San Francisco Chronicle

Demand for birth control rises as states ban abortion

- By Amanda Holpuch Amanda Holpuch is a New York Times writer.

Less than 48 hours after the Supreme Court said states could ban abortion, health care providers have observed an increase in interest in birth control, emergency contracept­ion and abortion pills.

Especially in the nine states that had banned the procedure by Sunday, women appeared to fear a tightening of access to family planning resources and some were stockpilin­g options. The increased demand reflected a growing concern that the court’s ruling was part of a broader effort to prevent Americans from determinin­g for themselves when and whether to become pregnant.

After Katie Thomas, 42, learned that abortion would soon become illegal in Arkansas, she purchased abortion pills for her 16-year-old daughter.

“Just the thought of something happening to my daughter, whether by force or by her choice, and there’s an unwanted pregnancy, I want to be able to handle that,” Thomas said. “If I need to handle that on my own, then I will.”

Thomas, of Little Rock, said she had already been stocking up on Plan B, the emergency contracept­ive, in case her 21year-old son and his girlfriend ever needed it. She bought even more Friday.

Abigail Carroll, founder of Abortion Access Nashville, said some young women were stockpilin­g Plan B, but she cautioned people not to clear the pharmacy shelves so those who need the pills now can obtain them.

Planned Parenthood Southeast in Atlanta received more calls than usual from people concerned that their options surroundin­g pregnancy were diminishin­g, said Lauren Frazier, a spokespers­on.

“They want to know how many birth control pills they can stockpile,” said Frazier, who said there also were questions about emergency contracept­ion, vasectomie­s and tubal ligations.

Even before the Supreme Court ruling, abortion pills were becoming more popular. In 2020, more than half of the abortions in the United States were medication abortions, according to a report by the Guttmacher Institute, which supports access to abortion. And that number is expected to rise.

Conservati­ve states that have banned medication abortion will probably find it difficult to enforce: Many patients choose the procedure because it is less expensive, less invasive and affords more privacy than surgical abortions.

Kiki Freedman, CEO of Hey Jane, a startup that provides telemedici­ne abortions to women in six states, said patient demand doubled after the court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. Traffic to its website Friday was 10 times larger than usual.

The court decision also appeared to drive interest in longacting reversible birth control methods, such as intrauteri­ne devices.

On Friday, one protester in Nashville, Maria French, said she had recently replaced an IUD out of concern that she could lose access to contracept­ion. Abortions are still legal in Tennessee, but the ruling allows the state to effectivel­y ban abortion in the next 30 days.

“I didn’t want to let mine expire and then need an abortion,” French said.

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