1973); People v Courts, 401 Mich 57, 61; 257 NW2d 101 (1977); In re Van Zant, 126 Mich App 732, 736; 338 NW2d 1 (1983), or offering an inducement for waiver of a constitutional right, People v Pallister, 14 Mich App 139, 148-149; 165 NW2d 319 (1968), is constitutionally intolerable. Conceptually, the same principle applies here.
(2) Our conclusion that § 109a is violative of the Michigan Constitution is not undermined by the fact that the statute in question was adopted through the initiative process, Const 1963, art 2, §9. The legislative power of the people, through the initiative and referendum, does not give any more force or effect to voter-approved legislation than to other legislative acts, which are "on an equal footing.” Advisory Opinion on Constitutionality of 1982 PA 47, 418 Mich 49, 66; 340 NW2d 817 (1983), quoting Luker v Curtis, 64 Idaho 703, 706-707; 136 P2d 978, 979 (1943). Although we recognize that the provisions of such a statute may be an expression of public policy, a constitutional provision does not mean one thing when it is adopted and another thing subsequently, when public sentiment has changed. Walber v Wayne Circuit Judge, 2 Mich App 145; 138 NW2d 772 (1966), aff'd 381 Mich 138; 160 NW2d 876 (1968). The meaning of the constitutional provision in question is immutable, in the sense that its meaning does not change merely because a majority of the electorate, a transitory group, voted to adopt *528MCL 400.109a; MSA 16.490(19a). As our Supreme Court has explained, in determining the meaning of a constitutional provision:
[W]e should endeavor to place ourselves in the position of the framers of the Constitution, and ascertain what was meant at the time; for, if we are successful in doing this, we have solved the question of its meaning for all time. It could not mean one thing at the time of its adoption, and another thing today, when public sentiments have undergone a change. McPherson v Secretary of State, 92 Mich 377 (16 L R A 475, 31 Am St Rep 587 [52 NW 469 (1892)]). It is therefore essential that we determine the intent of this provision by reference to the state of the law or custom previously existing, and by the contemporaneous construction, rather than attempt to test its meaning by the so-called advanced or liberal views obtaining among a large class of the community at the present day. [Pfeiffer v Detroit Bd of Ed, 118 Mich 560, 564; 77 NW 250 (1898); see also Burdick v Secretary of State, 373 Mich 578, 584; 130 NW2d 380 (1964).]
We also recognize that our conclusion appears inconsistent with the following remarks by our Supreme Court in Bricker, 389 Mich 529:
The public policy of this state is to be found in the declarations and deeds of its people. These find concrete expression in the constitution adopted by the people, the laws enacted by the Legislature, the acts of the Governor, the Attorney General, others exercising executive power, the decisions of our courts, and the vote of the people. Proponents of abortion reform took a case to the people last November and lost.
It is the public policy of the state to proscribe abortion. This public policy must now be subordinated to Federal Constitutional requirements.
*529However, we are not bound by such dicta. See Whitehead & Kales Co v Taan, 233 Mich 597, 601; 208 NW 148 (1926); Berger v Weber, 82 Mich App 199, 213; 267 NW2d 124 (1978), aff'd as modified 411 Mich 1; 303 NW2d 424 (1981). Moreover, the Court did not appear to consider either that the public policy of the state, as expressed by statute, would also be subordinated to state constitutional requirements, see Campbell v Detroit, 51 Mich App 34, 37; 214 NW2d 337 (1973), or that the reason underlying the state’s prohibition of abortion — protecting the health of the mother — did not necessarily conflict with the dictates of Roe v Wade.
(3) In concluding that the state’s interest is not a compelling one, we have found persuasive reported decisions in which five other states considered the validity of statutes or administrative regulations with language similar to, but less restrictive than, § 109a, under their respective state constitutions, and found them unconstitutional. See Doe v Maher, 40 Conn Sup 394; 515 A2d 134 (1986); Planned Parenthood Ass’n v Dep’t of Human Resources, 630 Or App 41; 663 P2d 1247 (1983), aff'd 297 Or 562; 687 P2d 785 (1984); Right to Choose v Byrne, 91 NJ 287; 450 A2d 925 (1982); Committee to Defend Reproductive Rights v Myers, 29 Cal 3d 252; 172 Cal Rptr 866; 625 P2d 779; 20 ALR4th 1118 (1981); Moe v Secretary of Administration & Finance, 382 Mass 629; 417 NE2d 387 (1981).
