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Wikipedia

Abortion in the United States

The United States is a global outlier among developed countries on the issue of abortion, with the subject being divisible in American politics and culture wars to an extent not found elsewhere. There are widely different abortion laws depending on state.[1]

Status of elective abortion in the United States
  Illegal with exceptions[a]
  Legal but no providers
  Legal before cardiac-cell activity[b]
  Legal through 12th week LMP*
  Legal through 15th week LMP* (1st trimester)
  Legal through 18th week LMP*
  Legal through 20th week LMP*
  Legal through 22nd week LMP* (5 months)
  Legal before fetal viability[c]
  Legal through 24th week LMP* (5½ months)
  Legal through second trimester[d]
  Legal at any stage
*LMP is the time since the last menstrual period began.
This color-coded map illustrates the current legal status of elective-specific abortion procedures in each of the individual states, U.S. territories, and federal district.[a] A colored border indicates a more stringent restriction or ban that is blocked by legal injunction or trigger provision (as of September 18, 2023).

From the American Revolution to the mid-19th century, abortion was legal in every state under the common law until quickening, not an issue of significant controversy, and most Americans held to the traditional Protestant Christian belief that personhood began at ensoulment rather than conception.[2][3][4][5] Connecticut was the first state to regulate abortion in 1821; it outlawed abortion after quickening and forbade the use of poisons to induce one post-quickening. Many states subsequently passed various laws on abortion until the Supreme Court of the United States decisions of Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton decriminalized abortion nationwide in 1973. The Roe decision imposed a federally mandated uniform framework for state legislation on the subject. It also established a minimal period during which abortion is legal, with more or fewer restrictions throughout the pregnancy. That basic framework, modified in Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992), remained nominally in place, although the effective availability of abortion varied significantly from state to state, as many counties had no abortion providers.[6] Casey held that a law could not place legal restrictions imposing an undue burden for "the purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus".[7] Evangelical Christians were initially overwhelmingly either supportive or indifferent to Roe — citing what they saw as a lack of biblical condemnation on the matter, its perceived affirmation of religious liberty, and furthering of non-intrusive government — but by the 1980s anti-abortion Catholics to overturn the decision.[8][9] In December 2021, the FDA legalized telemedicine provision of medication abortion pills with delivery by mail, but many states have laws which restrict this option. In 2022, Roe and Casey were overturned in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, ending protection of abortion rights by the United States Constitution and allowing individual states to regulate any aspect of abortion not preempted by federal law.[10] Since 1976, the Republican Party has generally sought to restrict abortion access based on the stage of pregnancy or to criminalize abortion, whereas the Democratic Party has generally defended access to abortion and has made contraception easier to obtain.[11]

The abortion-rights movement advocates for patient choice and bodily autonomy, while the anti-abortion movement maintains that the fetus has a right to live. Historically framed as a debate between the pro-choice and pro-life labels, most Americans agree with some positions of each side.[12] Support for abortion gradually increased in the U.S. beginning in the early 1970s,[13] and stabilized during the 2010s.[14][15] The abortion rate has continuously declined from a peak in 1980 of 30 per 1,000 women of childbearing age (15–44) to 11.3 by 2018.[16] In 2018, 78% of abortions were performed at 9 weeks or less gestation, and 92% of abortions were performed at 13 weeks or less gestation.[16] By 2020, medication abortions accounted for more than 50% of all abortions.[17] Almost 25% of women will have had an abortion by age 45, with 20% of 30 year olds having had one.[18] In 2019, 60% of women who had abortions were already mothers, and 50% already had two or more children.[19][20] Increased access to birth control has been statistically linked to reductions in the abortion rate.[21][22][23]

As of 2023, California, Michigan, and Vermont are the only U.S. states to have explicit rights to abortion in their state constitutions. Other states have implicit rights to abortion subject to state judicial review, such as Kansas and Montana, or simply protect it via state law such as Colorado. The state constitutions of Alabama, Louisiana, Tennessee, and West Virginia explicitly contain no right to an abortion.

Terminology

The abortion debate most commonly relates to the "induced abortion" of a pregnancy, which is also how the term is used in a legal sense.[nb 1] Some also use the term "elective abortion", which is used in relation to a claim to an unrestricted right of a woman to an abortion, whether or not she chooses to have one. The term elective abortion or voluntary abortion describes the interruption of pregnancy before viability at the request of the woman but not for medical reasons.[27]

In medical parlance, "abortion" can refer to either miscarriage or abortion until the fetus is viable. After viability, doctors call an abortion a "termination of pregnancy".

History

Early history and rise of anti-abortion legislation

Abortion has existed in North America since the European colonization of the Americas,[28] was a fairly common practice, and was not always illegal or controversial.[4][2] On the other hand, James Mohr wrote that even though pre-quickening abortion was legal in the first 3 decades of the 19th century, only 1 in 25 to 1 in 30 pregnancies ended in abortion. By the 1850s and 1860s this number had increased to 1 in 5 or 1 in 6.[29][5] Quickening indicates the start of fetal movements, usually felt 14–26 weeks after conception, or between the fourth and sixth month.[4][30][31] Its determination was generally at the discretion of the pregnant woman,[32] but the rules were unstated or unclear in written statues.[33] When the United States became independent, most U.S. states continued to apply English common law to abortion.[34] In the mid-1700s, Founding Father Benjamin Franklin amended a general textbook from Britain to include a manual with instructions for early pregnancy abortion methods.[35][36] In 1728, Franklin condemned publisher Samuel Keimer for publishing an article on abortion. According to biographer Walter Isaacson, Franklin did not have a strong view on the issue.[37][38]

In 1716 New York passed an ordinance prohibiting midwifes from providing abortion.[38] William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765) states that life "begins in contemplation of law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother's womb." This view was shared by James Wilson. As for legal penalties, Blackstone wrote that they applied only "if a woman is quick with child, and by a potion, or otherwise, killeth it in her womb."[39] Legal scholar Sheldon Gelman has argued that the U.S. Constitution (1789) imported the tenets of the English Magna Carta (1215), which includes the basis of the right to bodily integrity including abortion.[40] This notion has been disputed since during the 13th century England took steps to formally criminalize abortion.[41] Founding Father and Second President of the United States John Adams praised the Spartan lawgiver Lycurgus for refusing his sister-in-law from having an abortion even though it prevented him from assuming power.[38]

Within the context of a sex scandal,[33] Connecticut was the first state to regulate abortion in 1821; it outlawed abortion after quickening and forbade the use of poisons to induce one post-quickening.[42] In 1829, New York made post-quickening abortions a felony and pre-quickening abortions a misdemeanor.[43] This was followed by 10 of the 26 states creating similar restrictions within the next few decades,[44] in particular by the 1860s and 1870s.[42] The first laws related to abortion were made to protect women from real or perceived risks, and those more restrictive penalized only the provider.[32] According to several legal scholars, some of the early anti-abortion laws punished not only the doctor or abortionist but also the woman who hired them,[45] and while women could be criminally tried for a self-induced abortion,[45] they were rarely prosecuted in general;[42] dating back to Edward Coke in 1648, whether abortion was performed before or after quickening determined if it was a crime.[45]

A number of other factors likely played a role in the rise of anti-abortion laws. As in Europe, abortion techniques advanced starting in the 17th century, and the conservatism of most in the medical profession with regards to sexual matters prevented the wide expansion of abortion techniques.[42][46] Physicians, who were the leading advocates of abortion criminalization laws, appear to have been motivated at least in part by advances in medical knowledge. Science had discovered that fertilization inaugurated a more or less continuous process of development, which produced a new human being. Quickening was found to be not more or less crucial in the process of gestation than any other step. Many physicians concluded that if society considered it unjustifiable to terminate pregnancy after the fetus had quickened, and if quickening was a relatively unimportant step in the gestation process, then it was just as wrong to terminate a pregnancy before quickening as after quickening.[47] Ideologically, the Hippocratic Oath and the medical mentality of that age to defend the sanctity of life as an absolute played a significant role in molding opinions about abortion.[47] Doctors were also influenced by practical reasons to advocate anti-abortion laws. For one, abortion providers tended to be untrained and not members of medical societies. In an age where the leading doctors in the nation were attempting to standardize the medical profession, these unlicensed were considered a nuisance to public health.[48] The more formalized medical profession disliked the unlicensed because they were competition, often at a cheaper cost, and many of them were women[42] (midwives).

Despite campaigns to end the practice of abortion, abortifacient advertising was highly effective and abortion was commonly practiced, with the help of a midwife or other women,[2] in the mid-19th century,[28][49] although they were not always safe.[31] While the precise abortion rate was not known, James Mohr's 1978 book Abortion in America documented multiple recorded estimates by 19th-century physicians,[42] which suggested that between around 15% and 35% of all pregnancies ended in abortion during that period.[50] This era also saw a marked shift in the people who were obtaining abortions. Before the start of the 19th century, most abortions were sought by unmarried women, who had become pregnant out of wedlock and for which there was much less compassion compared to married women who got an abortion; many of them were wealthy and paid well.[42] Out of 54 abortion cases published in American medical journals between 1839 and 1880, over half were sought by married women, and well over 60% of the married women already had at least one child.[51]

The sense that married women were now frequently obtaining abortions worried many conservative physicians, who were almost exclusively men. In the Reconstruction era, much of the blame was placed on the burgeoning women's rights movement. Though the medical profession expressed hostility toward feminism, many feminists of the era were also opposed to abortion.[42][52][53] In The Revolution, a newspaper operated by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, an 1869 opinion piece was published arguing that instead of merely attempting to pass a law against abortion, the root cause must also be addressed.[53][54] The writer stated that simply passing an anti-abortion law would be "only mowing off the top of the noxious weed, while the root remains. ... No matter what the motive, love of ease, or a desire to save from suffering the unborn innocent, the woman is awfully guilty who commits the deed. It will burden her conscience in life, it will burden her soul in death; But oh! thrice guilty is he who drove her to the desperation which impelled her to the crime."[55] To many feminists of this era, abortion was regarded as an undesirable necessity forced upon women by thoughtless men.[56] The free love wing of the feminist movement refused to advocate for abortion and treated the practice as an example of the hideous extremes to which modern marriage was driving women.[57] Marital rape and the seduction of unmarried women were societal ills, which feminists believed caused the need to abort, as men did not respect women's right to abstinence.[57] Feminist opposition to abortion was much less prevalent by the 20th century, and it was feminists and physicians who came to question anti-abortion laws and raise public interest in the 1960s.[42]

 
Abortion laws in the U.S. before Roe:[58]
  Fully illegal (1 state).
  Legal in cases of risk to woman's life (29 states).
  Legal in cases of rape (1 state).
  Legal in cases of risk to woman's health (2 states).
  Legal in cases of risk to woman's health, rape or incest, or likely damaged fetus (13 states).
  Legal on request (4 states).

Physicians, one of the most famous and consequential being Horatio Storer, remained the loudest voice in the anti-abortion debate, and they carried their agenda to state legislatures around the country, advocating not only anti-abortion laws but also laws against birth control on racist and pseudoscientific grounds;[59] religious groups were not particularly active within this movement,[60] which presaged the modern debate over women's body rights.[61] Though many of these laws indicated the woman as a co-criminal, she was rarely prosecuted.[42] A campaign was launched against the movement and the use and availability of contraceptives. Criminalization of abortion accelerated from the late 1860s through the efforts of concerned legislators, doctors, and the American Medical Association influenced by Storer,[62][63] and were facilitated by the press.[42] In 1873, Anthony Comstock created the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice, an institution dedicated to supervising the morality of the public. Later that year, Comstock successfully influenced the United States Congress to pass the Comstock Law, which made it illegal to deliver through the U.S. mail any "obscene, lewd, or lascivious" material. It also prohibited producing or publishing information pertaining to the procurement of abortion, birth control, and venereal disease, including to medical students.[64] The production, publication, importation, and distribution of such materials was suppressed under the Comstock Law as being obscene, and similar prohibitions were passed by 24 of the 37 states.[65]

In 1900, abortion was normally a felony in every state. Some states included provisions allowing for abortion in limited circumstances, generally to protect the woman's health or to terminate pregnancies arising from rape or incest.[66] Most Americans did not view abortion as a crime, and abortions continued to occur and became increasingly available.[67] The American Birth Control League was founded by Margaret Sanger in 1921; it would become Planned Parenthood Federation of America in 1942.[68][69] By the 1930s, licensed physicians performed an estimated 800,000 abortions a year.[70]

Sherri Finkbine

In the early 1960s, a controversy centered around children's television host Sherri Finkbine that helped bring abortion and abortion law more directly into the American public eye. Living in the area of Phoenix, Arizona, Finkbine had had four healthy children; during her pregnancy with her fifth child, she discovered the child might have severe deformities when born.[71] This was likely because Finkbine had been taking sleeping pills that she was unaware contained thalidomide, a drug that increases the risk of fetal deformities during pregnancy.[72] Though Finkbine wanted an abortion, the abortion laws of Arizona only allowed abortions if a pregnancy posed a threat to the woman's life. The situation gained public attention after Finkbine shared the story with a reporter from The Arizona Republic, who disclosed her identity in spite of her requests for anonymity. On August 18, 1962, Finkbine traveled to Sweden to obtain a legal abortion, where it was confirmed that the fetus had severe deformities.[73]

Finkbine's story marked a turning point for women's reproductive rights and abortion law in the United States. Still, Finkbine was only able to get an abortion because she could afford to travel overseas for it,[74] highlighting an inequality in abortion rights persisting to this day whereby many women cannot afford or otherwise do not have the resources to obtain a legal abortion; in such cases, women may turn to illegal abortion.[75][76]

Pre-Roe precedents

In 1964, Gerri Santoro of Connecticut died trying to obtain an illegal abortion, and her photo became the symbol of an abortion-rights movement. Some women's rights activist groups developed their own skills to provide abortions to women who could not obtain them elsewhere. As an example, in Chicago, a group known as "Jane" operated a floating abortion clinic throughout much of the 1960s. Women seeking the procedure would call a designated number and be given instructions on how to find "Jane".[77]

In 1965, the U.S. Supreme Court case Griswold v. Connecticut struck down one of the remaining contraception Comstock laws in Connecticut and Massachusetts.[78] However, Griswold only applied to marital relationships, allowing married couples to buy and use contraceptives without government restriction. It took until 1972, with Eisenstadt v. Baird, to extend the precedent of Griswold to unmarried persons as well.[79] Following the Griswold case, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) issued a medical bulletin accepting a recommendation from six years earlier that clarified that "conception is the implantation of a fertilized ovum",[80] and consequently birth control methods that prevented implantation became classified as contraceptives, not abortifacients.

In 1967, Colorado became the first state to decriminalize abortion in cases of rape, incest, or in which pregnancy would lead to permanent physical disability of the woman. Similar laws were passed in California, Oregon, and North Carolina. In 1970, Hawaii became the first state to legalize abortions on the request of the woman,[81] and New York repealed its 1830 law and allowed abortions up to the 24th week of pregnancy. Similar laws were soon passed in Alaska and Washington. In 1970, Washington held a referendum on legalizing early pregnancy abortions, becoming the first state to legalize abortion through a vote of the people.[82] A law in Washington, D.C., which allowed abortion to protect the life or health of the woman, was challenged in the Supreme Court in 1971 in United States v. Vuitch. The court upheld the law, deeming that "health" meant "psychological and physical well-being", essentially allowing abortion in Washington, D.C. By the end of 1972, 13 states had a law similar to that of Colorado, while Mississippi allowed abortion in cases of rape or incest only and Alabama and Massachusetts allowed abortions only in cases where the woman's physical health was endangered. In order to obtain abortions during this period, women would often travel from a state where abortion was illegal to one where it was legal. The legal position prior to Roe v. Wade was that abortion was illegal in 30 states and legal under certain circumstances in 20 states.[83]

In the late 1960s, a number of organizations were formed to mobilize opinion both against and for the legalization of abortion. In 1966, the National Conference of Catholic Bishops assigned Monsignor James T. McHugh to document efforts to reform abortion laws, and anti-abortion groups began forming in various states in 1967. In 1968, McHugh led an advisory group which became the National Right to Life Committee.[84][85] The forerunner of the NARAL Pro-Choice America was formed in 1969 to oppose restrictions on abortion and expand access to abortion.[86] Following Roe v. Wade, in late 1973, NARAL became the National Abortion Rights Action League.

