All races, ethnicities, religions, gay/straight, CIS/trans, neurodiversity affirmative. If you can rock with us: You are one of us.
Follow Onionfarms/Kenneth Erwin Engelhardt
          

Find member

Community Featured Submissions

June 17, 2025: Gas Station Heroin

June 17, 2025: Imagine having a chimpanzee pick your nose

June 17, 2025: Soyteen Liker's Blog

June 17, 2025: Sodas

June 17, 2025: Recorded phone call with our friendly neighborhood stalker from Chattanooga: Ashley Hutsell Jankowski

June 17, 2025: Britney Spears Dances on a Boat in Teeny Bikini for Latest Instagram Video

Projects/Repair Work Needed

Onion Logo (Mobile Settings): Status: Mostly Resolved(June 14, 2025)

Onion Logo setting on same line as nav settings (like Kiwifarms)Status:(Not Yet Started)

Badges project: For starting threads that go viral: Status:(Not Yet Started) - June 14, 2025

Blocking Plugin: Status:(Almost Ready -Testing on local server) - June 14, 2025

Text Issue: No difference between bolded text and regular text: Status: Fixed -June 14, 2025

United States 66,510 women couldn’t get an abortion in their home state since 2022 Abortion Bans

The Gays From LA

The Gays From LA Took My K.Flay Away
An Onion Among Onions
66,000 "individuals"? 66,000 WOMEN! Only women can have abortions:

On Tuesday, the Society of Family Planning released the second report of its #WeCount project tracking abortion care "provided by clinics, private medical offices, hospitals, and virtual-only clinics" post-Roe. The report found that over 66,000 individuals (66,510 to be exact), couldn’t get an abortion in their home state from July through December 2022—from Arizona to South Carolina to Ohio, Georgia, North Dakota, and Indiana. Breaking these numbers down further, the report specifies that of these individuals, 43,830 people were unable to receive an abortion because of a new ban in their home state, while an additional 22,680 were unable to access care because of other new restrictions.

About 35,330 are estimated to have traveled out-of-state for care, and there was notably a slight increase in abortion in certain states that absorbed more out-of-state patients. But that leaves about 31,180 people "seemingly unable to get a legal abortion at all," per FiveThirtyEight, which first received the #WeCount study. "We don’t know whether those people remained pregnant, or got an abortion some other way," the outlet said.

Also, during the six months after Roe fell, there were "32,260 fewer abortions, compared to the average monthly number of abortions" in April and May of 2022. (The report noted that they chose to use these two months as their "baseline.")

Dr. Ushma Uphadyay, #WeCount co-chair and professor at UC San Francisco’s Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health (ANSIRH), has spent years researching what happens to people after they’re unable to get the abortion care they seek as part of the landmark Turnaway Study. Per the findings, people who are denied an abortion are more likely to be pushed into poverty, remain entrapped in abusive relationships, and experience worsened mental health outcomes. As Uphadyay put it, "the impact on their lives can be devastating, economically, physically, socially and psychologically"—and when you "multiply that impact by thousands, that’s the landscape of abortion access right now."
...

As for the individuals who are able to get abortion care out-of-state post-Roe, this often comes at significant cost and frankly dehumanizing inconvenience to them: The Chicago Abortion Fund told FiveThirtyEight that the average grant provided to clients for "wraparound services" (this includes travel-related expenses, including child care and lodging) rose from $120 pre-Dobbs to $375 after post-Dobbs. The president and CEO of a group running a newly opened clinic in southern Illinois told the outlet 98.5 percent of its patients have come from states that have banned abortion.

 
Back
Top Bottom