The Denver Post

Legal abortions fell around 6% in two months

- By Margot Sanger-katz and Claire Cain Miller

In the first two months after the Supreme Court overturned Roe vs. Wade on June 24, legal abortions nationwide declined by more than 10,000, a drop of about 6%, according to the first attempt at a nationwide count of abortions since the decision.

Thirteen states banned or severely restricted abortion during those months, mostly in the South, and legal abortions in those states fell to close to zero, according to detailed estimates made by a consortium of academics and abortion providers. Nine more states added major abortion restrictio­ns, and legal abortions in those states fell by one-third. In states with bans and restrictio­ns, there were about 22,000 fewer abortions in July and August, compared with the baseline of April, before the decision.

In states where abortion remained legal, the number of abortions increased by roughly 12,000, or 11%. That suggests that around half of women who were unable to get abortions in states with bans traveled to another state to get one.

But even with those increases, thousands of abortions appear to have been prevented by the new state laws.

Dr. Alison Norris, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at Ohio State and a co-author of the report, called the decline “a shock to the system.”

The data comes from a new organizati­on called Wecount, which is led by the Society of Family Planning, a group that supports abortion rights. It is collecting abortion data from clinics, hospitals and telemedici­ne providers across the United States. It obtained detailed abortion counts from 79% of the nation’s abortion providers, which were responsibl­e for 82% of all abortions before the court’s Dobbs decision. Researcher­s used adjustment­s based on state data and time trends to estimate the missing data.

The total decrease in abortions is likely to be lower than the cited estimate because the data does not include abortions outside the regulated U.S. health system, including so- called self-managed abortions that do not involve a medical provider. A growing number of women have been ordering abortion pills online from overseas providers or obtaining them from Mexico, where a pill that can end a pregnancy early in gestation is available over the counter as an ulcer medicine. Some women might also have turned to herbs or other methods to end pregnancie­s.

“We are celebratin­g the fact that at least 10,000 babies have a chance at life,” said Kristan Hawkins, president of the antiaborti­on group Students for Life.

“It’s a sign of course correction and of ordinary Americans finally having a say in how many lives are tragically lost to the tragedy of abortion,” she said.

Detailed informatio­n about how many abortions are performed in the United States has typically taken years to collect and publish. Wecount was created to provide more real-time data from a more comprehens­ive group of providers.

Because the Wecount data is new, it cannot compare abortion numbers from this past summer to those from the summer of 2021. Studies suggest that abortion typically follows a seasonal pattern, peaking in February and March before declining in summer months. Some of the measured decline may also reflect such trends.

The changes were calculated by comparing the number of legal abortions in the months after the decision with the number of abortions provided in April. At that time, Texas had already imposed a major abortion restrictio­n, and an abortion was difficult to get in other states, but it was still legal in all 50 states.

Wecount also found that abortions nationwide increased in the two-month period after the draft of the Supreme Court decision was leaked but before Roe was overturned, perhaps indicating that some women were seeking abortions earlier in pregnancy than they might have otherwise, or that clinics were expanding capacity in preparatio­n for bans.

Studies of previous abortion restrictio­ns have shown that although some women without access to a nearby clinic travel long distances to obtain abortions, many do not. The typical abortion patient is poor, unmarried and a mother. And the women who are most affected by bans are those who struggle with the cost and logistical challenges of interstate travel, including transporta­tion, lodging, child care and time off work.

“Some of these states where abortion was banned — Alabama, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, for example — are some of the poorest states in our country, and people would have to cross multiple state lines to get to another state where abortion remains legal,” said Kari White, who studies reproducti­ve health at the University of Texas at Austin and is on Wecount’s research committee. “Even for the people who make it to another state, this is a hardship.”

Although the Wecount report did not document where interstate abortion travelers came from, the states with large increases were located near states that banned abortions. ( Not all clinics gave this informatio­n to the group when they shared the number of abortions they had provided.) North Carolina, Kansas, Colorado and Illinois had the largest increases by percent. But some women did travel outside of their region: New York had a substantia­l increase.

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