The Columbus Dispatch

ABORTIONS

- Ccandisky@dispatch.com @ccandisky

“Last year, 20,893 babies were killed, and yet the abortion industry praises this as a win for ‘choice.’”

Gonidakis said abortionri­ghts advocates continue “to stall our pro-life legislatio­n with frivolous litigation. Additional­ly, in Ohio currently, there are two abortion clinics that are recklessly operating outside of the bounds of our state laws. These clinics refuse to hold to basic health and safety standards, and as a result, women and their unborn children are victimized. These clinics must be closed.”

“We won’t be done until the abortion report reads ‘Zero. Nothing to report,’” Gonidakis vowed.

NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio Executive Director Kellie Copeland said the attack on abortion rights — 20 restrictio­ns on the practice have been enacted by the GOP-dominated legislatur­e and signed into law by Gov. John Kasich in the past seven years — underscore­s the importance of both the makeup of the U.S. Supreme Court and the outcome of the upcoming gubernator­ial election.

“It is fitting that this report, which shows 20,893 people need and receive abortion care in Ohio annually, was released (Friday). The outcome of the (Brett) Kavanaugh nomination and Ohio’s gubernator­ial election will determine whether abortion is criminaliz­ed in Ohio in the

next year,” Copeland said.

“If abortion is outlawed, 20,893 people would be forced to continue pregnancie­s against their will, or face criminal penalties for seeking the abortion care they need. Everyone deserves access to abortion without shame, stigma, or threat of criminal prosecutio­n.

“What happens in the next few weeks will determine what abortion access looks like in Ohio. Will this report say that no one was able to access the care they needed in Ohio?”

According to the report, 94 percent of abortions performed in the state were obtained by Ohio women. Three fourths of abortions were carried out in Ohio’s three largest urban centers: Cuyahoga, Franklin and Hamilton counties. The rest were done in Montgomery, Summit and Lucas counties.

Most abortions, 87 percent, were obtained by women ages 20 to 39. Roughly 1 in 10 women were younger than 20.

About 85 percent of women who terminated their pregnancy last year were never married, divorced, or widowed.

The report found that 86 percent of abortions, 17,868, were performed by 12 weeks of pregnancy. There were 454 abortions in 2017 involving pregnancie­s of 19 or more weeks of gestation, a decrease from the 508 reported in 2016.

In 26 procedures, women suffered complicati­ons including bleeding and incomplete abortion.

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