Roe v. Wade

 
The United States Supreme Court membership in 1973

Prior to Roe v. Wade, 30 states prohibited abortion without exception, 16 states banned abortion except in certain special circumstances (e.g. rape, incest, and health threat to mother), 3 states allowed residents to obtain abortions, and New York allowed abortions generally.[87] Early that year, on January 22, 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade invalidated all of these laws, and set guidelines for the availability of abortion. The decision returned abortion to its liberalized pre-1820 status.[42] Roe established that the right of privacy of a woman to obtain an abortion "must be considered against important state interests in regulation".[88] Roe also established a trimester framework, defined as the end of the first pregnancy trimester (12 weeks), as the threshold for state interest, such that states were prohibited from banning abortion in the first trimester but allowed to impose increasing restrictions or outright bans later in pregnancy.[88]

In deciding Roe v. Wade, the Court ruled that a Texas statute forbidding abortion except when necessary to save the life of the mother was unconstitutional. The Court arrived at its decision by concluding that the issue of abortion and abortion rights falls under the right of privacy in the United States (e.g. federal constitutionally-protected right), in the sense of the right of a person not to be encroached by the state. In its opinion, it listed several landmark cases where the court had previously found a right to privacy implied by the Constitution. The Court did not recognize a right to abortion in all cases, saying: "State regulation protective of fetal life after viability thus has both logical and biological justifications. If the State is interested in protecting fetal life after viability, it may go so far as to proscribe abortion during that period, except when it is necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother."[89]

The Court held that a right to privacy existed and included the right to have an abortion. The court found that a mother had a right to abortion until viability, a point to be determined by the abortion doctor. After viability a woman can obtain an abortion for health reasons, which the Court defined broadly to include psychological well-being. A central issue in the Roe case and in the wider abortion debate in general is whether human life or personhood begins at conception, birth, or at some point in between. The Court declined to make an attempt at resolving this issue, writing: "We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man's knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer." Instead, it chose to point out that historically, under English and American common law and statutes, "the unborn have never been recognized ... as persons in the whole sense", and thus the fetuses are not legally entitled to the protection afforded by the right to life specifically enumerated in the Fourteenth Amendment. Rather than asserting that human life begins at any specific point, the Court declared that the state has a "compelling interest" in protecting "potential life" at the point of viability.[89]

Doe v. Bolton

Under Roe v. Wade, state governments may not prohibit late terminations of pregnancy when "necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother", even if it would cause the demise of a viable fetus.[90] This rule was clarified by the 1973 judicial decision Doe v. Bolton, which specifies "that the medical judgment may be exercised in the light of all factors—physical, emotional, psychological, familial, and the woman's age—relevant to the well-being of the patient".[91][92][93] It is by this provision for the mother's mental health that women in the U.S. legally choose abortion after viability when screenings reveal abnormalities that do not cause a baby to die shortly after birth.[94][95][96][97]

Later judicial decisions

In the 1992 case of Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the Court abandoned Roe's strict trimester framework but maintained its central holding that women have a right to choose to have an abortion before viability.[98] Roe had held that statutes regulating abortion must be subject to "strict scrutiny"—the traditional Supreme Court test for impositions upon fundamental Constitutional rights. Casey instead adopted the lower, undue burden standard for evaluating state abortion restrictions,[98] but re-emphasized the right to abortion as grounded in the general sense of liberty and privacy protected under the constitution: "Constitutional protection of the woman's decision to terminate her pregnancy derives from the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. It declares that no state shall "deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." The controlling word in the cases before us is 'liberty'."[99]

The Supreme Court continues to make decisions on this subject. On April 18, 2007, it issued a ruling in the case of Gonzales v. Carhart, involving a federal law entitled the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003 which President George W. Bush had signed into law. The law banned intact dilation and extraction, which opponents of abortion rights referred to as "partial-birth abortion", and stipulated that anyone breaking the law would get a prison sentence up to 2.5 years. The United States Supreme Court upheld the 2003 ban by a narrow majority of 5–4, marking the first time the Court has allowed a ban on any type of abortion since 1973. The opinion, which came from justice Anthony Kennedy, was joined by Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, and the two recent appointees, Samuel Alito and Chief Justice John Roberts.

In the case of Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt, the Supreme Court in a 5–3 decision on June 27, 2016, swept away forms of state restrictions on the way abortion clinics can function. The Texas legislature enacted in 2013 restrictions on the delivery of abortions services that, it was argued by its opponents, created an undue burden for women seeking an abortion by requiring abortion doctors to have difficult-to-obtain "admitting privileges" at a local hospital and by requiring clinics to have costly hospital-grade facilities. The Court supported this argument and struck down these two provisions "facially" from the law at issue—that is, the very words of the provisions were invalid, no matter how they might be applied in any practical situation. According to the Supreme Court, the task of judging whether a law puts an unconstitutional burden on a woman's right to abortion belongs with the courts, and not the legislatures.[100]

The Supreme Court ruled similarly in June Medical Services, LLC v. Russo on June 29, 2020, in a 5–4 decision that a Louisiana state law, modeled after the Texas law at the center of Whole Woman's Health, was unconstitutional.[101] Like Texas' law, the Louisiana law required certain measures for abortion clinics that, if having gone into effect, would have closed five of the six clinics in the state. The case in Louisiana was put on hold pending the result of Whole Woman's Health, and was retried based on the Supreme Court's decision. While the District Court ruled the law unconstitutional, the Fifth Circuit found that unlike the Texas law, the burden of the Louisiana law passed the tests outlined in Whole Woman's Health, and thus the law was constitutional. The Supreme Court issued an order to suspend enforcement of the law pending further review, and agreed to hear the case in full in October 2019. It was the first abortion-related case to be heard by President Donald Trump's appointees to the Court, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh.[102] The Supreme Court found the Louisiana law unconstitutional for the same reasons as the Texas one, reversing the Fifth Circuit. The judgment was supported by Chief Justice John Roberts who had dissented on Whole Woman's Health but joined in judgment as to upholding the court's respect for the past judgment in that case.[101]

Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization

 
The composition of the Supreme Court at the time of Dobbs

The Supreme Court granted certiorari to Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization in May 2021, a case that challenges the impact of Roe v. Wade in blocking enforcement of a 2018 Mississippi law (the Gestational Age Act) that had banned any abortions after the first 15 weeks.[103] Oral arguments to Dobbs were held in December 2021, and a decision was expected by the end of the 2021–22 Supreme Court term. On September 1, 2021, Texas passed the Texas Heartbeat Act, one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the nation, banning most procedures after six weeks.[104] On May 2, 2022, a leaked draft majority opinion for Dobbs, written by Samuel Alito, set to overturn Roe was reported by Politico.[105]

On June 24, 2022, the Supreme Court overruled both Roe and Planned Parenthood v. Casey in the Dobbs case on originalist grounds that a right to abortion cannot be found in the U.S. Constitution. John Roberts, the Chief Justice of the United States, concurred in the decision to uphold the law at question as constitutional, by a 6–3 vote, and did not support overruling both Roe and Casey.[106][107] This enabled trigger laws, which had been passed in 13 states,[108][109][110] to effectively ban abortions in those states.[111][112]

Abortion-related initiatives were placed on the 2022 ballot in six states, the most in a single year. California, Michigan, and Vermont enshrined the right to an abortion in their state constitutions, while Kansas, Kentucky, and Montana rejected restrictions on abortion.[113] During the August primaries, nearly 60 percent of Kansas voters rejected their state's "Value Them Both Amendment", which would have removed the right to an abortion from the Kansas Constitution.[113] Voters in Ohio defeated a referendum in August 2023 intended to make changes to the state's constitution more difficult, ahead of an abortion rights referendum scheduled for the November 2023 general election.[114]

Travel to Mexico

 
Availability of abortion in Mexican states.
  Illegal but providers are not prosecuted
  Legal during first 15 weeks LMP (first 12 weeks of pregnancy)
  Legal for economic reasons if mother already has 3 children

In the wake of state abortion bans and restrictions in the United States, Americans have started traveling to Mexico for abortions, and Mexico has expressed a willingness to help.[115][116]

At least partly due to a unanimous 2021 Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation decision that penalties for abortion violate women's rights, abortion-providers are not prosecuted even in states where abortion remains illegal under state law; there are also legal exemptions for rape and medical reasons, and a police report is not required for a rape exemption. Providers openly treat American travelers in several states where abortion remains technically illegal, such as Nuevo Leon, which neighbors Texas. Following the Supreme Court ruling, abortion is being gradually legalized at the state level, and as of 2022 is legal during the first trimester (before the 13th week after implantation) in eleven states and Mexico City.[117][118] In an additional two states, abortion is legal for economic reasons if a woman already has 3 children; this is during the first trimester for one (Michoacan) and with no set limit for the other (Yucatán).[119]

Medical abortion

Medical abortion via mifepristone and misoprostol was approved for abortion in the United States by the FDA in September 2000.[120] As of 2007, it was legal and available in all 50 states, Washington, D.C., Guam, and Puerto Rico.[121] It was a prescription drug, and required that it could only be distributed to the public through specially qualified licensed physicians.[122]

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic on December 16, 2021, in light of the difficulties in accessing in-person healthcare services, the FDA approved the distribution of mifepristone via mail.[123] In states where abortion is banned or restricted, women are able to obtain pills through ordering from overseas online pharmacies, purchasing from pharmacies in Mexico, from services such as Aid Access,[124] or through a network of U.S.-Mexico border organizations that includes Red Necesito Abortar, Las Libres [es], and Marea Verde.[125][126][127][128][129]

In January 2023, the U.S. Department of Justice stated that USPS mailing of pills for medication abortion, even into states where abortion services are restricted, does not violate federal law.[130] In 2023, online access to abortion medication by mail delivered by the US Postal Service is currently available to citizens of all states.[131]

In light of the Dobbs decision, the Alliance Defending Freedom launched a lawsuit in November 2022 in the Northern District of Texas under Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk to seek to overturn the FDA's original approval of mifepristone. The Alliance argued that the FDA had ignored some studies that showed the medication to have harmful side effects, while the current federal administration under Joe Biden, the manufacturers of the drugs, and several doctors vouched for the safety of the drugs and the lack of standing in the plaintiff's case. Despite this, Judge Kacsmaryk ruled for the Alliance on April 7, 2023, reversing the FDA's approval and banning mifepristone across the United States after seven days.[132] A district judge in a separate lawsuit, Thomas O. Rice of the Eastern District of Washington, ruled that the FDA should not reverse access to mifepristone in 16 states.[133] Kacsmaryk's ruling was partially reversed by a panel on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, leaving mifepristone on the market but reverting efforts made by the FDA to liberalize its use over seven years.[134] The case is expected to be ruled on by the Supreme Court.[133] Mifepristone is used for abortion in the tenth week of pregnancy. With the fact reported by the Guttmacher Institute, that more than half of abortion in the US is done with drugs,[135] the judge's decision will have a strong consequence.[136]

Legal status

Federal legislation

Since 1995, led by congressional Republicans, the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate have moved several times to pass measures banning the procedure of intact dilation and extraction, commonly known as partial birth abortion. Such measures passed twice by wide margins, but President Bill Clinton vetoed those bills in April 1996 and October 1997 on the grounds that they did not include health exceptions. Congressional supporters of the bill argue that a health exception would render the bill unenforceable, since the Doe v. Bolton decision defined "health" in vague terms, justifying any motive for obtaining an abortion. Congress was unsuccessful with subsequent attempts to override the vetoes.

The Born-Alive Infants Protection Act (BAIPA) was enacted August 5, 2002, by an Act of Congress and signed into law by George W. Bush. It asserts the human rights of infants born after a failed attempt to induce abortion. A "born-alive infant" is specified as a "person, human being, child, individual". "Born alive" is defined as the complete expulsion of an infant at any stage of development that has a heartbeat, pulsation of the umbilical cord, breath, or voluntary muscle movement, no matter if the umbilical cord has been cut or if the expulsion of the infant was natural, induced labor, cesarean section, or induced abortion. The Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act is a proposed piece of legislation that would result in criminal penalties for any practitioner who denies a born-alive infant care.

On October 2, 2003, with a vote of 281–142, the House approved the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act to ban intact dilation and extraction, with an exemption in cases of fatal threats to the woman. Through this legislation, a doctor could face up to two years in prison and civil lawsuits for performing such a procedure. A woman undergoing the procedure could not be prosecuted under the measure. On October 21, 2003, the United States Senate passed the bill by a vote of 64–34, with a number of Democrats joining in support. The bill was signed by President George W. Bush on November 5, 2003, but a federal judge blocked its enforcement in several states just a few hours after it became public law. The Supreme Court upheld the nationwide ban on the procedure in the case Gonzales v. Carhart on April 18, 2007, signaling a substantial change in the Court's approach to abortion law.[137] The 5–4 ruling said the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act does not conflict with previous decisions regarding abortion.

The judicial interpretation of the U.S. Constitution regarding abortion, following the Supreme Court of the United States's 1973 landmark decision in Roe v. Wade, and subsequent companion decisions, is that abortion is legal but may be restricted by the states to varying degrees. States have passed laws to restrict late-term abortions, require parental notification for minors, and mandate the disclosure of abortion risk information to patients prior to the procedure.[138]

The official report of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, issued in 1983 after extensive hearings on the Human Life Amendment (proposed by Senators Orrin Hatch and Thomas Eagleton), stated: "Thus, the [Judiciary] Committee observes that no significant legal barriers of any kind whatsoever exist today in the United States for a mother to obtain an abortion for any reason during any stage of her pregnancy."[139]

One aspect of the legal abortion regime now in place has been determining when the fetus is "viable" outside the womb as a measure of when the "life" of the fetus is its own (and therefore subject to being protected by the state). In the majority opinion delivered by the court in Roe v. Wade, viability was defined as "potentially able to live outside the mother's womb, albeit with artificial aid. Viability is usually placed at about seven months (28 weeks) but may occur earlier, even at 24 weeks". When the court ruled in 1973, the then-current medical technology suggested that viability could occur as early as 24 weeks. Advances over the past three decades allow survival of some babies born at 22 weeks.[140]

As of 2006, the youngest child to survive a premature birth in the United States was a girl born at Kapiolani Medical Center in Honolulu, Hawaii, at 21 weeks and 3 days gestation.[141] Because of the split between federal and state law, legal access to abortion continues to vary by state. Geographic availability varies dramatically, with 87 percent of U.S. counties having no abortion provider.[142] Moreover, due to the Hyde Amendment, many Medicaid state programs do not cover abortions; as of 2022, 17 states including California, Illinois, and New York offer or require such coverage.[143]

The legality of abortion is frequently a major issue in nomination battles for the U.S. Supreme Court. Nominees typically remain silent on the issue during their hearings, as the issue may come before them as judges.[144]

The Unborn Victims of Violence Act, commonly known as Laci and Conner's Law, was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Bush on April 1, 2004, allowing two charges to be filed against someone who kills a pregnant mother (one for the mother and one for the fetus). It specifically bans charges against the mother and/or doctor relating to abortion procedures. Nevertheless, it has generated much controversy among pro-abortion rights advocates who view it as a potential step in the direction of banning abortion.

In 2021, the Women's Health Protection Act, which would codify abortion rights into federal law, was introduced by Judy Chu.[145] The bill passed the U.S. House of Representatives but was rejected by the U.S. Senate.[146]

After the Dobbs decision, Merrick Garland, the U.S. Attorney General, asserted that under federal law, states do not have the right to restrict access to FDA-approved abortion pills, but Louisiana passed a law to ban mailing them.[147] Legal experts cited as a potentially persuasive precedent the 2014 district decision in Zogenix v. Patrick, in which the court ruled that under the doctrine of federal preemption, Massachusetts could not ban the opioid Zohydro because it had been approved by the FDA.[148][149]

On September 13, 2022, Republican senator Lindsey Graham introduced legislation that would ban abortion nationwide after 15 weeks of pregnancy with exceptions for rape, incest, and the life of the patient, named the Protecting Pain-Capable Unborn Children from Late-Term Abortions Act.[150][151][152] Graham had previously introduced the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, which set the period at 20 weeks.[153]

Penalties by state

Currently, 13 states have criminal penalties for performing abortions, regardless of gestational age.[154] The penalties in states that have made abortion illegal vary, as outlined below.

This chart lists only the penalties authorized specifically by the state laws which explicitly restrict (or ban) abortions. The chart does not address the risk of being prosecuted for violating any other law because of the abortion. The jurisprudence surrounding this question - whether laws such as "fetal-personhood laws",[155] or laws originally intended to protect pregnant women and their pregnancies from external aggressors, can now also be used to prosecute women who obtain abortions, or who terminate their own pregnancies, deliberately or unintentionally[156] – is unsettled, variable, and, in some states, unclear.[157] States with criminal penalties that are blocked by a court, have yet to take effect, or are unenforced are denoted by a grey background.

State Sentence
Abortion providers Patients getting abortions
  Alabama Performing an abortion is a Class A felony punishable by imprisonment for at least 10 years up to 99 years or life. Attempting to perform an abortion is a Class C felony punishable by imprisonment for at least 1 year and 1 day up to 10 years.[158] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[159]
  Arizona Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is punishable by imprisonment for a minimum of 2 years and a maximum of 5 years.[160]
  Arkansas Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is an unclassified felony punishable by imprisonment not to exceed 10 years and/or a maximum fine of $100,000.[161] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[162]
  Idaho Performing an abortion is a felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 2 and not more than 5 years and/or a maximum fine of $5,000.[163] Purposely terminating a pregnancy other than by live birth is a felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 1 and not more than 5 years and/or a maximum fine of $5,000.[164]
  Indiana Performing an illegal abortion is a Level 5 felony punishable by imprisonment for 1 to 6 years and/or a fine of up to $10,000.[165] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[166]
  Kentucky Intentional termination of life of an unborn human being is a class D felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 1 and not more than 5 years.[167] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[168]
  Louisiana Committing an abortion is punishable by imprisonment for not less than one year and not more than ten years and/or a fine of not less than $10,000 or more than $100,000.[169] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[170]
  Mississippi Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is punishable by imprisonment for not less than 1 year and not more than 10 years.[171] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[172]
  Missouri Performing an abortion is a class B felony punishable by imprisonment for at least five years and no more than fifteen years.[173] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[174]
  North Dakota Performing an abortion is a class C felony punishable by imprisonment for a maximum of five years and/or a fine of $10,000.[175] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[176]
  Oklahoma Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is a felony punishable by imprisonment for a term not to exceed ten years and/or a maximum fine of $100,000.[177] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[178]
  South Dakota Procurement of abortion is a class 6 felony punishable by up to two years imprisonment and/or a fine of $4,000.[179]
  Tennessee Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is a class C felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 3 years and not more than 15 years.[180] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[181]
  Texas Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is a first-degree felony if an unborn child ("an individual living member of the homo sapiens species from fertilization until birth, including the entire embryonic and fetal stages of development") dies as a result of the offense punishable by imprisonment of not less than 5 years and not more than 99 years and a maximum fine of $10,000; or a second-degree felony otherwise punishable by imprisonment of not less than 2 years and not more than 20 years and a maximum fine of $10,000.[182] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[183]
  Utah Killing an unborn child (not defined in the statute) is a second-degree felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 1 and not more than 15 years.[184]
  West Virginia Performing an illegal abortion is a felony punishable by imprisonment for a minimum of 3 years and a maximum of 10 years.[185] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[186]
  Wisconsin Performing an abortion is a class H felony punishable by imprisonment for a maximum of 6 years and/or a fine of $10,000.[187] None authorized by the state's ban on abortion.[188]
  Wyoming Violation of abortion restrictions is a felony punishable by imprisonment for not more than 14 years.[189]

State-by-state legal status

 
States in which the right to an abortion is protected, either through state law, a state supreme court ruling, or both.[190]
  Abortion access protected by state law
  Abortion access protected by state Constitution
  Abortion access protected via both state law and state Constitution
  No state level protections
 
Map showing which states require parental involvement (minors).
  Parental notification or consent not required
  One parent must be informed beforehand
  Both parents must be informed beforehand
  One parent must consent beforehand
  Both parents must consent beforehand
  One parent must consent and be informed beforehand
  Parental notification law currently enjoined
  Parental consent law currently enjoined
 
Mandatory waiting period laws in the U.S.
  No mandatory waiting period
  Waiting period of less than 24 hours
  Waiting period of 24 hours or more
  Waiting period law currently enjoined
 
Abortion counseling laws in the U.S.
  No mandatory counselling
  Counselling in person, by phone, mail, and/or other
  Counselling in person only
  Counselling law enjoined
[needs update]
 
Mandatory ultrasound laws in the U.S.
  Mandatory. Must display image.
  Mandatory. Must offer to display image.
  Mandatory. Law unenforceable.
  Not mandatory. If ultrasound is performed, must offer to display image.
  Not mandatory. Must offer ultrasound.
  Not mandatory.

