Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Texas abortion law had biggest effect on Latinas

- By J. DAVID MCSWANE and BRITTNEY MARTIN

AUSTIN, Texas — The Texas abortion law struck down last month by the Supreme Court appears to have curtailed access to the procedure for Hispanic women far more than any other group, a Dallas Morning News analysis of state data has found.

In 2014 — the first full year since restrictio­ns on abortion doctors, pills and clinics forced facilities to close — women in Texas had 9,000 fewer abortions than the year before. That’s a 14 percent drop in abortions statewide, a much bigger drop than seen in previous years.

But among Texas’ Hispanic women, the drop in abortions was especially steep: The number dropped 18 percent from 2013 to 2014, data show.

That drop of about 4,400 abortions in one year is more than three times what Hispanic women were experienci­ng before the law took effect, an analysis of the last five available years of data shows. Most of that decline can be traced to abortion clinic closures in the Rio Grande Valley, which is predominan­tly Hispanic.

No other demographi­c came close to seeing that impact.

Before clinics closed en masse, abortions among black women were falling annually at a clip of about 5 percent, according to data published by the Texas Department of State Health Services. After the law took hold, the number of black women getting the procedure dropped by 7.5 percent in one year.

White Texas women were having about 9 percent fewer abortions each year before 2014. After the law, their abortions dropped only 6.7 percent.

“The data shows not only that the drop in the number of safe, legal abortions provided was clearly linked to the eliminatio­n of access but also, and most especially, that the eliminatio­n of clinics disproport­ionately impacted Latinas,” said Jessica Gonzalez-Rojas, executive director of the National Latina Institute for Reproducti­ve Health in New York.

“The data shows exactly why the Supreme Court struck down the provisions” of the law, she added, “because they are harmful to women and their families.”

The data were released days after the court’s 5-3 ruling that the law, which caused more than half of the state’s abortion clinics to close, created an undue burden on women seeking abortions in the state. It’s unclear how many of those clinics will be in a position to reopen, even with the law struck down.

Nearly three-quarters of Texas counties saw fewer abortions among their residents from 2013 to 2014. Women living in the Texas Panhandle, West Texas and the Valley — which saw the largest increases in driving distances to the nearest abortion facility — experience­d some of the biggest drops in abortions.

The 2013 law had several parts, including a ban on abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy that was not challenged in court. The provisions that clinics found most damaging were requiremen­ts that doctors performing abortions have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital and the clinics meet the standards of outpatient surgical centers.

In 2014 alone, the state lost 10 facilities. The number fluctuated throughout the year due to court rulings that either blocked certain restrictio­ns temporaril­y or allowed them to go into effect. For a twoweek period in October, only eight clinics were open. The state had 40 before the law was passed.

Republican lawmakers and state leaders maintain that they passed and support the law because it made the procedure safer for women. But the Supreme Court ruled that the virtual absence of any health benefit of the restrictio­ns made enforcing them unconstitu­tional.

Trisha Trigilio, a staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, alleges the state was sitting on the data because they show that women living in regions that lost clinics and women of color were unconstitu­tionally burdened by the restrictio­ns.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States