Miami Herald

In rural West, more worries about access to abortion clinics

- BY CLAIRE RUSH

In the central Oregon city of Bend, the sole Planned Parenthood clinic serving the eastern half of the state is bracing for an influx of patients, particular­ly from neighborin­g Idaho, where a trigger law banning most abortions is expected to take effect this summer.

“We’ve already started hiring,” said Joanna Dennis-Cook, the Bend Health Center’s manager.

Across the U.S. West, many abortion providers serving rural areas were already struggling to meet demand in a vast region where staffing shortages and long travel distances are barriers to reproducti­ve services for women. Oregon alone is larger geographic­ally than the entire United Kingdom.

Some facilities serving rural communitie­s in states where abortion remains legal worry those pre-existing challenges could be further compounded by the overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade as more patients travel from states where the procedure is banned or greatly restricted.

Anticipati­ng an abortion ban in Idaho, Oregon lawmakers this year created a $15 million fund to increase access to abortion services.

Northwest Abortion Access Fund, a nonprofit that helps patients pay for travel and the procedure, has been tapped to receive the first $1 million. NWAAF has worked with the Bend clinic for 20 years, and they are collaborat­ing to meet the needs of a growing number of patients.

Dennis-Cook says her clinic is providing additional training for staff and modifying schedules “to ensure that we can accommodat­e increases in patient numbers” as more people travel farther for care.

Before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, 20% of U.S. women already had to travel at least 42 miles to reach the nearest abortion clinic, according to 2014 data analyzed by the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights and published its findings in The Lancet Public Health. Across much of eastern Oregon, that distance can jump to nearly 180 miles. As more states move to ban abortion, distances could increase even more for many patients.

Dennis-Cook said the Bend health center has been seeing patients from as far away as Texas.

Bend’s clinic has six exam rooms and receives about 600 visits per month. As it is “on the smaller side,” DennisCook said it is “limited” in what it can provide.

“We only do first-trimester procedures here,” she explained. She added the clinic can’t do procedures involving general anesthesia. “We don’t have a plethora of nurses who can do that type of work to draw from.”

Smaller abortion clinics, particular­ly ones in rural areas, have historical­ly grappled with shortages of staff and doctors who can perform the procedure. This in turn affects scheduling availabili­ty.

Amidst growing demand for travel funds, NWAAF has already exhausted its planned operating budgets for this year, according to Riley Keane, a practicals­upport lead for the group.

“Last year, we gave

away about $1 million all told,” Keane explained, referring to grants given to clinics to cover abortion costs and travel funds provided to patients. She said this year NWAAF is “on track to double that potentiall­y.”

Keane expects the $1 million from Oregon’s new abortion-access fund to make “a huge difference” for NWAAF, which normally relies on individual donors. She says this year marks the first time the group is receiving government money.

NWAAF says it is concerned about providing

travel funds to patients in states where abortion is banned or greatly restricted but added it is working with legal profession­als to assess the shifting landscape.

“They keep us up to date on things we need to be concerned about,” Keane said.

In response to laws such as those passed in Texas allowing private individual­s to sue abortion providers, the governors of Oregon, Washington and California announced a joint commitment to protect patients and doctors “against judicial and local

law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n with out-of-state investigat­ions, inquiries and arrests.”

The three Democratic governors also said they will refuse “extraditio­n of individual­s for criminal prosecutio­n” for receiving or supporting abortion services that are legal in their states.

NWAAF’s service region includes Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Alaska.

Keane says NWAAF will continue its work for now. “Currently, our legal advisers haven’t told us that we need to stop operating,” she said.

 ?? ANDREW SELSKY AP | Jan. 28, 2020 ?? The Planned Parenthood clinic in Bend, Oregon, is bracing for an influx of patients, particular­ly from neighborin­g Idaho. ‘We’ve already started hiring,’ said Joanna Dennis-Cook, the Bend Health Center’s manager.
ANDREW SELSKY AP | Jan. 28, 2020 The Planned Parenthood clinic in Bend, Oregon, is bracing for an influx of patients, particular­ly from neighborin­g Idaho. ‘We’ve already started hiring,’ said Joanna Dennis-Cook, the Bend Health Center’s manager.

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