Prior to 2022 abortion was legal in all U.S. states, and every state had at least one abortion clinic.[191][192] Abortion is a controversial political issue, and regular attempts to restrict it occur in most states. Two such cases, originating in Texas and Louisiana, led to the Supreme Court cases of Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt (2016) and June Medical Services, LLC v. Russo (2020) in which several Texas and Louisiana restrictions were struck down.[193][194]

The issue of minors and abortion is regulated at the state level, and 37 states require some parental involvement, either in the form of parental consent or in the form of parental notification. In certain situations, the parental restrictions can be overridden by a court.[195] Mandatory waiting periods, mandatory ultrasounds and scripted counseling are common abortion regulations. Abortion laws are generally stricter in conservative Southern states than they are in other parts of the country.

In 2019, New York passed the Reproductive Health Act (RHA), which repealed a pre-Roe provision that banned third-trimester abortions except in cases where the continuation of the pregnancy endangered a pregnant woman's life.[196][197]

Abortion in the Northern Mariana Islands, a United States Commonwealth territory, is illegal.[198][199][200]

Alabama House Republicans passed a law on April 30, 2019, that will criminalize most abortion if it goes into effect.[201] Dubbed the "Human Life Protection Act", it offers only two exceptions: serious health risk to the mother or a lethal fetal anomaly. Amendments that would have added cases of rape or incest to the list of exceptions were rejected[202] It will also make the procedure a Class A felony.[203] Twenty-five male Alabama senators voted to pass the law on May 13.[204] The next day, Alabama governor Kay Ivey signed the bill into law, primarily as a symbolic gesture in hopes of challenging Roe v. Wade in the Supreme Court.[205][206]

Since Alabama introduced the first modern anti-abortion legislation in April 2019, five other states have also adopted abortion laws including Mississippi, Kentucky, Ohio, Georgia and most recently Louisiana on May 30, 2019.[207]

In May 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld an Indiana state law that requires fetuses which were aborted be buried or cremated.[208] In a December 2019 case, the court declined to review a lower court decision which upheld a Kentucky law requiring doctors to perform ultrasounds and show fetal images to patients before abortions.[209]

On June 29, 2020, previous Supreme Court rulings banning abortion restrictions appeared to be upheld when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the Louisiana anti-abortion law.[210] Following the ruling, the legality of laws restricting abortion in states such as Ohio was then called into question.[211] It was also noted that Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, who agreed that the Louisiana anti-abortion law was unconstitutional, had previously voted to uphold a similar law in Texas which was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2016.[212]

In May 2021, Texas lawmakers passed the Texas Heartbeat Act, banning abortions as soon as cardiac activity can be detected, typically as early as six weeks into pregnancy, and often before women know they are pregnant due to the length of the menstrual cycle (which usually lasts a median of four weeks and in some cases can be irregular).[213] In order to avoid traditional constitutional challenges based on Roe v. Wade, the law provides that any person, with or without any vested interest, may sue anyone that performs or induces an abortion in violation of the statute, as well as anyone who "aids or abets the performance or inducement of an abortion, including paying for or reimbursing the costs of an abortion through insurance or otherwise."[214] The law was challenged in courts, though had yet to have a full formal hearing as its September 1, 2021, enactment date came due. Plaintiffs sought an order from the U.S. Supreme Court to stop the law from coming into effect, but the Court issued a denial of the order late on September 1, 2021, allowing the law to remain in effect. While unsigned, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Stephen Breyer wrote dissenting opinions joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor that they would have granted an injunction on the law until a proper judicial review.[215][216]

On September 9, 2021, Merrick Garland, the Attorney General and head of the United States Department of Justice, sued Texas over the Texas Heartbeat Act on the basis that "the law is invalid under the Supremacy Clause and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, is preempted by federal law, and violates the doctrine of intergovernmental immunity".[217] Garland further noted that the United States government has "an obligation to ensure that no state can deprive individuals of their constitutional rights."[218] The Complaint avers that Texas enacted the law "in open defiance of the Constitution".[219] The relief requested from the U.S. District Court in Austin, Texas includes a declaration that the Texas Act is unconstitutional, and an injunction against state actors as well as any and all private individuals who may bring a SB 8 action.[219][218] The idea of asking a federal court to impose an injunction upon the entire civilian population of a state is unprecedented and has drawn eyebrows.[220][221]

Colorado passed into law its Reproductive Health Equity Act in April 2022, which assures abortion rights for all citizens of the state. While the bill as passed maintained the status quo for abortion rights, it assures that "every individual has a fundamental right to make decisions about the individual's reproductive health care, including the fundamental right to use or refuse contraception; a pregnant individual has a fundamental right to continue a pregnancy and give birth or to have an abortion and to make decisions about how to exercise that right; and a fertilized egg, embryo, or fetus does not have independent or derivative rights under the laws of the state" regardless of changes that may happen at the federal level.[222]

On May 25, 2022, Oklahoma imposed a ban on elective abortions after Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt signed House Bill 4327. The bill bans elective abortion beginning at conception.[223] The law also permits private citizens to file lawsuits against abortion providers who knowingly provide, perform, or induce elective abortions on a pregnant woman. Abortion in cases of rape, incest, or high-risk pregnancies continue to be permitted.[224] A lawsuit was immediately filed by the ACLU in opposition to the bill.[225][226] At the time of enactment, Oklahoma was the only U.S. state to have passed a bill imposing such restrictions; the law made Oklahoma the first U.S. state to ban elective abortion procedures since prior to the ruling and implementation of Roe in 1973.[227][228][223]

After the Supreme Court overturned Roe on June 24, 2022, Texas and Missouri immediately banned abortions with the exception only if the pregnancy was deemed to be particularly life-threatening.[229][230]

On January 28, 2023, the Minnesota state Senate passed a bill guaranteeing women's rights to abortion and other reproductive medicine which was signed into law on January 31. The bill prohibits state and local governments from attempting to restrict access to sterilization or prenatal care, while also requiring contraceptive cost compensation.[231][232]

In 2023, five women launched a class action lawsuit against the State of Texas after they were reportedly denied abortions at a clinic in the State despite grave risks to their life. Four of the women traveled out of state in order to obtain an abortion, while the fifth only received the abortion in Texas when she was hospitalized after the fetus suffered a premature rupture of membranes. The case argues that the Texas law, which allows abortion if there is a health risk to the mother, is too vague and doctors will not perform an abortion for fear of legal repercussions.[233]

In response to the coronavirus pandemic

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, anti-abortion government officials in several American states enacted or attempted to enact restrictions on abortion, characterizing it as a non-essential procedure that can be suspended during the medical emergency.[234] The orders have led to several legal challenges and criticism by human rights groups and several national medical organizations, including the American Medical Association.[235] Legal challenges on behalf of abortion providers, many of which were represented by the American Civil Liberties Union and Planned Parenthood, successfully stopped most of the orders on a temporary basis.[234]

One challenge was made against the FDA's rule on the distribution of mifepristone (RU-486), one of the two-part drug regimen to induce abortions. Since 2000, it is only available through health providers under the FDA's ruling. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, access to mifepristone was a concern, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists along with other groups sued to have the rule relaxed to allow women to be able to access mifepristone at home through mail-order or retail pharmacies. While the Fourth Circuit issued a preliminary injunction against the FDA's ruling that would have allowed wider distribution, the Supreme Court ordered in a 6–3 decision in January 2021 to put a stay on the injunction, maintaining the FDA's rule.[236]

Sanctuary cities

Since 2019, the anti-abortion movement in the United States has sought declarations of "sanctuary cit[ies] for the unborn".[237] In June 2019, the city council of Waskom, Texas, voted to outlaw abortion in the city, declaring Waskom a "sanctuary city for the unborn" (the first such city to designate itself as such), as state governments elsewhere in the United States were also drafting abortion bans.[238][239] As of July 2019, there is no abortion clinic in the city.[240][241] The Waskom ordinance has led other small cities in Texas, and as of April 2021 in Nebraska, to vote in favor of becoming "sanctuary cities for the unborn".[242][243][244]

On April 6, 2021, Hayes Center, Nebraska, became the first city in Nebraska to outlaw abortion by local ordinance, declaring itself a "sanctuary city for the unborn."[245] The city of Blue Hill, Nebraska, followed suit and enacted a similar ordinance outlawing abortion on April 13, 2021.[246][247] In May 2021, Lubbock, Texas, with a population of less than 270,000, voted to ban abortion with the "sanctuary city for the unborn ordinance", becoming the largest city in the U.S. to ban abortion.[248][249][250]

Abortion rights movements have also pushed for similar counterpart legislation in other cities.[251] In February 2017, the St. Louis Board of Aldermen passed 17-10 Board Bill 203. The bill, sponsored by alderwoman Megan Green, made it illegal for landlords and employers to discriminate against individuals who are pregnant, use contraceptives, and are having or have had abortions.[252] This law was subsequently challenged, with plaintiffs including the St. Louis Archdiocese along with private citizens filing a lawsuit against the city in Our Lady's Inn et al v. City of St Louis on May 22, 2017, In the US District Court of Eastern Missouri, resulting in the ordinance being enjoined against the city.[253]

Abortion financing

 
State Medicaid coverage of medically necessary abortion services (text-based list):
  Medicaid covers medically necessary abortion for low-income women through legislation.
  Medicaid covers medically necessary abortions for low-income women under court order.
  Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low-income women except for cases of rape, incest, life or health endangerment, or severe fetal abnormality.
  Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low-income women except for cases of rape, incest, life endangerment, or severe fetal abnormality.
  Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low-income women except for cases of rape, incest, or life or health endangerment.
  Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low-income women except for cases of rape, incest, or life endangerment.
  Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low-income women except for cases of life endangerment.

The abortion debate has also been extended to the question of who pays the medical costs of the procedure, with some states using the mechanism as a way of reducing the number of abortions.[citation needed]

The cost of an abortion varies depending on factors such as location, facility, timing, type of procedure, and whether or not there is insurance or some other type of financial assistance. In 2022, a medication abortion cost was about $580 at Planned Parenthood, though it could be more, up to around $800, in other facilities. During the first trimester an in-clinic abortion cost up to around $800, though often less; the average cost at Planned Parenthood was about $600. A second trimester procedure varied depending on the stage of pregnancy. The average ranged from about $715 earlier in the second trimester to $1,500-2,000 later in the second trimester.[254] A variety of resources from support organizations are available to contribute to the costs of the procedure, as well as travel expenses.[255]

Abortion fund organizations

A variety of organizations offer financial support for people seeking abortions, including travel and other expenses.[255] Access Reproductive Care–Southeast (ARC Southeast), the Brigid Alliance, the Midwest Access Coalition (MAC), and the National Network of Abortion Funds are examples of such groups.[255]

Medicaid

The Hyde Amendment is a federal legislative provision barring the use of federal Medicaid funds to pay for abortions except for rape and incest.[256] The provision, in various forms, was in response to Roe v. Wade, and has been routinely attached to annual appropriations bills since 1976, and represented the first major legislative success by the pro-life movement. The law requires that states cover abortions under Medicaid in the event of rape, incest, and life endangerment.[257]

Private insurance

  • Six states require coverage in all private plans: California, Illinois, Maine, New York, Oregon, and Washington. (2021)[258]
  • Note: The following figures are from 2008 and may have changed since that time.
  • 5 states (ID, KY, MO, ND, OK) restrict insurance coverage of abortion services in private plans: OK limits coverage to life endangerment, rape or incest circumstances; and the other four states limit coverage to cases of life endangerment.
  • 11 states (CO, KY, MA, MS, NE, ND, OH, PA, RI, SC, VA) restrict abortion coverage in insurance plans for public employees, with CO and KY restricting insurance coverage of abortion under any circumstances.
  • U.S. laws also ban federal funding of abortions for federal employees and their dependents, Native Americans covered by the Indian Health Service, military personnel and their dependents, and women with disabilities covered by Medicare.[259]

Mexico City policy

Under this policy, U.S. federal funding to NGOs that provide abortion is not permitted. The policy was first announced by President Ronald Reagan in 1984. It has been rescinded by Democratic presidents and reinstated by Republican presidents. The policy was rescinded in 2021 by President Joe Biden.[260]

Qualifying requirements for abortion providers

Qualifying requirements for performing abortions vary from state to state.[261] Vermont has allowed physician assistants to do some first-trimester abortions since the mid-1970s.[262] More recently, several states have changed their requirements for abortion providers, anticipating that the Supreme Court would overturn Roe v. Wade; now that the court has done so, more states are expanding eligibility to provide abortions. As of July 2022, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Virginia and Washington allow mid-level practitioners such as nurse practitioners, nurse midwives, and physicians assistants, to do some first-trimester abortions.[263] In other states, non-physicians are not permitted to perform abortions.

Statistics

Because reporting of abortions is not mandatory, statistics are of varying reliability. Both the Centers For Disease Control (CDC)[264] and the Guttmacher Institute[265][266] regularly compile these statistics.

 [267]
 [265][266]

Number of abortions

The annual number of legal induced abortions in the U.S. doubled between 1973 and 1979, and peaked in 1990. There was a slow but steady decline throughout the 1990s. Overall, the number of annual abortions decreased by 6% between 2000 and 2009, with temporary spikes in 2002 and 2006.[268]

By 2011, abortion rate in the nation dropped to its lowest point since the Supreme Court legalized the procedure. According to a study performed by Guttmacher Institute, long-acting contraceptive methods had a significant impact in reducing unwanted pregnancies. There were fewer than 17 abortions for every 1,000 women of child-bearing age. That was a 13%-decrease from 2008's numbers and slightly higher than the rate in 1973, when the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision legalized abortion.[269] The study indicated a long-term decline in the abortion rate.[270][271][272]

In 2016, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported 623,471 abortions, a 2% decrease from 636,902 in 2015.[273]

During the first six months of 2023 (following Dobbs in 2022), the numbers of abortions in certain U.S. states changed dramatically compared to the same time period in 2020, according to the Guttmacher Institute. Abortions tripled in New Mexico and Wyoming and more than doubled in South Carolina and Kansas. For 13 states that had banned abortion, the Guttmacher Institute had no 2023 data to make the comparison.[274]

Medical abortions

A Guttmacher Institute survey of abortion providers estimated that early medical abortions accounted for 17% of all non-hospital abortions and slightly over one-quarter of abortions before 9 weeks gestation in the United States in 2008.[275] Medical abortions voluntarily reported to the CDC by 34 reporting areas (excluding Alabama, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Vermont, Wisconsin, and Wyoming) and published in its annual abortion surveillance reports have increased every year since the September 28, 2000 FDA approval of mifepristone (RU-486): 1.0% in 2000, 2.9% in 2001, 5.2% in 2002, 7.9% in 2003, 9.3% in 2004, 9.9% in 2005, 10.6% in 2006, 13.1% in 2007, 15.8% in 2008, 17.1% in 2009 (25.2% of those at less than 9 weeks gestation).[276] Medical abortions accounted for 32% of first-trimester abortions at Planned Parenthood clinics in 2008.[277] By 2020, medication abortions accounted for more than 50% of all abortions.[17]

Abortion and religion

A majority of abortions are obtained by religiously identified women. According to the Guttmacher Institute, "more than 7 in 10 U.S. women obtaining an abortion report a religious affiliation (37% protestant, 28% Catholic, and 7% other), and 25% attend religious services at least once a month. The abortion rate for protestant women is 15 per 1,000 women, while Catholic women have a slightly higher rate, 20 per 1,000."[278]

Abortions and ethnicity

Abortion rates tend to be higher among minority women in the U.S. In 2000–2001, the rates among black and Hispanic women were 49 per 1,000 and 33 per 1,000, respectively, vs. 13 per 1,000 among non-Hispanic white women. This figure includes all women of reproductive age, including women that are not pregnant. In other words, these abortion rates reflect the rate at which U.S. women of reproductive age have an abortion each year.[279]

In 2004, the rates of abortion by ethnicity in the U.S. were 50 abortions per 1,000 black women, 28 abortions per 1,000 Hispanic women, and 11 abortions per 1,000 white women.[280][281]

In-state vs. out-of-state

Roe v. Wade legalized abortion nationwide in 1973. In 1972, 41% of abortions were performed on women outside their state of residence, while in 1973 it declined to 21%, and then to 11% in 1974.[282]

In the decade from 2011 to 2020, during which many states increased abortion restrictions, the percentage of women nationwide who traveled out of state for an abortion increased steadily, from 6% in 2011 to 9% in 2020.[283] Out of state travel for an abortion was much more prevalent in the 29 states hostile to abortion rights, with percentages in those states rising from 9% in 2011 to 15% by 2020, while in states supportive of abortion rights, out of state travel for abortions rose from 2% to 3% between 2011 and 2020.[283]

Gutttmacher has released data about abortions by state of occurrence and state of residence.[283] In some states, these numbers can be tremendously different, for example in Missouri, a state very hostile to abortion rights, the abortion rate by state of occurrence dropped from 4 in 1000 women aged 15–44 for 2017 to 0.1 for 2020, because 57% of abortion recipients went out of state in 2017, while 99% did so in 2020.[283] In contrast, from 2017 to 2020, the abortion rate by state of residence for Missourians went up by 18% from 8.4 to 9.9.[283]

Some out of state travel pertains to locations of population centers in states; if large cities are close to state borders it may be common to cross borders for an abortion.[283] For example, Delaware, which is generally supportive of abortion rights, saw 44% of residents obtain their abortions in neighboring states.[283]

Motherhood

In 2019, 60% of women who had abortions were already mothers, and 50% already had two or more children.[19][20]

Reasons for abortions

A 1998 study revealed that in 1987 to 1988, women reported the following as their primary reasons for choosing an abortion:[284][285]

Percentage

of women

Primary reason for choosing an abortion
25.5% Want to postpone childbearing
21.3% Cannot afford a baby
14.1% Has relationship problem or partner does not want pregnancy
12.2% Too young; parent(s) or other(s) object to pregnancy
10.8% Having a child will disrupt education or employment
7.9% Want no (more) children
3.3% Risk to fetal health
2.8% Risk to maternal health
2.1% Other

The source of this information takes findings into account from 27 nations including the United States, and therefore, these findings may not be typical for any one nation.

