Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

State gets first new abortion provider in decades

- By SEAN MURPHY

OKLAHOMA CITY — Despite facing some of the nation’s strictest anti-abortion laws, a Kansas-based foundation opened a new facility in Oklahoma City — the first new abortion provider in the state in 40 years.

The Trust Women South Wind Women’s Center welcomed the first patients last week to its clinic on the city’s south side. Six licensed physicians are providing services there, including abortions, OB-GYN care, family planning, adoption and emergency contracept­ion.

“If you look at this part of the country, there is a lack of access to reproducti­ve health care, and frankly a lack of access to health care across the board,” Trust Women’s founder and CEO Julie Burkhart said Friday. “It’s hard for women who want to give birth to find OB-GYNs to help them deliver their babies.”

Trust Women said Oklahoma City was the largest metropolit­an area in the United States without an abortion provider, and the state’s last clinic opened in 1974. The only other abortion providers in the state are in Norman and Tulsa.

Dr. Naresh Patel performed abortions for decades at his clinic in the Oklahoma City suburb of Warr Acres before he gave up his license last year as part of a plea deal to fraud charges alleging he sold abortion-inducing drugs to women who weren’t pregnant.

Trust Women opened its first clinic in Wichita, Kansas, in 2013 after the shooting death of abortion provider Dr. George Tiller, with whom Burkhart worked for seven years.

Burkhart said she expects the Oklahoma clinic will provide about 1,500 abortions in its first year, increasing to as many as 3,000 per year after a few years.

The news of the clinic’s opening was dishearten­ing for abortion opponents, said Lorryn McGarry, a spokeswoma­n for the anti-abortion Holy Innocents Foundation of Oklahoma.

“We are grieved to hear of the abortion industry moving into south Oklahoma City, and we will do all we can to pray for a change of heart for all involved,” McGarry said. She said the group did not have any plans to protest outside the clinic.

Oklahoma’s Republican-led Legislatur­e has passed some of the most far-reaching anti-abortion bills in the country, including a measure last year that would have made it a felony punishable by up to three years in prison to perform the procedure in Oklahoma. Republican Gov. Mary Fallin vetoed the measure, saying that while she opposes abortion, the bill was vague and would not withstand a legal challenge.

At least five anti-abortion measures approved in recent years face legal challenges, including mandatory waiting periods, requiring abortion providers to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital and bans on various methods of abortion.

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