In Right to Choose v Byrne, supra at 293, the Supreme Court of New Jersey concluded that its state statute prohibiting Medicaid funding for abortions "except where it is medically indicated to be necessary to preserve the woman’s life,” violated the right of pregnant women to equal protection of the law under the New Jersey Constitution. Acknowledging that there is no fundamen*530tal right to funding for an abortion, the court reasoned:
The right to choose whether to have an abortion, however, is a fundamental right of all pregnant women, including those entitled to Medicaid reimbursement for necessary medical treatment. As to that group of women, the challenged statute discriminates between those for whom medical care is necessary for childbirth and those for whom an abortion is medically necessary. Under NJSA 30:4D-6.1, those needing abortions receive funds only when their lives are at stake. By granting funds when life is at risk, but withholding them when health is endangered, the statute denies equal protection to those women entitled to necessary medical services under Medicaid.
Thus, the statute impinges upon the fundamental right of a woman to control her body and destiny. [Id. at 305-306.]
The court explained that, although the protection of potential life is a legitimate state interest, it did not outweigh, at any stage of the pregnancy, the superior interest in the life and health of the mother. Id. at 306. Conceding that the legislature was not required to fund any of the costs of medically necessary treatment for an indigent woman’s pregnancy, the court concluded, as do we:
Once it undertakes to fund medically necessary care attendant upon pregnancy, however, government must proceed in a neutral manner. Given the high priority accorded in this State to the rights of privacy and health, it is not neutral to fund services medically necessary for childbirth while refusing to fund medically necessary abortions. Nor is it neutral to provide one woman with the means to protect her life at the expense of a fetus and to force another woman to sacrifice her health to protect a potential life. [Id. at 306-307.]
*531See also Committee to Defend Reproductive Rights, supra.
Similarly, the Connecticut Supreme Court responded in Doe v Maher to the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Maher v Roe by ruling that its state regulation restricting Medicaid funding for abortions constituted a violation of substantive due process because the regulation impinged upon the plaintiffs’ right of privacy guaranteed by the state constitution. As the Connecticut Supreme Court explained, once the state chose to pay for medical treatment of the poor, it was required to do so with neutrality. Doe v Maher. Because no compelling reason to justify the regulation was advanced by the state, the regulation was unconstitutional. Id. Moreover, the regulation constituted a violation of the equal protection clauses of the Connecticut Constitution, which had been amended by addition of an equal rights amendment.
We conclude that the Connecticut Supreme Court’s due process analysis is supportive of our equal protection analysis. In addition, although Michigan has not adopted an equal rights amendment, we have recognized the broader scope of our own Equal Protection Clause, as compared to that of the federal constitution.
(4) The circuit court in this case placed great reliance upon the only contrary state case, Fischer v Dep’t of Public Welfare, 509 Pa 293; 502 A2d 114 (1985), in which the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania rejected attacks on the basis of the equal rights provisions of that state’s constitution, art 1, § 1 and art 3, § 32, the antidiscrimination provision of art 1, § 26, and the equal rights amendment of art 1, § 28. However, for several reasons, we find that case unpersuasive.
A basic premise of the Fischer decision is that *532Medicaid funding restrictions on abortion do not concern the fundamental right to an abortion. As discussed above, we reject that premise. Plaintiffs’ claim is that § 109a impinges upon the fundamental right to an abortion. Rather than reword the issue to achieve a particular result, we address it as stated. Simply because Jane Doe’s inability to pay for an abortion was the first barrier to her exercise of her right to procreative choice, it does not follow that it is the only direct barrier. Clearly, she was qualified for Medicaid funding because of her inability to pay such costs, and § 109a acted as a second, direct, state-imposed barrier to her exercise of a fundamental right.