According to a 1987 study that included specific data about late abortions (i. e., abortions "at 16 or more weeks' gestation"),[286] women reported that various reasons contributed to their having a late abortion:

Percentage

of women

Reasons contributing to a late abortion
71% Woman did not recognize she was pregnant or misjudged gestation
48% Woman had found it hard to make arrangements for an earlier abortion
33% Woman was afraid to tell her partner or parents
24% Woman took time to decide to have an abortion
8% Woman waited for her relationship to change
8% Someone had earlier pressured woman not to have abortion
6% Something changed some time after woman became pregnant
6% Woman did not know timing is important
5% Woman did not know she could get an abortion
2% A fetal problem was diagnosed late in pregnancy
11% Other

In 2000, cases of rape or incest accounted for 1% of abortions.[287]

A 2004 study by the Guttmacher Institute reported that women listed the following amongst their reasons for choosing to have an abortion:[285]

Percentage

of women

Reason for choosing to have an abortion
74% Having a baby would dramatically change my life
73% Cannot afford a baby now
48% Do not want to be a single mother or having relationship problems
38% Have completed my childbearing
32% Not ready for another child
25% Do not want people to know I had sex or got pregnant
22% Do not feel mature enough to raise a(nother) child
14% Husband or partner wants me to have an abortion
13% Possible problems affecting the health of the fetus
12% Concerns about my health
6% Parents want me to have an abortion
1% Was a victim of rape
less than .5% Became pregnant as a result of incest

A 2008 National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) shows that rates of unintended pregnancy are highest among Blacks, Hispanics, and women with lower socio-economic status.[288]

  • 70% of all pregnancies among Black women were unintended
  • 57% of all pregnancies among Hispanic women were unintended
  • 42% of all pregnancies among White women were unintended

When women have abortions (by gestational age)

 
Abortion in the U.S. by gestational age, 2016[289]

According to the Centers for Disease Control, in 2011, most (64.5%) abortions were performed by ≤8 weeks' gestation, and nearly all (91.4%) were performed by ≤13 weeks' gestation. Few abortions (7.3%) were performed between 14 and 20 weeks' gestation or at ≥21 weeks' gestation (1.4%). From 2002 to 2011, the percentage of all abortions performed at ≤8 weeks' gestation increased 6%.[289]

Safety of abortions

The risk of death from carrying a child to term in the U.S. is approximately 14 times greater than the risk of death from a legal abortion.[290] The risk of abortion-related mortality increases with gestational age, but remains lower than that of childbirth through at least 21 weeks' gestation.[291][292][293]

Birth control effects

Increased access to birth control has been statistically linked to reductions in the abortion rate.[21][22][23] As an element of family planning, birth control was federally subsidized for low income families in 1965 under President Lyndon B. Johnson's War on Poverty program. In 1970, Congress passed Title X to provide family planning services for those in need, and President Richard Nixon signed it into law. Funding for Title X rose from $6 million in 1971 to $61 million the next year, and slowly increased each year to $317 million in 2010, after which it was reduced by a few percent.[294]

In 2011, the Guttmacher Institute reported that the number of abortions in the U.S. would be nearly two-thirds higher without access to birth control.[295] In 2015, the Federation of American Scientists reported that federally mandated access to birth control had helped reduce teenage pregnancies in the U.S. by 44 percent, and had prevented more than 188,000 unintended pregnancies.[296]

Public opinion

 
Trend percent of Americans self-identifying as either "pro-life" or "pro-choice"

Americans have been equally divided on the issue; a May 2018 Gallup poll indicated that 48% of Americans described themselves as "pro-choice" and 48% described themselves as "pro-life".[15] A July 2018 poll indicated that 64% of Americans did not want the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade, while 28% did.[297] The same poll found that support for abortion being generally legal was 60% during the first trimester of pregnancy, dropping to 28% in the second trimester, and 13% in the third trimester.[298]

Support for the legalization of abortion has been consistently higher among more educated adults than less educated,[299] and in 2019, 70% of college graduates support abortion being legal in all or most cases, compared to 60% of those with some college, and 54% of those with a high school degree or less.[300]

In January 2013, a majority of Americans believed abortion should be legal in all or most cases, according to a poll by NBC News and The Wall Street Journal.[301] Approximately 70% of respondents in the same poll opposed Roe v. Wade being overturned.[301] A poll by the Pew Research Center yielded similar results.[302] Moreover, 48% of Republicans opposed overturning Roe, compared to 46% who supported overturning it.[302]

Gallup declared in May 2010 that more Americans identifying as "pro-life" is "the new normal", while also noting that there had been no increase in opposition to abortion. It suggested that political polarization may have prompted more Republicans to call themselves "pro-life".[14] The terms "pro-choice" and "pro-life" do not always reflect a political view or fall along a binary; in one Public Religion Research Institute poll, seven in ten Americans described themselves as "pro-choice" while almost two-thirds described themselves as "pro-life". The same poll found that 56% of Americans were in favor of legal access to abortion in all or some cases.[303]

A 2022 study reviewing the literature and public opinion datasets found that 43.8% of survey respondents in the U.S. consistently support both elective and traumatic abortion, whereas only 14.8% consistently oppose abortion irrespective of the reason, and others differ in their degree of support for abortion depending on the circumstances of the abortion.[13] 90% approve of abortion when the health of the woman is endangered, 77.4% when there is a strong chance of defects in the baby that could result from the pregnancy, and 79.5% when the pregnancy is the result of rape.[13]

A January 2023 Gallup poll found that nearly 7 in 10 Americans disapprove of the country's abortion policies, the highest rate in 23 years.[304]

Date of poll "Pro-life" "Pro-choice" Mixed / neither Don't know what terms mean No opinion
2016, May 4–8 46% 47% 3% 3% 2%
2015, May 6–10 44% 50% 3% 2% 1%
2014, May 8–11 46% 47% 3% 3%
2013, May 2–7 48% 45% 3% 3% 2%
2012, May 3–6 50% 41% 4% 3% 3%
2011, May 5–8 45% 49% 3% 2% 2%
2010, March 26–28 46% 45% 4% 2% 3%
2009, November 20–22 45% 48% 2% 2% 3%
2009, May 7–10 51% 42% 0 7%
2008, September 5–7 43% 51% 2% 1% 3%

By gender and age

Pew Research Center polling shows little change in views from 2008 to 2012; modest differences based on gender or age.[305]

The original article's table also shows by party affiliation, religion, and education level.

2011–2012 2009–2010 2007–2008
Legal Illegal Don't Know Legal Illegal Don't Know Legal Illegal Don't Know
Total 53% 41% 6% 48% 44% 8% 54% 40% 6%
Men 51% 43% 6% 46% 46% 9% 52% 42% 6%
Women 55% 40% 5% 50% 43% 7% 55% 39% 5%
18–29 53% 44% 3% 50% 45% 5% 52% 45% 3%
30–49 54% 42% 4% 49% 43% 7% 58% 38% 5%
50–64 55% 38% 7% 49% 42% 9% 56% 38% 6%
65+ 48% 43% 9% 39% 49% 12% 45% 44% 11%

By educational level

Support for the legalization of abortion is significantly higher among more educated adults than less educated, and has been consistently so for decades.[299] In 2019, 70% of college graduates support abortion being legal in all or most cases, as well as 60% of those with some college education, compared to 54% of those with a high school degree or less.[300]

2019
Educational attainment Legal in all or most cases Illegal in all or most cases
College grad or more 70% 30%
Some college 60% 39%
High school or less 54% 44%

By gender, party, and region

A January 2003 CBS News/The New York Times poll examined whether Americans thought abortion should be legal or not, and found variations in opinion which depended upon party affiliation and the region of the country.[306] The margin of error is +/– 4% for questions answered of the entire sample (overall figures) and may be higher for questions asked of subgroups (all other figures).[306]

Group Generally available Available, but with stricter limits than now Not permitted
Women 37% 37% 24%
Men 40% 40% 20%
Democrats 43% 35% 21%
Republicans 29% 41% 28%
Independents 42% 38% 18%
Northeasterners 48% 31% 19%
Midwesterners 34% 40% 25%
Southerners 33% 41% 25%
Westerners 43% 40% 16%
Overall 39% 38% 22%

By trimester of pregnancy

A CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll in January 2003 asked about the legality of abortion by trimester, using the question, "Do you think abortion should generally be legal or generally illegal during each of the following stages of pregnancy?"[307] This same question was also asked by Gallup in March 2000 and July 1996.[308][309] Polls indicates general support of legal abortion during the first trimester, although support drops dramatically for abortion during the second and third trimester.

Since the 2011 poll, support for legal abortion during the first trimester has declined.

2018 Poll 2012 Poll 2011 Poll 2003 Poll 2000 Poll 1996 Poll
Legal Illegal Legal Illegal Legal Illegal Legal Illegal Legal Illegal Legal Illegal
First trimester 60% 34% 61% 31% 62% 29% 66% 35% 66% 31% 64% 30%
Second trimester 28% 65% 27% 64% 24% 71% 25% 68% 24% 69% 26% 65%
Third trimester 13% 81% 14% 80% 10% 86% 10% 84% 8% 86% 13% 82%

By circumstance or reasons

According to Gallup's long-time polling on abortion, the majority of Americans are neither strictly "pro-life" or "pro-choice"; it depends upon the circumstances of the pregnancy. Gallup polling from 1996 to 2021 consistently reveals that when asked the question, "Do you think abortions should be legal under any circumstances, legal only under certain circumstances, or illegal in all circumstances?", Americans repeatedly answer "legal only under certain circumstances". According to the poll, in any given year 48–57% say legal only under certain circumstances, 21–34% say legal under any circumstances, and 13–19% illegal in all circumstances, with 1–7% having no opinion.[308]

Legal under any circumstances Legal only under certain circumstances Illegal in all circumstances No opinion
2021 May 3–18 32% 48% 19% 2%
2020 May 1–13 29% 50% 20% 2%
2019 May 1–12 25% 53% 21% 2%
2018 May 1–10 29% 50% 18% 2%
2017 May 3–7 29% 50% 18% 3%
2016 May 4–8 29% 50% 19% 2%
2015 May 6–10 29% 51% 19% 1%
2014 May 8–11 28% 50% 21% 2%
2013 May 2–7 26% 52% 20% 2%
2012 Dec 27–30 28% 52% 18% 3%
2012 May 3–6 25% 52% 20% 3%
2011 Jul 15–17 26% 51% 20% 3%
2011 June 9–12 26% 52% 21% 2%
2011 May 5–8 27% 49% 22% 3%
2009 Jul 17–19 21% 57% 18% 4%
2009 May 7–10 22% 53% 23% 2%
2008 May 8–11 28% 54% 18% 2%
2007 May 10–13 26% 55% 17% 1%
2006 May 8–11 30% 53% 15% 2%

According to the aforementioned poll,[308] Americans differ drastically based upon situation of the pregnancy, suggesting they do not support unconditional abortions. Based on two separate polls taken May 19–21, 2003, of 505 and 509 respondents respectively, Americans stated their approval for abortion under these various circumstances:

Poll Criteria Total Poll A Poll B
When the woman's life is endangered 78% 82% 75%
When the pregnancy was caused by rape or incest 65% 72% 59%
When the child would be born with a life-threatening illness 54% 60% 48%
When the child would be born mentally disabled 44% 50% 38%
When the woman does not want the child for any reason 32% 41% 24%

Another separate trio of polls taken by Gallup in 2003, 2000, and 1996,[308] revealed public support for abortion as follows for the given criteria:

Poll criteria 2003 Poll 2000 Poll 1996 Poll
When the woman's life is endangered 85% 84% 88%
When the woman's physical health is endangered 77% 81% 82%
When the pregnancy was caused by rape or incest 76% 78% 77%
When the woman's mental health is endangered 63% 64% 66%
When there is evidence that the baby may be physically impaired 56% 53% 53%
When there is evidence that the baby may be mentally impaired 55% 53% 54%
When the woman or family cannot afford to raise the child 35% 34% 32%

Gallup furthermore established public support for many issues supported by the anti-abortion community and opposed by the abortion rights community:[308]

Legislation 2011 Poll 2003 Poll 2000 Poll 1996 Poll
A law requiring doctors to inform patients about alternatives to abortion before performing the procedure 88% 86% 86%
A law requiring women seeking abortions to wait 24 hours before having the procedure done 69% 78% 74% 73%
Legislation 2005 Poll 2003 Poll 1996 Poll 1992 Poll
A law requiring women under 18 to get parental consent for any abortion 69% 73% 74% 70%
A law requiring that the husband of a married woman be notified if she decides to have an abortion 64% 72% 70% 73%

An October 2007 CBS News poll explored under what circumstances Americans believe abortion should be allowed, asking the question, "What is your personal feeling about abortion?" The results were as follows:[307]

Permitted in all cases Permitted, but subject to greater restrictions than it is now Only in cases such as rape, incest, or to save the woman's life Only permitted to save the woman's life Never Unsure
26% 16% 34% 16% 4% 4%

Additional polls

 
Results of Gallup opinion poll in the U.S. since 1975, legal restriction of abortion[310]
  • A June 2000 Los Angeles Times survey found that, although 57% of polltakers considered abortion to be murder, half of that 57% believed in allowing women access to abortion. The survey also found that, overall, 65% of respondents did not believe abortion should be legal after the first trimester, including 72% of women and 58% of men. Further, the survey found that 85% of Americans polled supported abortion in cases of risk to a woman's physical health, 54% if the woman's mental health was at risk, and 66% if a congenital abnormality was detected in the fetus.[311]
  • A July 2002 Public Agenda poll found that 44% of men and 42% of women thought that "abortion should be generally available to those who want it", 34% of men and 35% of women thought that "abortion should be available, but under stricter than limits it is now", and 21% of men and 22% of women thought that "abortion should not be permitted".[312]
  • A January 2003 ABC News/The Washington Post poll also examined attitudes towards abortion by gender. In answer to the question, "On the subject of abortion, do you think abortion should be legal in all cases, legal in most cases, illegal in most cases or illegal in all cases?", 25% of women responded that it should be legal in "all cases", 33% that it should be legal in "most cases", 23% that it should be illegal in "most cases", and 17% that it should be illegal in "all cases". 20% of men thought it should be legal in "all cases", 34% legal in "most cases", 27% illegal in "most cases", and 17% illegal in "all cases".[312]
  • Most Fox News viewers favor both parental notification as well as parental consent, when a minor seeks an abortion. A Fox News poll in 2005 found that 78% of people favor a notification requirement, and 72% favor a consent requirement.[313]
  • An April 2006 Harris poll on Roe v. Wade, asked, "In 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court decided that states' laws which made it illegal for a woman to have an abortion up to three months of pregnancy were unconstitutional, and that the decision on whether a woman should have an abortion up to three months of pregnancy should be left to the woman and her doctor to decide. In general, do you favor or oppose this part of the U.S. Supreme Court decision making abortions up to three months of pregnancy legal?", to which 49% of respondents indicated favor while 47% indicated opposition. The Harris organization has concluded from this poll that, "49 percent now support Roe vs. Wade".[314]
  • Two polls were released in May 2007 asking Americans "With respect to the abortion issue, would you consider yourself to be pro-choice or pro-life?" May 4–6, a CNN poll found 45% said "pro-choice" and 50% said pro-life.[315] Within the following week, a Gallup poll found 50% responding "pro-choice" and 44% pro-life.[316]
  • In 2011, a poll conducted by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 43% of respondents identified themselves as both "pro-life" and "pro-choice".[317]

Intact dilation and extraction

In 2003, the U.S. Congress outlawed intact dilation and extraction when it passed the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act. A Rasmussen Reports poll four days after the Supreme Court's opinion in Gonzales v. Carhart found that 40% of respondents "knew the ruling allowed states to place some restrictions on specific abortion procedures." Of those who knew of the decision, 56% agreed with the decision and 32% were opposed.[318] An ABC poll from 2003 found that 62% of respondents thought "partial-birth abortion" should be illegal; a similar number of respondents wanted an exception "if it would prevent a serious threat to the woman's health".

