Daily News (Los Angeles)

What new abortion bans mean for young patients

- By Dana Goldstein and Ava Sasani The New York Times

She was just 10 years old, so young that many people were horrified when they heard it, and others refused to believe it. But the ordeal of the child rape victim in Ohio who had to cross state lines for an abortion, and the ugly political fight that followed, have highlighte­d two uncomforta­ble facts: Such pregnancie­s are not as rare as people think, and new abortion bans are likely to have a pronounced impact on the youngest pregnant girls.

New bans in nearly a dozen states do not make exceptions for rape or incest, leaving young adolescent­s — already among the most restricted in their abortion options — with less access to the procedure. Even in states with exemptions for rape and incest, requiremen­ts involving police reports and parental consent can be prohibitiv­e for children and teenagers.

“The situation out of Ohio is in no way unique,” said Katie McHugh, an OBGYN in Indiana and board member of the group Physicians for Reproducti­ve Health, which favors abortion rights. “This is a situation that every abortion provider has seen before.”

The number of pregnancie­s in the United States among girls younger than 15 has fallen sharply in recent decades with greater access to contracept­ion and a drop in adolescent sexual activity. But state and federal data suggest there are still thousands of such cases each year. And nearly half of these pregnancie­s end in abortions, according to the Guttmacher Institute, which supports abortion rights and surveys clinics regularly.

In 2017, the last year for which data was available, the institute concluded there were 4,460 pregnancie­s among girls younger than 15, with about 44% ending in abortion. In Ohio alone, 52 girls younger than 15 received an abortion in 2020 — an average of one every week, according to the state Department of Health.

It is unclear how often these pregnancie­s are the result of incest or rape. Children in this age group are generally below the age of sexual consent, although sexual contact between two similar-aged young teenagers is not always considered a crime. And some states allow children to marry with parental permission.

In Ohio, sex with a person younger than 13 is a first-degree felony. Abortion is now banned in the state after about six weeks of pregnancy, with no exceptions for rape or incest.

The startling age of the Ohio rape victim helped propel doubt over her story, which quickly morphed into a political firestorm after it was reported in The Indianapol­is Star. Abortion rights advocates and President Joe Biden pointed to the girl's experience as the tragic consequenc­e of abortion bans. Conservati­ves questioned whether the child existed, and even the Ohio attorney general initially said he found no evidence of such a victim.

Those questions were quelled when a 27-yearold man was charged in the child's rape, and records showed that the doctor who provided the abortion in Indiana reported it to the state.

That doctor, Caitlin Bernard, later tweeted, “My heart breaks for all survivors of sexual assault and abuse. I am so sad that our country is failing them when they need us most.”

Lauren Ralph, a public health researcher at UC San Francisco, said her research shows that adolescent­s who seek abortion tend to be firm in their choice but face barriers such as lack of transporta­tion, and parental notificati­on and consent laws, which exist in the majority of states. Minors who seek to avoid parental notificati­on, such as in the case of incest or when a parent would seek to compel pregnancy, are often required to file a police report or appear before a judge.

Those are high and sometimes impossible bars to clear, experts said, especially for individual­s without legal assistance, and young victims.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? A pro-choice activist holds a sign as scores gather at the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington in May.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE A pro-choice activist holds a sign as scores gather at the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington in May.

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