The Commercial Appeal

Abortion access full of obstacles in the South

Long drives, air travel, exhausting waits

- Sarah Varney

Just a quick walk through the parking lot of Choices-memphis Center for Reproducti­ve Health in this legendary music mecca speaks volumes about access to abortion in the American South. Parked alongside the polished SUVS and weathered sedans with Tennessee license plates are cars from Mississipp­i, Arkansas, Florida and, on many days, Alabama, Georgia and Texas.

Choices is one of two abortion clinics in the

Memphis metro area, with a population of 1.3 million. While that might seem a surprising­ly limited number of options for women seeking a commonplac­e medical procedure, it represents a wealth of access compared with Mississipp­i, which has one abortion clinic for the entire state of 3 million people.

A tsunami of restrictiv­e abortion regulation­s enacted by Republican-led legislatur­es and governors

across the South have sent women who want or need an early end to a pregnancy fleeing in all directions, making long drives or plane trips across state lines to find safe, profession­al services. For many women, that also requires taking time off work, arranging child care and finding transporta­tion and lodging, sharply increasing the anxiety, expense and logistical complicati­ons of what is often a profoundly difficult moment in a woman’s life.

“Especially for women coming from long distances, child care is the biggest thing,” said Sue Burbano, a patient educator and financial assistance coordinato­r at Choices. “They’re coming all the way from Oxford, Mississipp­i, or Jackson. This is a three-day ordeal. I can just see how exhausted they are.”

The long drives and wait times could soon spread to other states, as the U.S. Supreme Court prepares this fall to consider a Mississipp­i ban on nearly all abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, with no allowances for cases of rape or incest. Under a law enacted in 2018 by the Republican-led legislatur­e, a woman could obtain a legal abortion only if the pregnancy threatens her life or would cause an “irreversib­le impairment of a major bodily function.”

Mississipp­i’s ban was promptly challenged by abortion rights activists and put on hold as a series of lower courts have deemed it unconstitu­tional under the Supreme Court’s landmark Roe v. Wade decision. That 1973 ruling, in concert with subsequent federal case law, forbids states from banning abortions before “fetal viability,” the point at which a fetus can survive outside the womb, or about 24 weeks into pregnancy.

Tennessee, Texas, Mississipp­i and several other states have since passed laws that would ban abortions after six weeks. That legislatio­n is also on hold pending legal review.

Groups opposed to abortion rights have cheered the court’s decision to hear the Mississipp­i case, believing the addition of Justice Amy Coney Barrett gives the court’s conservati­ve bloc enough votes to overturn Roe, or at least vastly expand the authority of individual states to restrict abortion.

But, for supporters of reproducti­ve rights, anything but a firm rejection of the Mississipp­i ban raises the specter of an even larger expanse of abortion service deserts. Abortion could quickly become illegal in 21 states – including nearly the entire South, the Dakotas and other stretches of the Midwest – should the court rescind the principle that a woman’s right to privacy protects pregnancy decisions.

“If we end up with any kind of decision that goes back to being a states’ rights issue, the entire South is in a very bad way,” said Jennifer Pepper, executive director of Choices in Memphis.

The decadeslon­g strategy by conservati­ve white evangelica­l Christians to chip away at abortion access state by state has flourished in the South, where hard-right Republican­s hold a decisive advantage in state legislatur­es and nearly all executive chambers.

Though details vary by state, the rules governing abortion providers tend to hit similar notes. Among them are requiremen­ts that women seeking abortions, even via an abortion pill, submit to invasive vaginal ultrasound­s; mandatory waiting periods of 48 hours between the initial consultati­on with a provider and the abortion; and complex rules for licensing physicians and technician­s and disposing of fetal remains.

Some states insist that abortion providers require women to listen to a fetal heartbeat; other providers have been unable to obtain admitting privileges at local hospitals.

“Everything is hard down here,” said Pepper.

The rules also have made some doctors reluctant to perform the procedure. While obstetrici­ans and gynecologi­sts in California, New York, Illinois and elsewhere routinely perform abortions at their medical offices – the same practices where they care for women through pregnancy and delivery – their peers in many Southern states who perform more than a small number of abortions a year must register their practices as abortion clinics. None has done so.

Texas offers an example of how targeted legislatio­n can disrupt a patient’s search for medical care. In 2012, 762 Texans went out of state for abortions, according to researcher­s at the University of Texas-austin. Two years later, after then-gov. Rick Perry signed into law the nation’s most restrictiv­e abortion bill, shuttering about half the state’s abortion facilities, 1,673 women left Texas to seek services. In 2016, 1,800 did so.

Similarly, in March 2020, as the coronaviru­s pandemic took hold, Gov. Greg Abbott issued an order prohibitin­g all abortions unless the woman’s life was in danger, deeming the procedure “not medically necessary.” The month before the order, about 150 Texans went out of state to seek abortion services. In March and April, with the order in effect, nearly 950 women sought care outside Texas.

There can also be an unsettling stigma in some parts of the South.

Vikki Brown, 33, who works in education in New Orleans, said she initially tried to end her pregnancy in Louisiana, calling her gynecologi­st for advice, and was told by a receptioni­st that she was “disgusted” by the request.

She sought out the lone abortion clinic operating in New Orleans but found it besieged with both protesters and patients. “I knew but didn’t understand how difficult it was to get care,” said Brown, who moved to Louisiana in 2010 from New York City. “The clinic was absolutely full. People were sitting on the floor. It was swamped.” It took her six hours to get an ultrasound, which cost $150, she said.

A friend in Washington, D.C., counseled Brown that “it didn’t have to be like that” and the pair researched clinics in the nation’s capital. She flew to Washington, where she was able to get an abortion the same day and for less than it would have cost her in New Orleans, even including airfare.