Gallup has repeatedly queried the American public on this issue.[308]

Legislation 2011 2003 2000 2000 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996
A law that would make it illegal to perform a specific abortion procedure conducted in the last six months, or second and/or third trimester of pregnancy, known by some opponents as a partial birth abortion, except in cases necessary to save the life of the mother 64% 70% 63% 66% 64% 61% 61% 55% 57%

Positions of political parties

After Roe, there was a national political realignment surrounding abortion. The abortion-rights movement in the United States initially emphasized the national policy benefits of abortion, such as smaller welfare expenses, slower population growth, and fewer illegitimate births. The abortion-rights movement drew support from the population control movement, feminists, and environmentalists. Anti-abortion advocates and civil-rights activists accused abortion-rights supporters of intending to control the population of racial minorities and the disabled, citing their ties to racial segregationists and eugenicist legal reformers. The abortion-rights movement subsequently distanced from the population control movement, and responded by taking up choice-based and rights-oriented rhetoric similar to what was used in the Roe decision.[319] Opponents of abortion experienced a political shift. The Catholic Church and the Democratic Party supported an expansive welfare state, wanted to reduce rates of abortion through prenatal insurance and federally funded day care, and opposed abortion at the time of Roe. Afterwards, the anti-abortion movement in the United States shifted more to Protestant faiths that saw abortion rights as part of a liberal-heavy agenda to fight against, and became part of the new Christian right. The Protestant influence helped make opposition to abortion part of the Republican Party's platform by the 1990s.[320][321] Republican-led states enacted laws to restrict abortion, including abortions earlier than Casey's general standard of 24 weeks.[112]

Into the 21st century, although members of both major U.S. political parties come down on either side of the issue, the Republican Party is often seen as being anti-abortion, since the official party platform opposes abortion and considers fetuses to have an inherent right to life. Republicans for Choice represents the minority of that party. In 2006, pollsters found that 9% of Republicans favor the availability of abortion in most circumstances.[322] Of Republican National Convention delegates in 2004, 13% believed that abortion should be generally available, and 38% believed that it should not be permitted. The same poll showed that 17% of all Republican voters believed that abortion should be generally available to those who want it, while 38% believed that it should not be permitted.[323] The Republican Party was supportive of abortion rights prior to 1976 Republican National Convention, at which they supported an anti-abortion constitutional amendment as a temporary political ploy to gain more support from Catholics; this stance brought many more social conservatives into the party resulting in a large and permanent shift toward support of the anti-abortion position.[324] The Democratic Party platform considers abortion to be a woman's right. Democrats for Life of America represents the minority of that party. In 2006, pollsters found that 74% of Democrats favor the availability of abortion in most circumstances.[322] Of Democratic National Convention delegates in 2004, 75% believed that abortion should be generally available, and 2% believed that abortion should not be permitted. The same poll showed that 49% of all Democratic voters believed that abortion should be generally available to those who want it, while 13% believed that it should not be permitted.[325]

The position of U.S. third political parties and other U.S. minor political parties is diverse. The Green Party supports legal abortion as a woman's right. While abortion is a contentious issue and the Maryland-based Libertarians for Life opposes the legality of abortion in most circumstances, the Libertarian Party platform (2012) states that "government should be kept out of the matter, leaving the question to each person for their conscientious consideration."[326] The issue of abortion has become deeply politicized. In 2002, 84% of state Democratic platforms supported the right to having an abortion while 88% of state Republican platforms opposed it. This divergence also led to Christian right organizations like Christian Voice, Christian Coalition of America, and Moral Majority having an increasingly strong role in the Republican Party. This opposition has been extended under the Foreign Assistance Act; in 1973, Jesse Helms introduced an amendment banning the use of aid money to promote abortion overseas, and in 1984 the Mexico City policy prohibited financial support to any overseas organization that performed or promoted abortions. The policy was revoked by President Bill Clinton and subsequently reinstated by President George W. Bush.[327] President Barack Obama overruled this policy by Executive Order on January 23, 2009,[328] and it was reinstated on January 23, 2017, by President Donald Trump.[327] On January 28, 2021, President Joe Biden signed a Presidential Memorandum that repealed the restoration of Mexico City policy and also called for the United States Department of Health and Human Services to "suspend, rescind or revoke" restrictions made to Title X.[329]

Effects of legalization and impact of abortion bans

 
The 2013 winter issue of Ms. was about abortion rights.

The risk of death due to legal abortion has fallen considerably since Roe v. Wade (1973) legalized it; this was due to increased physician skills, improved medical technology, and earlier termination of pregnancy.[330] From 1940 through 1970, deaths of pregnant women during abortion fell from nearly 1,500 to a little over 100.[330] According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of women who died in 1972 from illegal abortion was thirty-nine.[331] The Roe effect is a hypothesis suggesting that since supporters of abortion rights cause the erosion of their own political base by having fewer children, the practice of abortion will eventually lead to the restriction or illegalization of abortion.[332] The legalized abortion and crime effect is another controversial theory that posits legal abortion reduces crime because unwanted children are more likely to become criminals.[333][334][335]

Since Roe, there have been numerous attempts to reverse the decision.[336][337] In the 2011 election season, Mississippi placed an amendment on the ballot that redefined how the state viewed abortion. The personhood amendment defined personhood as "every human being from the moment of fertilization, cloning or the functional equivalent thereof"; if passed, it would have been illegal to get an abortion in the state.[338] On July 11, 2012, a Mississippi federal judge ordered an extension of his temporary order to allow the state's only abortion clinic to stay open. The order was to stay in place until U.S. District Judge Daniel Porter Jordan III could review newly drafted rules on how the Mississippi Department of Health would administer a new abortion law. The law in question came into effect on July 1, 2012.[339]

Between 2008 and 2016, the Turnaway Study followed a group of 1,000 women, two of whom died after giving birth,[340] for five years after they sought an abortion,[341] and compared their health and socio-economic consequences of receiving an abortion or being denied one.[341][342] The study found that those who were provided with abortion performed better, and those who were denied one suffered negative consequences.[343][344] Scientific American described it as landmark.[340] A follow-up Turnaway Study was confirmed to determinate the health and economic impact of Roe being overturned,[343][345] which other scholars also analyzed.[32] According to a 2019 study, were Roe reversed and abortion bans implemented in states with trigger laws, including states considered highly likely to ban abortion, "increases in travel distance are estimated to prevent 93,546 to 143,561 women from accessing abortion care."[346]

For the Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization case,[347] which confirmed the May 2022 leaks obtained by Politico and overruled Roe and Planned Parenthood v. Casey in June 2022,[348][349][350] among the over 130 amici curiae briefs, hundreds of scientists provided evidence, data, and studies, in particular the Turnaway Study, in favor of abortion rights and to rebuke arguments made to the Court that abortion "has no beneficial effect on women's lives and careers—and might even cause them harm".[351] The American Historical Association (AHA) and the Organization of American Historians (OAH) were among those who signed an amici curiae brief for Dobbs,[352] and were cited, among others,[353] by Reason,[39] Syracuse University News,[34] and The Washington Post.[67] AHA and OAH jointly issued a statement against the Supreme Court's decision, which was reported by Anchorage Daily News,[354] Inside Higher Ed,[355] Insight Into Diversity,[356] and the Strict Scrutiny podcast from Crooked Media,[357] saying they have "declined to take seriously the historical claims of our [amicus curiae] brief". Joined by at least 30 other academic and scholarly institutions, they condemned "the court's misinterpretation about the history of legalized abortion" and said it has "the potential to exacerbate historic injustices and deepen inequalities in our country".[358]

Unintended live birth

Although it is uncommon,[359][360][361] women sometimes give birth in spite of an attempted abortion.[362][363][364] Reporting of live birth after attempted abortion may not be consistent from state to state, but 38 were recorded in one study in upstate New York in the two-and-a-half years before Roe v. Wade.[365] Under the Born-Alive Infants Protection Act of 2002,[366][367] medical staff must report live birth if they observe any breathing, heartbeat, umbilical cord pulsation, or confirmed voluntary muscle movement, regardless of whether the born-alive is non-viable ex utero in the long term because of birth defects, and regardless of gestational age, including gestational ages which are too early for long-term viability ex utero.[368][369][370]

See also

Notable cases
  • Becky Bell, an American teenage girl who died as a result of an unsafe abortion in 1988.
  • Rosie Jimenez, an American woman who was the first recorded death due to an unsafe abortion after federal Medicaid funds for abortions were removed by the Hyde Amendment in 1977.
  • Gerri Santoro, an American woman who died because of an unsafe abortion in 1964.
  • Gerardo Flores, convicted in 2005 on two counts of capital murder for giving his girlfriend, who was carrying twins, an at-home abortion.
  • Gianna Jessen, an American woman who was born alive in 1977 after an attempted saline abortion.
  • Sherri Chessen, an actress who had difficulty seeking an abortion for her thalidomide-deformed baby in 1962.

Notes

  1. ^ a b All states make exceptions if the mother’s life is in immediate danger.
    • Exceptions for risk to mother's physical health: Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
    • Exceptions for risk to mother's general health: California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New York, Rhode Island, Virginia, Washington.
    • Exception for pregnancy due to rape or incest: Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Mississippi, North Dakota, South Carolina, West Virginia, Utah, and Wyoming.
    • Exception for lethal fetal abnormality: Alabama, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, South Carolina, West Virginia, Wyoming, and Utah.
    Note that these exceptions may have a time frame in which pregnant woman can use the exceptions to get an abortion; current time limits for these exceptions range from cardiac-cell activity (or 6 weeks) to the entire pregnancy before birth (no limit).
  2. ^ This generally happens in the 6th week LMP.
  3. ^ Typically, it is between the 23rd or 24th week LMP.
  4. ^ Variously defined as through 27th or 28th week LMP; in Massachusetts, 24 weeks from implantation ≈ 27 weeks LMP.
  1. ^ According to the Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade (1973):

    "(a) For the stage prior to approximately the end of the first trimester, the abortion decision and its effectuation must be left to the medical judgment of the pregnant woman's attending physician.

    (b) For the stage subsequent to approximately the end of the first trimester, the State, in promoting its interest in the health of the mother, may, if it chooses, regulate the abortion procedure in ways that are reasonably related to maternal health.

    (c) For the stage subsequent to viability, the State in promoting its interest in the potentiality of human life may, if it chooses, regulate, and even proscribe, abortion except where it is necessary, in appropriate medical judgment, for the preservation of the life or health of the mother."[24]

    The 5th edition of the Black's Law Dictionary (1979) defined abortion as "knowing destruction" or "intentional expulsion or removal".[25] Into the 21st century, its free, online version defines it as "artificial or spontaneous termination of a pregnancy before the embryo or foetus can survive on its own outside a woman's uterus."[26]

