Over 60 clinics in 15 U.S. states ceased abortion care post-Roe - study
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[October 06, 2022]
By Gabriella Borter
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - More than 60
abortion clinics across 15 states have stopped providing abortions since
the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, according to a
study by the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive rights advocacy
research group.
The study, published on Thursday, found that 14 states no longer have
any clinics providing abortions as of Oct. 2, which marked 100 days
since the Supreme Court gutted the 1973 ruling that had guaranteed
federal abortion rights.
In the wake of the court's June 24 decision, more than a dozen states
have enforced near-total abortion bans. All abortion clinics in those
states - Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and West
Virginia - have stopped providing abortion services.
Wisconsin's providers have also ceased abortion services amid legal
uncertainty over an 1849 state ban that took effect after the Supreme
Court overturned Roe.
In Georgia, where abortion is banned after six weeks, one abortion
provider has closed down, the study found.
Nearly a third of American women of reproductive age now live in these
15 states where abortion is unavailable or severely restricted,
according to Guttmacher.
Texas and Louisiana had the most closures, with 12 of 23 clinics closing
in Texas and all three of Louisiana's clinics shutting down.
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A recovery room sits empty at Alamo
Women's Reproductive Services, an abortion clinic that closed its
doors following the overturn of Roe v. Wade and plans to reopen in
New Mexico and Illinois, in San Antonio, Texas, August 16, 2022.
REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare
Some clinics in the 15 states
surveyed by Guttmacher have continued to provide other gynecological
services. But restrictive state laws have forced 26 clinics to close
for good, limiting access to abortion and other healthcare services,
said Rachel Jones, Guttmacher's principal research scientist.
"If they have to close their doors, that means that community loses
access not just to abortion but to other types of healthcare as
well," Jones said.
Legal battles over state abortion restrictions will determine the
fate of clinics in several other Republican-led states that have
tried to ban the procedure, including Arizona and Indiana. Jones
said more clinics are likely to cease abortion services or shut down
in the coming weeks.
The Nov. 8 midterm election results will also determine the future
of abortion access in states like Michigan and Kentucky, where
voters will be asked to determine if the state constitution protects
abortion rights. Abortion is expected to be a prominent issue in the
elections to decide control of Congress, and other key U.S. races.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and
Richard Chang)
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