New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

If Roe falls, some fear repercussi­ons

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If the Supreme Court follows through on overturnin­g Roe v. Wade, abortion likely will be banned or greatly restricted in about half the U.S. states. But experts and advocates fear repercussi­ons could reach even further, affecting care for women who miscarry, couples seeking fertility treatments and access to some forms of contracept­ion.

Many conservati­ves insist they are only interested in curtailing abortion, and legislatio­n passed so far often has exceptions for other reproducti­ve care. But rumblings from some in the GOP have experts concerned, and laws banning abortion could also have unintended side effects.

“The rhetoric has been really increasing over the last several years,” said Mara Gandal-Powers, the director of birth control access at the National Women’s Law Center. “There’s definitely a domino effect which I think people are really starting to wake up to and see this is how far it could go.”

If Roe is overturned, as suggested by a leaked draft opinion, states will set their own abortion laws, and conservati­ve lawmakers are already passing a steady stream of deeply restrictiv­e regulation­s. Oklahoma lawmakers, for example, passed legislatio­n Thursday banning abortion at conception, the strictest in the nation.

Although that bill has some exceptions, it signals a direction that is deeply worrisome for many doctors.

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