References

  1. ^ Staff (June 24, 2022). "Roe Abolition Makes U.S. a Global Outlier". Foreign Policy. Retrieved July 31, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Blakemore, Erin (May 22, 2022). "The complex early history of abortion in the United States". National Geographic. Retrieved July 26, 2022. But that view of history is the subject of great dispute. Though interpretations differ, most scholars who have investigated the history of abortion argue that terminating a pregnancy wasn't always illegal—or even controversial. ... A pregnant woman might consult with a midwife, or head to her local drug store for an over-the-counter patent medicine or douching device. If she owned a book like the 1855 Hand-Book of Domestic Medicine, she could have opened it to the section on 'emmenagogues,' substances that provoked uterine bleeding. Though the entry did not mention pregnancy or abortion by name, it did reference 'promoting the monthly discharge from the uterus.'
  3. ^ Balmer, Randall (May 10, 2022). "The Religious Right and the Abortion Myth". POLITICO. Retrieved July 31, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Reagan, Leslie J. (2022) [1997]. When Abortion Was a Crime: Women, Medicine and the Law in the United States, 1867–1973 (1st ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520387416.
  5. ^ a b Wilson, Jacque (January 22, 2013). "Before and after Roe v. Wade". CNN. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  6. ^ Alesha Doan (2007). Opposition and Intimidation: The Abortion Wars and Strategies of Political Harassment. University of Michigan Press. p. 57. ISBN 9780472069750.
  7. ^ Casey, 505 U.S. at 877.
  8. ^ Williams, Daniel K. (May 9, 2022). "This Really Is a Different Pro-Life Movement". The Atlantic. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  9. ^ Taylor, Justin (May 9, 2018). "How the Christian Right Became Prolife on Abortion and Transformed the Culture Wars". The Gospel Coalition. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  10. ^ Mangan, Dan; Breuninger, Kevin (June 24, 2022). "Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade, ending 50 years of federal abortion rights". CNBC. from the original on June 25, 2022. Retrieved June 24, 2022.
  11. ^ Wilson, Joshua C. (2020). "Striving to Rollback or Protect Roe: State Legislation and the Trump-Era Politics of Abortion". Publius: The Journal of Federalism. 50 (3): 370–397. doi:10.1093/publius/pjaa015. S2CID 225601579.
  12. ^ Saad, Lydia (August 8, 2011). "Plenty of Common Ground Found in Abortion Debate". Gallup.com. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
  13. ^ a b c Osborne, Danny; Huang, Yanshu; Overall, Nickola C.; Sutton, Robbie M.; Petterson, Aino; Douglas, Karen M.; Davies, Paul G.; Sibley, Chris G. (2022). "Abortion Attitudes: An Overview of Demographic and Ideological Differences". Political Psychology. 43: 29–76. doi:10.1111/pops.12803. ISSN 0162-895X. S2CID 247365991.
  14. ^ a b Saad, Lydia (May 14, 2010). "The New Normal on Abortion: Americans More "Pro-Life"". Gallup. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
  15. ^ a b Jeffrey Jones (June 11, 2018). "U.S. Abortion Attitudes Remain Closely Divided". Gallup.
  16. ^ a b Kortsmit, K; Jatlaoui, TC; Mandel, MG (2020). "Abortion Surveillance – United States, 2018". Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 69 (7): 1–29. doi:10.15585/mmwr.ss6907a1. PMC 7713711. PMID 33237897.
  17. ^ a b Jones, Rachel K. (February 24, 2022). "Medication Abortion Now Accounts for More Than Half of All US Abortions". Guttmacher Institute.
  18. ^ Jones, Rachel K. (October 19, 2017). "Abortion Is a Common Experience for U.S. Women, Despite Dramatic Declines in Rates". Guttmacher Institute.
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abortion, united, states, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, overuse, misuse, color, making, hard, understand, color, blind, users, equivale. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may overuse or misuse color making it hard to understand for color blind users No equivalent form for readers who are colorblind Please remove or fix instances of distracting or hard to read colors or remove colored links that may impede user ability to distinguish links from regular text or color links for purely aesthetic reasons See the guides to editing for accessibility at contrast and colors June 2022 The accessibility of this article is in question The specific issue is alt text and or clearly organized equivalent missing Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The United States is a global outlier among developed countries on the issue of abortion with the subject being divisible in American politics and culture wars to an extent not found elsewhere There are widely different abortion laws depending on state 1 Status of elective abortion in the United States Illegal with exceptions a vte Legal but no providers Legal before cardiac cell activity b Legal through 12th week LMP Legal through 15th week LMP 1st trimester Legal through 18th week LMP Legal through 20th week LMP Legal through 22nd week LMP 5 months Legal before fetal viability c Legal through 24th week LMP 5 months Legal through second trimester d Legal at any stage LMP is the time since the last menstrual period began This color coded map illustrates the current legal status of elective specific abortion procedures in each of the individual states U S territories and federal district a A colored border indicates a more stringent restriction or ban that is blocked by legal injunction or trigger provision as of September 18 2023 From the American Revolution to the mid 19th century abortion was legal in every state under the common law until quickening not an issue of significant controversy and most Americans held to the traditional Protestant Christian belief that personhood began at ensoulment rather than conception 2 3 4 5 Connecticut was the first state to regulate abortion in 1821 it outlawed abortion after quickening and forbade the use of poisons to induce one post quickening Many states subsequently passed various laws on abortion until the Supreme Court of the United States decisions of Roe v Wade and Doe v Bolton decriminalized abortion nationwide in 1973 The Roe decision imposed a federally mandated uniform framework for state legislation on the subject It also established a minimal period during which abortion is legal with more or fewer restrictions throughout the pregnancy That basic framework modified in Planned Parenthood v Casey 1992 remained nominally in place although the effective availability of abortion varied significantly from state to state as many counties had no abortion providers 6 Casey held that a law could not place legal restrictions imposing an undue burden for the purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus 7 Evangelical Christians were initially overwhelmingly either supportive or indifferent to Roe citing what they saw as a lack of biblical condemnation on the matter its perceived affirmation of religious liberty and furthering of non intrusive government but by the 1980s anti abortion Catholics to overturn the decision 8 9 In December 2021 the FDA legalized telemedicine provision of medication abortion pills with delivery by mail but many states have laws which restrict this option In 2022 Roe and Casey were overturned in Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization ending protection of abortion rights by the United States Constitution and allowing individual states to regulate any aspect of abortion not preempted by federal law 10 Since 1976 the Republican Party has generally sought to restrict abortion access based on the stage of pregnancy or to criminalize abortion whereas the Democratic Party has generally defended access to abortion and has made contraception easier to obtain 11 The abortion rights movement advocates for patient choice and bodily autonomy while the anti abortion movement maintains that the fetus has a right to live Historically framed as a debate between the pro choice and pro life labels most Americans agree with some positions of each side 12 Support for abortion gradually increased in the U S beginning in the early 1970s 13 and stabilized during the 2010s 14 15 The abortion rate has continuously declined from a peak in 1980 of 30 per 1 000 women of childbearing age 15 44 to 11 3 by 2018 16 In 2018 78 of abortions were performed at 9 weeks or less gestation and 92 of abortions were performed at 13 weeks or less gestation 16 By 2020 medication abortions accounted for more than 50 of all abortions 17 Almost 25 of women will have had an abortion by age 45 with 20 of 30 year olds having had one 18 In 2019 60 of women who had abortions were already mothers and 50 already had two or more children 19 20 Increased access to birth control has been statistically linked to reductions in the abortion rate 21 22 23 As of 2023 California Michigan and Vermont are the only U S states to have explicit rights to abortion in their state constitutions Other states have implicit rights to abortion subject to state judicial review such as Kansas and Montana or simply protect it via state law such as Colorado The state constitutions of Alabama Louisiana Tennessee and West Virginia explicitly contain no right to an abortion Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 Early history and rise of anti abortion legislation 2 2 Sherri Finkbine 2 3 Pre Roe precedents 2 4 Roe v Wade 2 4 1 Doe v Bolton 2 5 Later judicial decisions 2 6 Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization 2 7 Travel to Mexico 2 8 Medical abortion 3 Legal status 3 1 Federal legislation 3 2 Penalties by state 3 3 State by state legal status 3 4 In response to the coronavirus pandemic 3 5 Sanctuary cities 4 Abortion financing 4 1 Abortion fund organizations 4 2 Medicaid 4 3 Private insurance 4 4 Mexico City policy 5 Qualifying requirements for abortion providers 6 Statistics 6 1 Number of abortions 6 2 Medical abortions 6 3 Abortion and religion 6 4 Abortions and ethnicity 6 5 In state vs out of state 6 6 Motherhood 6 7 Reasons for abortions 6 8 When women have abortions by gestational age 6 9 Safety of abortions 6 10 Birth control effects 7 Public opinion 7 1 By gender and age 7 2 By educational level 7 3 By gender party and region 7 4 By trimester of pregnancy 7 5 By circumstance or reasons 7 6 Additional polls 7 7 Intact dilation and extraction 8 Positions of political parties 9 Effects of legalization and impact of abortion bans 10 Unintended live birth 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksTerminologyMain article Definitions of abortion The abortion debate most commonly relates to the induced abortion of a pregnancy which is also how the term is used in a legal sense nb 1 Some also use the term elective abortion which is used in relation to a claim to an unrestricted right of a woman to an abortion whether or not she chooses to have one The term elective abortion or voluntary abortion describes the interruption of pregnancy before viability at the request of the woman but not for medical reasons 27 In medical parlance abortion can refer to either miscarriage or abortion until the fetus is viable After viability doctors call an abortion a termination of pregnancy HistoryEarly history and rise of anti abortion legislation Abortion has existed in North America since the European colonization of the Americas 28 was a fairly common practice and was not always illegal or controversial 4 2 On the other hand James Mohr wrote that even though pre quickening abortion was legal in the first 3 decades of the 19th century only 1 in 25 to 1 in 30 pregnancies ended in abortion By the 1850s and 1860s this number had increased to 1 in 5 or 1 in 6 29 5 Quickening indicates the start of fetal movements usually felt 14 26 weeks after conception or between the fourth and sixth month 4 30 31 Its determination was generally at the discretion of the pregnant woman 32 but the rules were unstated or unclear in written statues 33 When the United States became independent most U S states continued to apply English common law to abortion 34 In the mid 1700s Founding Father Benjamin Franklin amended a general textbook from Britain to include a manual with instructions for early pregnancy abortion methods 35 36 In 1728 Franklin condemned publisher Samuel Keimer for publishing an article on abortion According to biographer Walter Isaacson Franklin did not have a strong view on the issue 37 38 In 1716 New York passed an ordinance prohibiting midwifes from providing abortion 38 William Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England 1765 states that life begins in contemplation of law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother s womb This view was shared by James Wilson As for legal penalties Blackstone wrote that they applied only if a woman is quick with child and by a potion or otherwise killeth it in her womb 39 Legal scholar Sheldon Gelman has argued that the U S Constitution 1789 imported the tenets of the English Magna Carta 1215 which includes the basis of the right to bodily integrity including abortion 40 This notion has been disputed since during the 13th century England took steps to formally criminalize abortion 41 Founding Father and Second President of the United States John Adams praised the Spartan lawgiver Lycurgus for refusing his sister in law from having an abortion even though it prevented him from assuming power 38 Within the context of a sex scandal 33 Connecticut was the first state to regulate abortion in 1821 it outlawed abortion after quickening and forbade the use of poisons to induce one post quickening 42 In 1829 New York made post quickening abortions a felony and pre quickening abortions a misdemeanor 43 This was followed by 10 of the 26 states creating similar restrictions within the next few decades 44 in particular by the 1860s and 1870s 42 The first laws related to abortion were made to protect women from real or perceived risks and those more restrictive penalized only the provider 32 According to several legal scholars some of the early anti abortion laws punished not only the doctor or abortionist but also the woman who hired them 45 and while women could be criminally tried for a self induced abortion 45 they were rarely prosecuted in general 42 dating back to Edward Coke in 1648 whether abortion was performed before or after quickening determined if it was a crime 45 A number of other factors likely played a role in the rise of anti abortion laws As in Europe abortion techniques advanced starting in the 17th century and the conservatism of most in the medical profession with regards to sexual matters prevented the wide expansion of abortion techniques 42 46 Physicians who were the leading advocates of abortion criminalization laws appear to have been motivated at least in part by advances in medical knowledge Science had discovered that fertilization inaugurated a more or less continuous process of development which produced a new human being Quickening was found to be not more or less crucial in the process of gestation than any other step Many physicians concluded that if society considered it unjustifiable to terminate pregnancy after the fetus had quickened and if quickening was a relatively unimportant step in the gestation process then it was just as wrong to terminate a pregnancy before quickening as after quickening 47 Ideologically the Hippocratic Oath and the medical mentality of that age to defend the sanctity of life as an absolute played a significant role in molding opinions about abortion 47 Doctors were also influenced by practical reasons to advocate anti abortion laws For one abortion providers tended to be untrained and not members of medical societies In an age where the leading doctors in the nation were attempting to standardize the medical profession these unlicensed were considered a nuisance to public health 48 The more formalized medical profession disliked the unlicensed because they were competition often at a cheaper cost and many of them were women 42 midwives Despite campaigns to end the practice of abortion abortifacient advertising was highly effective and abortion was commonly practiced with the help of a midwife or other women 2 in the mid 19th century 28 49 although they were not always safe 31 While the precise abortion rate was not known James Mohr s 1978 book Abortion in America documented multiple recorded estimates by 19th century physicians 42 which suggested that between around 15 and 35 of all pregnancies ended in abortion during that period 50 This era also saw a marked shift in the people who were obtaining abortions Before the start of the 19th century most abortions were sought by unmarried women who had become pregnant out of wedlock and for which there was much less compassion compared to married women who got an abortion many of them were wealthy and paid well 42 Out of 54 abortion cases published in American medical journals between 1839 and 1880 over half were sought by married women and well over 60 of the married women already had at least one child 51 The sense that married women were now frequently obtaining abortions worried many conservative physicians who were almost exclusively men In the Reconstruction era much of the blame was placed on the burgeoning women s rights movement Though the medical profession expressed hostility toward feminism many feminists of the era were also opposed to abortion 42 52 53 In The Revolution a newspaper operated by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B Anthony an 1869 opinion piece was published arguing that instead of merely attempting to pass a law against abortion the root cause must also be addressed 53 54 The writer stated that simply passing an anti abortion law would be only mowing off the top of the noxious weed while the root remains No matter what the motive love of ease or a desire to save from suffering the unborn innocent the woman is awfully guilty who commits the deed It will burden her conscience in life it will burden her soul in death But oh thrice guilty is he who drove her to the desperation which impelled her to the crime 55 To many feminists of this era abortion was regarded as an undesirable necessity forced upon women by thoughtless men 56 The free love wing of the feminist movement refused to advocate for abortion and treated the practice as an example of the hideous extremes to which modern marriage was driving women 57 Marital rape and the seduction of unmarried women were societal ills which feminists believed caused the need to abort as men did not respect women s right to abstinence 57 Feminist opposition to abortion was much less prevalent by the 20th century and it was feminists and physicians who came to question anti abortion laws and raise public interest in the 1960s 42 nbsp Abortion laws in the U S before Roe 58 Fully illegal 1 state Legal in cases of risk to woman s life 29 states Legal in cases of rape 1 state Legal in cases of risk to woman s health 2 states Legal in cases of risk to woman s health rape or incest or likely damaged fetus 13 states Legal on request 4 states Physicians one of the most famous and consequential being Horatio Storer remained the loudest voice in the anti abortion debate and they carried their agenda to state legislatures around the country advocating not only anti abortion laws but also laws against birth control on racist and pseudoscientific grounds 59 religious groups were not particularly active within this movement 60 which presaged the modern debate over women s body rights 61 Though many of these laws indicated the woman as a co criminal she was rarely prosecuted 42 A campaign was launched against the movement and the use and availability of contraceptives Criminalization of abortion accelerated from the late 1860s through the efforts of concerned legislators doctors and the American Medical Association influenced by Storer 62 63 and were facilitated by the press 42 In 1873 Anthony Comstock created the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice an institution dedicated to supervising the morality of the public Later that year Comstock successfully influenced the United States Congress to pass the Comstock Law which made it illegal to deliver through the U S mail any obscene lewd or lascivious material It also prohibited producing or publishing information pertaining to the procurement of abortion birth control and venereal disease including to medical students 64 The production publication importation and distribution of such materials was suppressed under the Comstock Law as being obscene and similar prohibitions were passed by 24 of the 37 states 65 In 1900 abortion was normally a felony in every state Some states included provisions allowing for abortion in limited circumstances generally to protect the woman s health or to terminate pregnancies arising from rape or incest 66 Most Americans did not view abortion as a crime and abortions continued to occur and became increasingly available 67 The American Birth Control League was founded by Margaret Sanger in 1921 it would become Planned Parenthood Federation of America in 1942 68 69 By the 1930s licensed physicians performed an estimated 800 000 abortions a year 70 Sherri Finkbine Main article Sherri Chessen In the early 1960s a controversy centered around children s television host Sherri Finkbine that helped bring abortion and abortion law more directly into the American public eye Living in the area of Phoenix Arizona Finkbine had had four healthy children during her pregnancy with her fifth child she discovered the child might have severe deformities when born 71 This was likely because Finkbine had been taking sleeping pills that she was unaware contained thalidomide a drug that increases the risk of fetal deformities during pregnancy 72 Though Finkbine wanted an abortion the abortion laws of Arizona only allowed abortions if a pregnancy posed a threat to the woman s life The situation gained public attention after Finkbine shared the story with a reporter from The Arizona Republic who disclosed her identity in spite of her requests for anonymity On August 18 1962 Finkbine traveled to Sweden to obtain a legal abortion where it was confirmed that the fetus had severe deformities 73 Finkbine s story marked a turning point for women s reproductive rights and abortion law in the United States Still Finkbine was only able to get an abortion because she could afford to travel overseas for it 74 highlighting an inequality in abortion rights persisting to this day whereby many women cannot afford or otherwise do not have the resources to obtain a legal abortion in such cases women may turn to illegal abortion 75 76 Pre Roe precedents In 1964 Gerri Santoro of Connecticut died trying to obtain an illegal abortion and her photo became the symbol of an abortion rights movement Some women s rights activist groups developed their own skills to provide abortions to women who could not obtain them elsewhere As an example in Chicago a group known as Jane operated a floating abortion clinic throughout much of the 1960s Women seeking the procedure would call a designated number and be given instructions on how to find Jane 77 In 1965 the U S Supreme Court case Griswold v Connecticut struck down one of the remaining contraception Comstock laws in Connecticut and Massachusetts 78 However Griswold only applied to marital relationships allowing married couples to buy and use contraceptives without government restriction It took until 1972 with Eisenstadt v Baird to extend the precedent of Griswold to unmarried persons as well 79 Following the Griswold case the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists ACOG issued a medical bulletin accepting a recommendation from six years earlier that clarified that conception is the implantation of a fertilized ovum 80 and consequently birth control methods that prevented implantation became classified as contraceptives not abortifacients In 1967 Colorado became the first state to decriminalize abortion in cases of rape incest or in which pregnancy would lead to permanent physical disability of the woman Similar laws were passed in California Oregon and North Carolina In 1970 Hawaii became the first state to legalize abortions on the request of the woman 81 and New York repealed its 1830 law and allowed abortions up to the 24th week of pregnancy Similar laws were soon passed in Alaska and Washington In 1970 Washington held a referendum on legalizing early pregnancy abortions becoming the first state to legalize abortion through a vote of the people 82 A law in Washington D C which allowed abortion to protect the life or health of the woman was challenged in the Supreme Court in 1971 in United States v Vuitch The court upheld the law deeming that health meant psychological and physical well being essentially allowing abortion in Washington D C By the end of 1972 13 states had a law similar to that of Colorado while Mississippi allowed abortion in cases of rape or incest only and Alabama and Massachusetts allowed abortions only in cases where the woman s physical health was endangered In order to obtain abortions during this period women would often travel from a state where abortion was illegal to one where it was legal The legal position prior to Roe v Wade was that abortion was illegal in 30 states and legal under certain circumstances in 20 states 83 In the late 1960s a number of organizations were formed to mobilize opinion both against and for the legalization of abortion In 1966 the National Conference of Catholic Bishops assigned Monsignor James T McHugh to document efforts to reform abortion laws and anti abortion groups began forming in various states in 1967 In 1968 McHugh led an advisory group which became the National Right to Life Committee 84 85 The forerunner of the NARAL Pro Choice America was formed in 1969 to oppose restrictions on abortion and expand access to abortion 86 Following Roe v Wade in late 1973 NARAL became the National Abortion Rights Action League Roe v Wade Main article Roe v Wade nbsp The United States Supreme Court membership in 1973Prior to Roe v Wade 30 states prohibited abortion without exception 16 states banned abortion except in certain special circumstances e g rape incest and health threat to mother 3 states allowed residents to obtain abortions and New York allowed abortions generally 87 Early that year on