Additionally, the Pennsylvania statute contained an exception not found in MCL 400.109a; MSA 16.490(19a), namely, that public funds could be used for abortion services for indigent women not only when the life of the mother was endangered, but also in cases of rape or incest. It is these exceptions which buttress the Fischer Court’s opinion, and underlie its ratio decidendi:
In the present case, however, we cannot accept appellant’s rather simplistic argument that because only a woman can have an abortion then the statute necessarily utilizes "sex as a basis for distinction,” Henderson v Henderson, supra [458 Pa 97, 101; 327 A2d 60 (1974)]. To the contrary, the basis for the distinction here is not sex but abortion, and the statute does not accord varying benefits to men and women because of their sex, but accords varying benefits to one class of women, as distinct from another, based on a voluntary choice made by the women. [509 Pa 313-314. Emphasis supplied.]
Yet the case at bar is a perfect example of a highly relevant distinction between this case and *533Fischer. Plaintiff Jane Doe is a fifteen-year-old, unemancipated, unmarried pregnant female. Beyond her claims that she was forcibly raped, because of her youth Jane Doe’s ability to lawfully consent to sexual activity is not unfettered. MCL 750.520c(l)(b); MSA 28.788(3)(l)(b). Her condition cannot be said to be "voluntary” because the statute contains no exceptions for victims of incest or rape and no exceptions for those whose mental impairments may cast doubt upon their ability to become pregnant through a conscious process that involves an element of "voluntariness.” Under Michigan’s jurisprudential scheme, the law has a "tender regard” for the insane, the mentally incompetent, the aged, and the infirm, or any others who may be under a disability. Brydges v Home for the Aged, 373 Mich 408; 129 NW2d 869 (1964). Contrary to the circuit court’s opinion in this case, Fischer does not preclude a contrary outcome as applied to the facts of this case.
We add that this case should not, and for us does not, present a moral question. As the court said in Committee to Defend Reproductive Rights v Myers, supra, 29 Cal 3d 256-257:
First, this case does not turn on the morality or immorality of abortion, and most decidedly does not concern the personal views of the individual justices as to the wisdom of the legislation itself or the ethical considerations involved in a woman’s individual decision whether or not to bear a child. Indeed, although in this instance the Legislature has adopted restrictions which discriminate against women who choose to have an abortion, similar constitutional issues would arise if the Legislature — as a population control measure, for example — funded Medi-Cal abortions but' refused to provide comparable medical care for poor women who choose childbirth. Thus, the constitutional question before us does not involve a weigh*534ing of the value of abortion as against childbirth, but instead concerns the protection of either procreative choice from discriminatory governmental treatment.
Second, contrary to the suggestion of the defendants and the dissent, the question presented is not whether the state is generally obligated to subsidize the exercise of constitutional rights for those who cannot otherwise afford to do so; plaintiffs do not contend that the state would be required to fund abortions for poor women if the state had not chosen to fund medical services for poor women who choose to bear a child. Rather, we face the much narrower question of whether the state, having enacted a general program to provide medical services to the poor, may selectively withhold such benefits from otherwise qualified persons solely because such persons seek to exercise their constitutional right of procreative choice in a manner which the state does not favor and does not wish to support.
VI. CONCLUSION
Because the state has failed to show a compelling interest to justify § 109a’s impingement on the right of a woman to terminate her first-trimester pregnancy, we hold that exclusion from the Medicaid program of indigent pregnant women who elect "medically necessary” abortions in lieu of carrying the pregnancy to term is a denial of equal protection of the law guaranteed by Const 1963, art 1, § 2. In so declaring, we note that the federal authorities on which defendants have relied do not address situations where state-funded abortion services for rape or incest victims, inter alia, are being withheld.
Our resolution of this appeal on the basis of the Equal Protection Clause of Const 1963, art 1, § 2, makes it unnecessary to address the other consti*535tutional arguments advanced by plaintiffs involving the Due Process Clause of Const 1963, art 1, § 17, and the Antidiscrimination Clause of Const 1963, art 1, § 2. See Taylor v Auditor General, 360 Mich 146, 154; 103 NW2d 769 (1960).