“No protesters, no waiting period,” she said. “It was a wildly different experience.”

Atlanta, a Southern transporta­tion hub, has also become a key piece in the frayed quilt of abortion care in the region.

Kwajelyn Jackson, executive director of Feminist Women’s Health Center in Atlanta, said the clinic regularly sees patients from other states, including Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky and the Carolinas.

These visits often involve long drives or flights, but rarely overnight stays because the state-mandated 24-hour waiting period can begin with a phone consultati­on rather than an in-person visit. Georgia has many of the same laws other states employ to make clinical operations more burdensome – requiremen­ts to cremate fetal remains, for instance, and that abortion providers adhere to the onerous building standards set for outpatient surgical centers – but its urban clinics so far have weath

ered the strategies.

Jackson said staffers at her clinic are aware of its role as a refuge. “We’ve had patients who were able to get a ride from Alabama, but they weren’t able to get a ride home,” she said. “We had to help them find a ride home. It is so much simpler to go 3 or 4 miles from your home and sleep in your bed at night. That is a luxury that so many of our patients can’t enjoy.”

Many women embarking on a search for a safe abortion are also confrontin­g serious expenses. State Medicaid programs in the South do not pay for abortions, and many private insurers refuse to cover the procedure. In addition, the longer a woman’s abortion is delayed, the more expensive the procedure becomes.

Becca Turchanik, a 32-year-old account manager for a robotics company in Nashville, Tennessee, drove four hours to Atlanta for her abortion in 2019. “We got an appointmen­t in Georgia because that was the only place that had appointmen­ts,” she said.

Turchanik said her employer’s health insurance would not cover abortion, and the cost of gas, food, medication­s and the procedure itself totaled $1,100. Her solution? Take on debt. “I took out a Speedy Cash loan,” she said.

Turchanik had a contracept­ive implant when she learned she was six weeks pregnant. She said she was in an unhealthy relationsh­ip with a man she discovered to be dishonest, and she decided to end her pregnancy.

“I wish I had a child, but I’m glad it wasn’t his child,” she said. “I have accomplish­ed so much since my abortion. I’m going to make my life better.”

But the emotions of the ordeal have stayed with her. She’s angry that she had to call around from state to state in a panic, and that she was unable to have her abortion close to home, with friends to comfort her.

Others turn to nonprofit groups for financial and logistical support for bus and plane tickets, hotels, child care and medical bills, including the National Abortion Federation, which operates a hotline to help women find providers. Last year, the federation received 100,000 calls from women seeking informatio­n, said its president, the Very Rev. Katherine Hancock Ragsdale.

Access Reproducti­ve Care-southeast, an abortion fund based in Atlanta, has trained over 130 volunteers who pick women up at bus stations, host them at their homes and provide child care. A study published this year in the Internatio­nal Journal of Environmen­tal Research and Public Health examined 10,000 cases of women seeking assistance from Arc-southeast: 81% were Black, 77% were uninsured or publicly insured, 77% had at least one child, and 58% identified as Christian.

“It’s amazing to see the scope of the people we work with,” said Oriaku Njoku, Arc-southeast’s co-founder. “The post-roe reality that y’all are afraid of is the lived reality for folks today in the South.”

A Texas law targets precisely this kind of help, allowing such organizati­ons or individual­s to be sued by anyone in the state for helping a woman get an abortion. It could go into effect Sept. 1, though abortion rights advocates are suing to stop the new law.

Despite the controvers­y surroundin­g abortion, Choices makes no effort to hide its mission. The modern limegreen building announces itself to its Memphis neighborho­od, and the waiting room is artfully decorated, offering services beyond abortion, including delivery of babies and midwifery.

Like other clinics in the South, Choices has to abide by state laws that many abortion supporters find onerous and intrusive, including performing transvagin­al ultrasound­s and showing the women seeking abortions images from those ultrasound­s.

Nonetheles­s, the clinic is booked full most days with patients from almost all of the eight states that touch Tennessee, a slender handsaw-shaped state that stretches across much of the Deep South. And Katy Deaton, a nurse at the facility, said few women change their minds.

“They’ve put a lot of thought into this hard decision already,” she said. “I don’t think it changes the fact that they’re getting an abortion. But it definitely makes their life harder.”

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces indepth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organizati­on providing informatio­n on health issues to the nation.

 ?? LAURA E. PARTIAN/KAISER HEALTH NEWS/TNS ?? Becca Turchanik, of Nashville, drove four hours to Atlanta for an abortion in 2019, and the emotions of the ordeal have stayed with her, she says. She’s angry that she had to call from state to state to find care, and that she couldn’t have her abortion close to home with friends nearby. “We got an appointmen­t in Georgia because that was the only place that had appointmen­ts,” she said.
LAURA E. PARTIAN/KAISER HEALTH NEWS/TNS Becca Turchanik, of Nashville, drove four hours to Atlanta for an abortion in 2019, and the emotions of the ordeal have stayed with her, she says. She’s angry that she had to call from state to state to find care, and that she couldn’t have her abortion close to home with friends nearby. “We got an appointmen­t in Georgia because that was the only place that had appointmen­ts,” she said.
 ?? SERGIO FLORES/GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? Protesters hold up signs at a protest May 29 outside the Texas state capitol in Austin, Texas. Thousands of protesters came out in response to a bill outlawing abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected was signed by Texas Governor Greg Abbott.
SERGIO FLORES/GETTY IMAGES/TNS Protesters hold up signs at a protest May 29 outside the Texas state capitol in Austin, Texas. Thousands of protesters came out in response to a bill outlawing abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected was signed by Texas Governor Greg Abbott.

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