January 22 1973 the U S Supreme Court in Roe v Wade invalidated all of these laws and set guidelines for the availability of abortion The decision returned abortion to its liberalized pre 1820 status 42 Roe established that the right of privacy of a woman to obtain an abortion must be considered against important state interests in regulation 88 Roe also established a trimester framework defined as the end of the first pregnancy trimester 12 weeks as the threshold for state interest such that states were prohibited from banning abortion in the first trimester but allowed to impose increasing restrictions or outright bans later in pregnancy 88 In deciding Roe v Wade the Court ruled that a Texas statute forbidding abortion except when necessary to save the life of the mother was unconstitutional The Court arrived at its decision by concluding that the issue of abortion and abortion rights falls under the right of privacy in the United States e g federal constitutionally protected right in the sense of the right of a person not to be encroached by the state In its opinion it listed several landmark cases where the court had previously found a right to privacy implied by the Constitution The Court did not recognize a right to abortion in all cases saying State regulation protective of fetal life after viability thus has both logical and biological justifications If the State is interested in protecting fetal life after viability it may go so far as to proscribe abortion during that period except when it is necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother 89 The Court held that a right to privacy existed and included the right to have an abortion The court found that a mother had a right to abortion until viability a point to be determined by the abortion doctor After viability a woman can obtain an abortion for health reasons which the Court defined broadly to include psychological well being A central issue in the Roe case and in the wider abortion debate in general is whether human life or personhood begins at conception birth or at some point in between The Court declined to make an attempt at resolving this issue writing We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine philosophy and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus the judiciary at this point in the development of man s knowledge is not in a position to speculate as to the answer Instead it chose to point out that historically under English and American common law and statutes the unborn have never been recognized as persons in the whole sense and thus the fetuses are not legally entitled to the protection afforded by the right to life specifically enumerated in the Fourteenth Amendment Rather than asserting that human life begins at any specific point the Court declared that the state has a compelling interest in protecting potential life at the point of viability 89 Doe v Bolton Main article Doe v Bolton Under Roe v Wade state governments may not prohibit late terminations of pregnancy when necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother even if it would cause the demise of a viable fetus 90 This rule was clarified by the 1973 judicial decision Doe v Bolton which specifies that the medical judgment may be exercised in the light of all factors physical emotional psychological familial and the woman s age relevant to the well being of the patient 91 92 93 It is by this provision for the mother s mental health that women in the U S legally choose abortion after viability when screenings reveal abnormalities that do not cause a baby to die shortly after birth 94 95 96 97 Later judicial decisions In the 1992 case of Planned Parenthood v Casey the Court abandoned Roe s strict trimester framework but maintained its central holding that women have a right to choose to have an abortion before viability 98 Roe had held that statutes regulating abortion must be subject to strict scrutiny the traditional Supreme Court test for impositions upon fundamental Constitutional rights Casey instead adopted the lower undue burden standard for evaluating state abortion restrictions 98 but re emphasized the right to abortion as grounded in the general sense of liberty and privacy protected under the constitution Constitutional protection of the woman s decision to terminate her pregnancy derives from the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution It declares that no state shall deprive any person of life liberty or property without due process of law The controlling word in the cases before us is liberty 99 The Supreme Court continues to make decisions on this subject On April 18 2007 it issued a ruling in the case of Gonzales v Carhart involving a federal law entitled the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003 which President George W Bush had signed into law The law banned intact dilation and extraction which opponents of abortion rights referred to as partial birth abortion and stipulated that anyone breaking the law would get a prison sentence up to 2 5 years The United States Supreme Court upheld the 2003 ban by a narrow majority of 5 4 marking the first time the Court has allowed a ban on any type of abortion since 1973 The opinion which came from justice Anthony Kennedy was joined by Justices Antonin Scalia Clarence Thomas and the two recent appointees Samuel Alito and Chief Justice John Roberts In the case of Whole Woman s Health v Hellerstedt the Supreme Court in a 5 3 decision on June 27 2016 swept away forms of state restrictions on the way abortion clinics can function The Texas legislature enacted in 2013 restrictions on the delivery of abortions services that it was argued by its opponents created an undue burden for women seeking an abortion by requiring abortion doctors to have difficult to obtain admitting privileges at a local hospital and by requiring clinics to have costly hospital grade facilities The Court supported this argument and struck down these two provisions facially from the law at issue that is the very words of the provisions were invalid no matter how they might be applied in any practical situation According to the Supreme Court the task of judging whether a law puts an unconstitutional burden on a woman s right to abortion belongs with the courts and not the legislatures 100 The Supreme Court ruled similarly in June Medical Services LLC v Russo on June 29 2020 in a 5 4 decision that a Louisiana state law modeled after the Texas law at the center of Whole Woman s Health was unconstitutional 101 Like Texas law the Louisiana law required certain measures for abortion clinics that if having gone into effect would have closed five of the six clinics in the state The case in Louisiana was put on hold pending the result of Whole Woman s Health and was retried based on the Supreme Court s decision While the District Court ruled the law unconstitutional the Fifth Circuit found that unlike the Texas law the burden of the Louisiana law passed the tests outlined in Whole Woman s Health and thus the law was constitutional The Supreme Court issued an order to suspend enforcement of the law pending further review and agreed to hear the case in full in October 2019 It was the first abortion related case to be heard by President Donald Trump s appointees to the Court Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh 102 The Supreme Court found the Louisiana law unconstitutional for the same reasons as the Texas one reversing the Fifth Circuit The judgment was supported by Chief Justice John Roberts who had dissented on Whole Woman s Health but joined in judgment as to upholding the court s respect for the past judgment in that case 101 Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization Main article Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization nbsp The composition of the Supreme Court at the time of DobbsThe Supreme Court granted certiorari to Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization in May 2021 a case that challenges the impact of Roe v Wade in blocking enforcement of a 2018 Mississippi law the Gestational Age Act that had banned any abortions after the first 15 weeks 103 Oral arguments to Dobbs were held in December 2021 and a decision was expected by the end of the 2021 22 Supreme Court term On September 1 2021 Texas passed the Texas Heartbeat Act one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the nation banning most procedures after six weeks 104 On May 2 2022 a leaked draft majority opinion for Dobbs written by Samuel Alito set to overturn Roe was reported by Politico 105 On June 24 2022 the Supreme Court overruled both Roe and Planned Parenthood v Casey in the Dobbs case on originalist grounds that a right to abortion cannot be found in the U S Constitution John Roberts the Chief Justice of the United States concurred in the decision to uphold the law at question as constitutional by a 6 3 vote and did not support overruling both Roe and Casey 106 107 This enabled trigger laws which had been passed in 13 states 108 109 110 to effectively ban abortions in those states 111 112 Abortion related initiatives were placed on the 2022 ballot in six states the most in a single year California Michigan and Vermont enshrined the right to an abortion in their state constitutions while Kansas Kentucky and Montana rejected restrictions on abortion 113 During the August primaries nearly 60 percent of Kansas voters rejected their state s Value Them Both Amendment which would have removed the right to an abortion from the Kansas Constitution 113 Voters in Ohio defeated a referendum in August 2023 intended to make changes to the state s constitution more difficult ahead of an abortion rights referendum scheduled for the November 2023 general election 114 Travel to Mexico nbsp Availability of abortion in Mexican states Illegal but providers are not prosecuted Legal during first 15 weeks LMP first 12 weeks of pregnancy Legal for economic reasons if mother already has 3 childrenFurther information Abortion in Mexico In the wake of state abortion bans and restrictions in the United States Americans have started traveling to Mexico for abortions and Mexico has expressed a willingness to help 115 116 At least partly due to a unanimous 2021 Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation decision that penalties for abortion violate women s rights abortion providers are not prosecuted even in states where abortion remains illegal under state law there are also legal exemptions for rape and medical reasons and a police report is not required for a rape exemption Providers openly treat American travelers in several states where abortion remains technically illegal such as Nuevo Leon which neighbors Texas Following the Supreme Court ruling abortion is being gradually legalized at the state level and as of 2022 is legal during the first trimester before the 13th week after implantation in eleven states and Mexico City 117 118 In an additional two states abortion is legal for economic reasons if a woman already has 3 children this is during the first trimester for one Michoacan and with no set limit for the other Yucatan 119 Medical abortion Medical abortion via mifepristone and misoprostol was approved for abortion in the United States by the FDA in September 2000 120 As of 2007 update it was legal and available in all 50 states Washington D C Guam and Puerto Rico 121 It was a prescription drug and required that it could only be distributed to the public through specially qualified licensed physicians 122 In the midst of the COVID 19 pandemic on December 16 2021 in light of the difficulties in accessing in person healthcare services the FDA approved the distribution of mifepristone via mail 123 In states where abortion is banned or restricted women are able to obtain pills through ordering from overseas online pharmacies purchasing from pharmacies in Mexico from services such as Aid Access 124 or through a network of U S Mexico border organizations that includes Red Necesito Abortar Las Libres es and Marea Verde 125 126 127 128 129 In January 2023 the U S Department of Justice stated that USPS mailing of pills for medication abortion even into states where abortion services are restricted does not violate federal law 130 In 2023 online access to abortion medication by mail delivered by the US Postal Service is currently available to citizens of all states 131 Main article Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v FDA In light of the Dobbs decision the Alliance Defending Freedom launched a lawsuit in November 2022 in the Northern District of Texas under Judge Matthew J Kacsmaryk to seek to overturn the FDA s original approval of mifepristone The Alliance argued that the FDA had ignored some studies that showed the medication to have harmful side effects while the current federal administration under Joe Biden the manufacturers of the drugs and several doctors vouched for the safety of the drugs and the lack of standing in the plaintiff s case Despite this Judge Kacsmaryk ruled for the Alliance on April 7 2023 reversing the FDA s approval and banning mifepristone across the United States after seven days 132 A district judge in a separate lawsuit Thomas O Rice of the Eastern District of Washington ruled that the FDA should not reverse access to mifepristone in 16 states 133 Kacsmaryk s ruling was partially reversed by a panel on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals leaving mifepristone on the market but reverting efforts made by the FDA to liberalize its use over seven years 134 The case is expected to be ruled on by the Supreme Court 133 Mifepristone is used for abortion in the tenth week of pregnancy With the fact reported by the Guttmacher Institute that more than half of abortion in the US is done with drugs 135 the judge s decision will have a strong consequence 136 Legal statusFederal legislation Since 1995 led by congressional Republicans the U S House of Representatives and U S Senate have moved several times to pass measures banning the procedure of intact dilation and extraction commonly known as partial birth abortion Such measures passed twice by wide margins but President Bill Clinton vetoed those bills in April 1996 and October 1997 on the grounds that they did not include health exceptions Congressional supporters of the bill argue that a health exception would render the bill unenforceable since the Doe v Bolton decision defined health in vague terms justifying any motive for obtaining an abortion Congress was unsuccessful with subsequent attempts to override the vetoes The Born Alive Infants Protection Act BAIPA was enacted August 5 2002 by an Act of Congress and signed into law by George W Bush It asserts the human rights of infants born after a failed attempt to induce abortion A born alive infant is specified as a person human being child individual Born alive is defined as the complete expulsion of an infant at any stage of development that has a heartbeat pulsation of the umbilical cord breath or voluntary muscle movement no matter if the umbilical cord has been cut or if the expulsion of the infant was natural induced labor cesarean section or induced abortion The Born Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act is a proposed piece of legislation that would result in criminal penalties for any practitioner who denies a born alive infant care On October 2 2003 with a vote of 281 142 the House approved the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act to ban intact dilation and extraction with an exemption in cases of fatal threats to the woman Through this legislation a doctor could face up to two years in prison and civil lawsuits for performing such a procedure A woman undergoing the procedure could not be prosecuted under the measure On October 21 2003 the United States Senate passed the bill by a vote of 64 34 with a number of Democrats joining in support The bill was signed by President George W Bush on November 5 2003 but a federal judge blocked its enforcement in several states just a few hours after it became public law The Supreme Court upheld the nationwide ban on the procedure in the case Gonzales v Carhart on April 18 2007 signaling a substantial change in the Court s approach to abortion law 137 The 5 4 ruling said the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act does not conflict with previous decisions regarding abortion The judicial interpretation of the U S Constitution regarding abortion following the Supreme Court of the United States s 1973 landmark decision in Roe v Wade and subsequent companion decisions is that abortion is legal but may be restricted by the states to varying degrees States have passed laws to restrict late term abortions require parental notification for minors and mandate the disclosure of abortion risk information to patients prior to the procedure 138 The official report of the U S Senate Judiciary Committee issued in 1983 after extensive hearings on the Human Life Amendment proposed by Senators Orrin Hatch and Thomas Eagleton stated Thus the Judiciary Committee observes that no significant legal barriers of any kind whatsoever exist today in the United States for a mother to obtain an abortion for any reason during any stage of her pregnancy 139 One aspect of the legal abortion regime now in place has been determining when the fetus is viable outside the womb as a measure of when the life of the fetus is its own and therefore subject to being protected by the state In the majority opinion delivered by the court in Roe v Wade viability was defined as potentially able to live outside the mother s womb albeit with artificial aid Viability is usually placed at about seven months 28 weeks but may occur earlier even at 24 weeks When the court ruled in 1973 the then current medical technology suggested that viability could occur as early as 24 weeks Advances over the past three decades allow survival of some babies born at 22 weeks 140 As of 2006 update the youngest child to survive a premature birth in the United States was a girl born at Kapiolani Medical Center in Honolulu Hawaii at 21 weeks and 3 days gestation 141 Because of the split between federal and state law legal access to abortion continues to vary by state Geographic availability varies dramatically with 87 percent of U S counties having no abortion provider 142 Moreover due to the Hyde Amendment many Medicaid state programs do not cover abortions as of 2022 17 states including California Illinois and New York offer or require such coverage 143 The legality of abortion is frequently a major issue in nomination battles for the U S Supreme Court Nominees typically remain silent on the issue during their hearings as the issue may come before them as judges 144 The Unborn Victims of Violence Act commonly known as Laci and Conner s Law was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Bush on April 1 2004 allowing two charges to be filed against someone who kills a pregnant mother one for the mother and one for the fetus It specifically bans charges against the mother and or doctor relating to abortion procedures Nevertheless it has generated much controversy among pro abortion rights advocates who view it as a potential step in the direction of banning abortion In 2021 the Women s Health Protection Act which would codify abortion rights into federal law was introduced by Judy Chu 145 The bill passed the U S House of Representatives but was rejected by the U S Senate 146 After the Dobbs decision Merrick Garland the U S Attorney General asserted that under federal law states do not have the right to restrict access to FDA approved abortion pills but Louisiana passed a law to ban mailing them 147 Legal experts cited as a potentially persuasive precedent the 2014 district decision in Zogenix v Patrick in which the court ruled that under the doctrine of federal preemption Massachusetts could not ban the opioid Zohydro because it had been approved by the FDA 148 149 On September 13 2022 Republican senator Lindsey Graham introduced legislation that would ban abortion nationwide after 15 weeks of pregnancy with exceptions for rape incest and the life of the patient named the Protecting Pain Capable Unborn Children from Late Term Abortions Act 150 151 152 Graham had previously introduced the Pain Capable Unborn Child Protection Act which set the period at 20 weeks 153 Penalties by state Currently 13 states have criminal penalties for performing abortions regardless of gestational age 154 The penalties in states that have made abortion illegal vary as outlined below This chart lists only the penalties authorized specifically by the state laws which explicitly restrict or ban abortions The chart does not address the risk of being prosecuted for violating any other law because of the abortion The jurisprudence surrounding this question whether laws such as fetal personhood laws 155 or laws originally intended to protect pregnant women and their pregnancies from external aggressors can now also be used to prosecute women who obtain abortions or who terminate their own pregnancies deliberately or unintentionally 156 is unsettled variable and in some states unclear 157 States with criminal penalties that are blocked by a court have yet to take effect or are unenforced are denoted by a grey background State SentenceAbortion providers Patients getting abortions nbsp Alabama Performing an abortion is a Class A felony punishable by imprisonment for at least 10 years up to 99 years or life Attempting to perform an abortion is a Class C felony punishable by imprisonment for at least 1 year and 1 day up to 10 years 158 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 159 nbsp Arizona Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is punishable by imprisonment for a minimum of 2 years and a maximum of 5 years 160 nbsp Arkansas Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is an unclassified felony punishable by imprisonment not to exceed 10 years and or a maximum fine of 100 000 161 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 162 nbsp Idaho Performing an abortion is a felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 2 and not more than 5 years and or a maximum fine of 5 000 163 Purposely terminating a pregnancy other than by live birth is a felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 1 and not more than 5 years and or a maximum fine of 5 000 164 nbsp Indiana Performing an illegal abortion is a Level 5 felony punishable by imprisonment for 1 to 6 years and or a fine of up to 10 000 165 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 166 nbsp Kentucky Intentional termination of life of an unborn human being is a class D felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 1 and not more than 5 years 167 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 168 nbsp Louisiana Committing an abortion is punishable by imprisonment for not less than one year and not more than ten years and or a fine of not less than 10 000 or more than 100 000 169 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 170 nbsp Mississippi Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is punishable by imprisonment for not less than 1 year and not more than 10 years 171 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 172 nbsp Missouri Performing an abortion is a class B felony punishable by imprisonment for at least five years and no more than fifteen years 173 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 174 nbsp North Dakota Performing an abortion is a class C felony punishable by imprisonment for a maximum of five years and or a fine of 10 000 175 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 176 nbsp Oklahoma Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is a felony punishable by imprisonment for a term not to exceed ten years and or a maximum fine of 100 000 177 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 178 nbsp South Dakota Procurement of abortion is a class 6 felony punishable by up to two years imprisonment and or a fine of 4 000 179 nbsp Tennessee Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is a class C felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 3 years and not more than 15 years 180 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 181 nbsp Texas Performing or attempting to perform an abortion is a first degree felony if an unborn child an individual living member of the homo sapiens species from fertilization until birth including the entire embryonic and fetal stages of development dies as a result of the offense punishable by imprisonment of not less than 5 years and not more than 99 years and a maximum fine of 10 000 or a second degree felony otherwise punishable by imprisonment of not less than 2 years and not more than 20 years and a maximum fine of 10 000 182 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 183 nbsp Utah Killing an unborn child not defined in the statute is a second degree felony punishable by imprisonment for not less than 1 and not more than 15 years 184 nbsp West Virginia Performing an illegal abortion is a felony punishable by imprisonment for a minimum of 3 years and a maximum of 10 years 185 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 186 nbsp Wisconsin Performing an abortion is a class H felony punishable by imprisonment for a maximum of 6 years and or a fine of 10 000 187 None authorized by the state s ban on abortion 188 nbsp Wyoming Violation of abortion restrictions is a felony punishable by imprisonment for not more than 14 years 189 State by state legal status Main articles Abortion in the United States by state and Types of abortion restrictions in the United States This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on Talk Abortion in the United States Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section possibly contains original research due to uncited undated maps Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp States in which the right to an abortion is protected either through state law a state supreme court ruling or both 190 Abortion access protected by state law Abortion access protected by state Constitution Abortion access protected via both state law and state Constitution No state level protections nbsp Map showing which states require parental involvement minors Parental notification or consent not required One parent must be informed beforehand Both parents must be informed beforehand One parent must consent beforehand Both parents