2 comments

RappaccinisDaughterMarch 17, 2025(Edited March 18, 2025)

The effects were most pronounced among women in certain groups — Black and Hispanic women, women without a college degree, and women living farthest from a clinic.

“It really tracks, both that women who are poorer and younger and have less education are more likely to have an unintended pregnancy, and more likely to be unable to overcome the barriers to abortion care,” said Dr. Alison Norris, an epidemiology professor at Ohio State who helps lead a nationwide abortion counting effort and was not involved in the new study.

Interesting, the article also talks about abortions increasing directly after the Dobbs decision, due to greater financial assistance and telehealth availability as a result of increased support for abortion rights after Dobbs.

However, there was an increase in birth rates, as well. The overall increase in birth rates was small, meaning most women who wanted abortions still got them, but definitely the data indicates, yes, babies were born whose mothers would have preferred to have gotten abortions.

The article also says that doctor-prescribed pills from out of state being used to abort is too recent to get good data on, so it remains to be seen what the impact of that will be.

(Edited to clarify)