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New York has one of the most lenient abortion laws in the country dating to 1970 and provides funding for all or most medically necessary procedures. The city is also where the country's modern-day birth control movement got its start when Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, opened a family planning clinic in Brooklyn in 1916. Experts point to a myriad number of possible factors -- social, economic, financial
-- to explain the statistics on abortions and unintended pregnancies in the city. Rachel Jones, a senior researcher at the Guttmacher Institute, said that the procedure is more accessible in the city because there are fewer laws in New York that regulate abortion, state insurance pays for the procedure and public transportation makes it easy to get to providers. "We are a geographically concentrated area," she said. "It is easy to find a clinic and it is easy to get there." But while abortion may be more accessible, low-income women especially have uneven access to family planning, such as birth control, health officials said. "We know that abortion rates are higher for poor women who have lower access to these services," said Deborah Kaplan, the city's assistant commissioner in the Bureau of Maternal, Infant and Reproductive Health. The city has worked to reduce the numbers of abortions through various public policies, including an initiative funded in 2005 to improve family planning. Kaplan said one outcome of the program had been a delay in subsequent pregnancies. The city also received a five-year grant from the Centers for Disease Control for a program in the Bronx for improving sexual education and services. Malin said social and economic barriers make it "pretty difficult" for women to get the reproductive services they need in the city
-- and that some may not even be able to afford birth control. "Many of the women we see are leading chaotic lives," she said. "In my mind, it's related to all the factors of poverty that make it more challenging and difficult to get services." The Rev. Earl Kooperkamp, a pastor at St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Harlem who supports Planned Parenthood, said he had counseled many women with unintended pregnancies and found one underlying theme. "One thing we are not doing -- we as a city, as a society, as churches
-- we aren't doing nearly the job we need to do so that our young boys and girls have the education they need," he said. He recounted how one young woman came to him astonished that she could get pregnant. "There is so much ignorance out there," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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