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Doctoroff, J., concurred.Jane Doe’s identity was revealed to the trial court in camera.
According to Dr. Ethelene Jones, an obstetrician-gynecologist who examined her on February 25, 1989, Jane Doe suffers from an unevaluated and undiagnosed seizure disorder.
"Quickening” is the point at which the fetus indicates signs of life by fetal movements, which can be felt by the mother and which are first noted in the fourth or fifth month of pregnancy. An "unquickened” fetus has not yet reached that point of intrauteral development. Stedman, Medical Dictionary (21st ed, 1966), pp 1340-1341.
On remand from our Supreme Court for disposition consistent *505with its decisions in Larkin v Wayne Prosecutor, 389 Mich 533; 208 NW2d 176 (1973), and Bricker, the Court of Appeals in People v Nixon (On Remand), 50 Mich App 38, 39-40; 212 NW2d 797 (1975), reversed its initial decision affirming the defendant doctor’s conviction, because he had performed the abortion within the first trimester of pregnancy.
Reaching a similar conclusion in a different context, the Court of Appeals in Toth v Goree, 65 Mich App 296, 304; 237 NW2d 297 (1975), concluded that a three-month-old fetus not born alive was not a person within the meaning of the wrongful death act, MCL 600.2922; MSA 27A.2922.
We express no opinion regarding the necessity of Nancy Doe’s involvement in her daughter’s decision to seek an abortion. We merely note that, to the extent this case involves a minor female, she had the approval of her parent to undergo an abortion, thus entitling her to eifectuate her choice of medical care. See Hodgson v Minnesota, 497 US —; 110 S Ct 2926; 111 L Ed 2d 344 (1990).
Title XIX of the Social Security Act does not itself require a participating state to fund nontherapeutic abortions as a condition of its participation. Beal v Doe, 432 US 438, 444-445; 97 S Ct 2366; 53 L Ed 2d 464 (1977).
The Hyde Amendment restricted Medicaid funding for abortions to those where the mother’s life would be endangered if the fetus was carried to term and where necessary for the victims of promptly reported rape or incest. Different versions of the Hyde Amendment were applicable for fiscal year 1977 (no rape or incest exception) and for most of fiscal year 1978 and all of fiscal year 1979 (additional exception for abortions where two physicians determined that severe and long-lasting physical health damage to the mother would result if the pregnancy were carried to term). Harris, 448 US 302-303.
The United States Supreme Court continued to rely on its reasoning in Maher v Roe, supra, to justify its finding in Webster v Reproductive Health Services, 492 US —; 109 S Ct 3040, 3050-3054; 106 L Ed 2d 410 (1989), that the limits on public assistance in the performance of abortions imposed by a Missouri statute were constitutional. As discussed below at 523-525, we reject the Supreme Court’s reasoning in Maher v Roe, as we do that in Webster. An additional issue raised by the parties in Webster was the constitutionality of the statute’s provision requiring a physician to ascertain before performing an abortion that the fetus of a woman, who the physician believed was twenty or more weeks pregnant, was not viable. 109 S Ct 3047. While a majority of the Court found that that provision did not violate the United States Constitution, only three justices suggested that Roe v Wade and succeeding cases were modified and narrowed by its opinion, 109 S Ct 3058 (Rehnquist, C.J., joined by White and Kennedy, JJ.), with Justice Scalia expressing dismay that the opinion did not explicitly overrule Roe v Wade. 109 S Ct 3064 (Scalia, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment). A majority of the justices agreed that the viability determination provision in the Missouri statute did not offend Roe v Wade as it stands. 109 S Ct 3060 (O’Connor, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment), 109 S Ct 3069-3071 (Blackmun, J., joined by Brennan and Marshall, JJ., concurring in part and dissenting in part), 109 S Ct 3079 (Stevens, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Beyond the majority’s affirmation of Roe v Wade, we note that Missouri’s viability determination provision required a determination of the viability of a fetus twenty weeks old or more. In this case, § 109a prohibited plaintiffs from terminating Jane’s pregnancy approximately three weeks after conception. Thus, the viability provision considered in Webster has little resemblance to the statute at issue here.