During its most recent Term, the U.S. Supreme decided an unusually large number of cases of interest to health care and mental health professionals on topics that included abortion, capital punishment, contraception, DACA, HIV prevention, the insanity defense, jury verdicts, Obama Care, police-official immunity, and sex. The degree of interest among health professionals in these issues was evidenced by the large number if amicus curiae briefs filed this Term by health-related organizations. The Court also decided a variety of other issues of general interest and importance, including asylum and immigration, elections, international child custody, gun laws, presidential subpoenas, religious schools, and robocalls. The work of the Court was interrupted by COVID, and near the end of the Term, the Court held some oral arguments by telephone. The Court decided 60 cases, including 53 “signed” merits opinions after oral argument, an unusually low number of cases. Chief Justice Roberts was the “median” justice—in the majority in 12 of the 13 5-4 decisions. The Court will undoubtedly open with only eight justices. On September 18, 2020, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg passed away at age 87. She had served on the Court since 1993. She was a gifted lawyer and justice. She also became a cultural icon—“the Notorious RBG.” Her death in the middle of a presidential campaign set off a major political struggle. The cases already selected for the October 2020 Term (beginning October 5), suggest another extraordinary Term ahead.