must consent beforehand One parent must consent and be informed beforehand Parental notification law currently enjoined Parental consent law currently enjoined nbsp Mandatory waiting period laws in the U S No mandatory waiting period Waiting period of less than 24 hours Waiting period of 24 hours or more Waiting period law currently enjoined nbsp Abortion counseling laws in the U S No mandatory counselling Counselling in person by phone mail and or other Counselling in person only Counselling law enjoined needs update nbsp Mandatory ultrasound laws in the U S Mandatory Must display image Mandatory Must offer to display image Mandatory Law unenforceable Not mandatory If ultrasound is performed must offer to display image Not mandatory Must offer ultrasound Not mandatory Prior to 2022 abortion was legal in all U S states and every state had at least one abortion clinic 191 192 Abortion is a controversial political issue and regular attempts to restrict it occur in most states Two such cases originating in Texas and Louisiana led to the Supreme Court cases of Whole Woman s Health v Hellerstedt 2016 and June Medical Services LLC v Russo 2020 in which several Texas and Louisiana restrictions were struck down 193 194 The issue of minors and abortion is regulated at the state level and 37 states require some parental involvement either in the form of parental consent or in the form of parental notification In certain situations the parental restrictions can be overridden by a court 195 Mandatory waiting periods mandatory ultrasounds and scripted counseling are common abortion regulations Abortion laws are generally stricter in conservative Southern states than they are in other parts of the country In 2019 New York passed the Reproductive Health Act RHA which repealed a pre Roe provision that banned third trimester abortions except in cases where the continuation of the pregnancy endangered a pregnant woman s life 196 197 Abortion in the Northern Mariana Islands a United States Commonwealth territory is illegal 198 199 200 Alabama House Republicans passed a law on April 30 2019 that will criminalize most abortion if it goes into effect 201 Dubbed the Human Life Protection Act it offers only two exceptions serious health risk to the mother or a lethal fetal anomaly Amendments that would have added cases of rape or incest to the list of exceptions were rejected 202 It will also make the procedure a Class A felony 203 Twenty five male Alabama senators voted to pass the law on May 13 204 The next day Alabama governor Kay Ivey signed the bill into law primarily as a symbolic gesture in hopes of challenging Roe v Wade in the Supreme Court 205 206 Since Alabama introduced the first modern anti abortion legislation in April 2019 five other states have also adopted abortion laws including Mississippi Kentucky Ohio Georgia and most recently Louisiana on May 30 2019 207 In May 2019 the U S Supreme Court upheld an Indiana state law that requires fetuses which were aborted be buried or cremated 208 In a December 2019 case the court declined to review a lower court decision which upheld a Kentucky law requiring doctors to perform ultrasounds and show fetal images to patients before abortions 209 On June 29 2020 previous Supreme Court rulings banning abortion restrictions appeared to be upheld when the U S Supreme Court struck down the Louisiana anti abortion law 210 Following the ruling the legality of laws restricting abortion in states such as Ohio was then called into question 211 It was also noted that Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts who agreed that the Louisiana anti abortion law was unconstitutional had previously voted to uphold a similar law in Texas which was struck down by the U S Supreme Court in 2016 212 In May 2021 Texas lawmakers passed the Texas Heartbeat Act banning abortions as soon as cardiac activity can be detected typically as early as six weeks into pregnancy and often before women know they are pregnant due to the length of the menstrual cycle which usually lasts a median of four weeks and in some cases can be irregular 213 In order to avoid traditional constitutional challenges based on Roe v Wade the law provides that any person with or without any vested interest may sue anyone that performs or induces an abortion in violation of the statute as well as anyone who aids or abets the performance or inducement of an abortion including paying for or reimbursing the costs of an abortion through insurance or otherwise 214 The law was challenged in courts though had yet to have a full formal hearing as its September 1 2021 enactment date came due Plaintiffs sought an order from the U S Supreme Court to stop the law from coming into effect but the Court issued a denial of the order late on September 1 2021 allowing the law to remain in effect While unsigned Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Stephen Breyer wrote dissenting opinions joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor that they would have granted an injunction on the law until a proper judicial review 215 216 On September 9 2021 Merrick Garland the Attorney General and head of the United States Department of Justice sued Texas over the Texas Heartbeat Act on the basis that the law is invalid under the Supremacy Clause and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution is preempted by federal law and violates the doctrine of intergovernmental immunity 217 Garland further noted that the United States government has an obligation to ensure that no state can deprive individuals of their constitutional rights 218 The Complaint avers that Texas enacted the law in open defiance of the Constitution 219 The relief requested from the U S District Court in Austin Texas includes a declaration that the Texas Act is unconstitutional and an injunction against state actors as well as any and all private individuals who may bring a SB 8 action 219 218 The idea of asking a federal court to impose an injunction upon the entire civilian population of a state is unprecedented and has drawn eyebrows 220 221 Colorado passed into law its Reproductive Health Equity Act in April 2022 which assures abortion rights for all citizens of the state While the bill as passed maintained the status quo for abortion rights it assures that every individual has a fundamental right to make decisions about the individual s reproductive health care including the fundamental right to use or refuse contraception a pregnant individual has a fundamental right to continue a pregnancy and give birth or to have an abortion and to make decisions about how to exercise that right and a fertilized egg embryo or fetus does not have independent or derivative rights under the laws of the state regardless of changes that may happen at the federal level 222 On May 25 2022 Oklahoma imposed a ban on elective abortions after Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt signed House Bill 4327 The bill bans elective abortion beginning at conception 223 The law also permits private citizens to file lawsuits against abortion providers who knowingly provide perform or induce elective abortions on a pregnant woman Abortion in cases of rape incest or high risk pregnancies continue to be permitted 224 A lawsuit was immediately filed by the ACLU in opposition to the bill 225 226 At the time of enactment Oklahoma was the only U S state to have passed a bill imposing such restrictions the law made Oklahoma the first U S state to ban elective abortion procedures since prior to the ruling and implementation of Roe in 1973 227 228 223 After the Supreme Court overturned Roe on June 24 2022 Texas and Missouri immediately banned abortions with the exception only if the pregnancy was deemed to be particularly life threatening 229 230 On January 28 2023 the Minnesota state Senate passed a bill guaranteeing women s rights to abortion and other reproductive medicine which was signed into law on January 31 The bill prohibits state and local governments from attempting to restrict access to sterilization or prenatal care while also requiring contraceptive cost compensation 231 232 In 2023 five women launched a class action lawsuit against the State of Texas after they were reportedly denied abortions at a clinic in the State despite grave risks to their life Four of the women traveled out of state in order to obtain an abortion while the fifth only received the abortion in Texas when she was hospitalized after the fetus suffered a premature rupture of membranes The case argues that the Texas law which allows abortion if there is a health risk to the mother is too vague and doctors will not perform an abortion for fear of legal repercussions 233 In response to the coronavirus pandemic Main article Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic on abortion in the United States Amid the COVID 19 pandemic anti abortion government officials in several American states enacted or attempted to enact restrictions on abortion characterizing it as a non essential procedure that can be suspended during the medical emergency 234 The orders have led to several legal challenges and criticism by human rights groups and several national medical organizations including the American Medical Association 235 Legal challenges on behalf of abortion providers many of which were represented by the American Civil Liberties Union and Planned Parenthood successfully stopped most of the orders on a temporary basis 234 One challenge was made against the FDA s rule on the distribution of mifepristone RU 486 one of the two part drug regimen to induce abortions Since 2000 it is only available through health providers under the FDA s ruling Due to the COVID 19 pandemic access to mifepristone was a concern and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists along with other groups sued to have the rule relaxed to allow women to be able to access mifepristone at home through mail order or retail pharmacies While the Fourth Circuit issued a preliminary injunction against the FDA s ruling that would have allowed wider distribution the Supreme Court ordered in a 6 3 decision in January 2021 to put a stay on the injunction maintaining the FDA s rule 236 Sanctuary cities Since 2019 the anti abortion movement in the United States has sought declarations of sanctuary cit ies for the unborn 237 In June 2019 the city council of Waskom Texas voted to outlaw abortion in the city declaring Waskom a sanctuary city for the unborn the first such city to designate itself as such as state governments elsewhere in the United States were also drafting abortion bans 238 239 As of July 2019 update there is no abortion clinic in the city 240 241 The Waskom ordinance has led other small cities in Texas and as of April 2021 in Nebraska to vote in favor of becoming sanctuary cities for the unborn 242 243 244 On April 6 2021 Hayes Center Nebraska became the first city in Nebraska to outlaw abortion by local ordinance declaring itself a sanctuary city for the unborn 245 The city of Blue Hill Nebraska followed suit and enacted a similar ordinance outlawing abortion on April 13 2021 246 247 In May 2021 Lubbock Texas with a population of less than 270 000 voted to ban abortion with the sanctuary city for the unborn ordinance becoming the largest city in the U S to ban abortion 248 249 250 Abortion rights movements have also pushed for similar counterpart legislation in other cities 251 In February 2017 the St Louis Board of Aldermen passed 17 10 Board Bill 203 The bill sponsored by alderwoman Megan Green made it illegal for landlords and employers to discriminate against individuals who are pregnant use contraceptives and are having or have had abortions 252 This law was subsequently challenged with plaintiffs including the St Louis Archdiocese along with private citizens filing a lawsuit against the city in Our Lady s Inn et al v City of St Louis on May 22 2017 In the US District Court of Eastern Missouri resulting in the ordinance being enjoined against the city 253 Abortion financing nbsp State Medicaid coverage of medically necessary abortion services text based list Medicaid covers medically necessary abortion for low income women through legislation Medicaid covers medically necessary abortions for low income women under court order Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low income women except for cases of rape incest life or health endangerment or severe fetal abnormality Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low income women except for cases of rape incest life endangerment or severe fetal abnormality Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low income women except for cases of rape incest or life or health endangerment Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low income women except for cases of rape incest or life endangerment Medicaid denies abortion coverage for low income women except for cases of life endangerment The abortion debate has also been extended to the question of who pays the medical costs of the procedure with some states using the mechanism as a way of reducing the number of abortions citation needed The cost of an abortion varies depending on factors such as location facility timing type of procedure and whether or not there is insurance or some other type of financial assistance In 2022 a medication abortion cost was about 580 at Planned Parenthood though it could be more up to around 800 in other facilities During the first trimester an in clinic abortion cost up to around 800 though often less the average cost at Planned Parenthood was about 600 A second trimester procedure varied depending on the stage of pregnancy The average ranged from about 715 earlier in the second trimester to 1 500 2 000 later in the second trimester 254 A variety of resources from support organizations are available to contribute to the costs of the procedure as well as travel expenses 255 Abortion fund organizations A variety of organizations offer financial support for people seeking abortions including travel and other expenses 255 Access Reproductive Care Southeast ARC Southeast the Brigid Alliance the Midwest Access Coalition MAC and the National Network of Abortion Funds are examples of such groups 255 Medicaid The Hyde Amendment is a federal legislative provision barring the use of federal Medicaid funds to pay for abortions except for rape and incest 256 The provision in various forms was in response to Roe v Wade and has been routinely attached to annual appropriations bills since 1976 and represented the first major legislative success by the pro life movement The law requires that states cover abortions under Medicaid in the event of rape incest and life endangerment 257 Private insurance Six states require coverage in all private plans California Illinois Maine New York Oregon and Washington 2021 258 Note The following figures are from 2008 and may have changed since that time 5 states ID KY MO ND OK restrict insurance coverage of abortion services in private plans OK limits coverage to life endangerment rape or incest circumstances and the other four states limit coverage to cases of life endangerment 11 states CO KY MA MS NE ND OH PA RI SC VA restrict abortion coverage in insurance plans for public employees with CO and KY restricting insurance coverage of abortion under any circumstances U S laws also ban federal funding of abortions for federal employees and their dependents Native Americans covered by the Indian Health Service military personnel and their dependents and women with disabilities covered by Medicare 259 Mexico City policy Main article Mexico City policy Under this policy U S federal funding to NGOs that provide abortion is not permitted The policy was first announced by President Ronald Reagan in 1984 It has been rescinded by Democratic presidents and reinstated by Republican presidents The policy was rescinded in 2021 by President Joe Biden 260 Qualifying requirements for abortion providersQualifying requirements for performing abortions vary from state to state 261 Vermont has allowed physician assistants to do some first trimester abortions since the mid 1970s 262 More recently several states have changed their requirements for abortion providers anticipating that the Supreme Court would overturn Roe v Wade now that the court has done so more states are expanding eligibility to provide abortions As of July 2022 update California Connecticut Delaware Hawaii Illinois Maine Maryland Massachusetts Montana New Jersey New York Rhode Island Virginia and Washington allow mid level practitioners such as nurse practitioners nurse midwives and physicians assistants to do some first trimester abortions 263 In other states non physicians are not permitted to perform abortions StatisticsMain article Abortion statistics in the United States Because reporting of abortions is not mandatory statistics are of varying reliability Both the Centers For Disease Control CDC 264 and the Guttmacher Institute 265 266 regularly compile these statistics nbsp 267 nbsp 265 266 Number of abortions The annual number of legal induced abortions in the U S doubled between 1973 and 1979 and peaked in 1990 There was a slow but steady decline throughout the 1990s Overall the number of annual abortions decreased by 6 between 2000 and 2009 with temporary spikes in 2002 and 2006 268 By 2011 abortion rate in the nation dropped to its lowest point since the Supreme Court legalized the procedure According to a study performed by Guttmacher Institute long acting contraceptive methods had a significant impact in reducing unwanted pregnancies There were fewer than 17 abortions for every 1 000 women of child bearing age That was a 13 decrease from 2008 s numbers and slightly higher than the rate in 1973 when the Supreme Court s Roe v Wade decision legalized abortion 269 The study indicated a long term decline in the abortion rate 270 271 272 In 2016 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC reported 623 471 abortions a 2 decrease from 636 902 in 2015 273 During the first six months of 2023 following Dobbs in 2022 the numbers of abortions in certain U S states changed dramatically compared to the same time period in 2020 according to the Guttmacher Institute Abortions tripled in New Mexico and Wyoming and more than doubled in South Carolina and Kansas For 13 states that had banned abortion the Guttmacher Institute had no 2023 data to make the comparison 274 Medical abortions A Guttmacher Institute survey of abortion providers estimated that early medical abortions accounted for 17 of all non hospital abortions and slightly over one quarter of abortions before 9 weeks gestation in the United States in 2008 275 Medical abortions voluntarily reported to the CDC by 34 reporting areas excluding Alabama California Connecticut Delaware Florida Hawaii Illinois Louisiana Maryland Massachusetts Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire Pennsylvania Tennessee Vermont Wisconsin and Wyoming and published in its annual abortion surveillance reports have increased every year since the September 28 2000 FDA approval of mifepristone RU 486 1 0 in 2000 2 9 in 2001 5 2 in 2002 7 9 in 2003 9 3 in 2004 9 9 in 2005 10 6 in 2006 13 1 in 2007 15 8 in 2008 17 1 in 2009 25 2 of those at less than 9 weeks gestation 276 Medical abortions accounted for 32 of first trimester abortions at Planned Parenthood clinics in 2008 277 By 2020 medication abortions accounted for more than 50 of all abortions 17 Abortion and religion A majority of abortions are obtained by religiously identified women According to the Guttmacher Institute more than 7 in 10 U S women obtaining an abortion report a religious affiliation 37 protestant 28 Catholic and 7 other and 25 attend religious services at least once a month The abortion rate for protestant women is 15 per 1 000 women while Catholic women have a slightly higher rate 20 per 1 000 278 Abortions and ethnicity Abortion rates tend to be higher among minority women in the U S In 2000 2001 the rates among black and Hispanic women were 49 per 1 000 and 33 per 1 000 respectively vs 13 per 1 000 among non Hispanic white women This figure includes all women of reproductive age including women that are not pregnant In other words these abortion rates reflect the rate at which U S women of reproductive age have an abortion each year 279 In 2004 the rates of abortion by ethnicity in the U S were 50 abortions per 1 000 black women 28 abortions per 1 000 Hispanic women and 11 abortions per 1 000 white women 280 281 In state vs out of state Roe v Wade legalized abortion nationwide in 1973 In 1972 41 of abortions were performed on women outside their state of residence while in 1973 it declined to 21 and then to 11 in 1974 282 In the decade from 2011 to 2020 during which many states increased abortion restrictions the percentage of women nationwide who traveled out of state for an abortion increased steadily from 6 in 2011 to 9 in 2020 283 Out of state travel for an abortion was much more prevalent in the 29 states hostile to abortion rights with percentages in those states rising from 9 in 2011 to 15 by 2020 while in states supportive of abortion rights out of state travel for abortions rose from 2 to 3 between 2011 and 2020 283 Gutttmacher has released data about abortions by state of occurrence and state of residence 283 In some states these numbers can be tremendously different for example in Missouri a state very hostile to abortion rights the abortion rate by state of occurrence dropped from 4 in 1000 women aged 15 44 for 2017 to 0 1 for 2020 because 57 of abortion recipients went out of state in 2017 while 99 did so in 2020 283 In contrast from 2017 to 2020 the abortion rate by state of residence for Missourians went up by 18 from 8 4 to 9 9 283 Some out of state travel pertains to locations of population centers in states if large cities are close to state borders it may be common to cross borders for an abortion 283 For example Delaware which is generally supportive of abortion rights saw 44 of residents obtain their abortions in neighboring states 283 Motherhood In 2019 60 of women who had abortions were already mothers and 50 already had two or more children 19 20 Reasons for abortions This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information May 2022 A 1998 study revealed that in 1987 to 1988 women reported the following as their primary reasons for choosing an abortion 284 285 Percentage of women Primary reason for choosing an abortion25 5 Want to postpone childbearing21 3 Cannot afford a baby14 1 Has relationship problem or partner does not want pregnancy12 2 Too young parent s or other s object to pregnancy10 8 Having a child will disrupt education or employment7 9 Want no more children3 3 Risk to fetal health2 8 Risk to maternal health2 1 OtherThe source of this information takes findings into account from 27 nations including the United States and therefore these findings may not be typical for any one nation According to a 1987 study that included specific data about late abortions i e abortions at 16 or more weeks gestation 286 women reported that various reasons contributed to their having a late abortion Percentage of women Reasons contributing to a late abortion71 Woman did not recognize she was pregnant or misjudged gestation48 Woman had found it hard to make arrangements for an earlier abortion33 Woman was afraid to tell her partner or parents24 Woman took time to decide to have an abortion8 Woman waited for her relationship to change8 Someone had earlier pressured woman not to have abortion6 Something changed some time after woman became pregnant6 Woman did not know timing is important5 Woman did not know she could get an abortion2 A fetal problem was diagnosed late in pregnancy11 OtherIn 2000 cases of rape or incest accounted for 1 of abortions 287 A 2004 study by the Guttmacher Institute reported that women listed the following amongst their reasons for choosing to have an abortion 285 Percentage of women Reason for choosing to have an abortion74 Having a baby would dramatically change my life73 Cannot afford a baby now48 Do not want to be a single mother or having relationship problems38 Have completed my childbearing32 Not ready for another child25 Do not want people to know I had sex or got pregnant22 Do not feel mature enough to raise a nother child14 Husband or partner wants me to have an abortion13 Possible problems affecting the health of the fetus12 Concerns about my health6 Parents want me to have an abortion1 Was a victim of rapeless than 5 Became pregnant as a result of incestA 2008 National Survey of Family Growth NSFG shows that rates of unintended pregnancy are highest among Blacks Hispanics and women with lower socio economic status 288 70 of all pregnancies among Black women were unintended 57 of all pregnancies among Hispanic women were unintended 42 of all pregnancies among White women were unintendedWhen women have abortions by gestational age nbsp Abortion in the U S by gestational age 2016 289 According to the Centers for Disease Control in 2011 most 64 5 abortions were performed by 8 weeks gestation and nearly all 91 4 were performed by 13 weeks gestation Few abortions 7 3 were performed between 14 and 20 weeks gestation or at 21 weeks gestation 1 4 From 2002 to 2011 the percentage of all abortions performed at 8 weeks gestation increased 6 289 Safety of abortions See also Abortion Safety The risk of death from carrying a child to term in the U S is approximately 14 times greater than the risk of death from a legal abortion 290 The risk of abortion related mortality increases with gestational age but remains lower than that of childbirth through at least 21 weeks gestation 291 292 293 Birth control effects Main article Birth control Increased access to birth control has been statistically linked to reductions in the abortion rate 21 22 23 As an element of family planning birth control was federally subsidized for low income families in 1965 under President Lyndon B Johnson s War on Poverty program In 1970 Congress passed Title X to provide family planning services for those in need and President Richard Nixon signed it into law Funding for Title X rose from 6 million in 1971 to 61 million the next year and slowly increased each year to 317 million in 2010 after which it was reduced by a few percent 294 In 2011 the Guttmacher Institute reported that the number of abortions in the U S would be nearly two thirds higher without access to birth control 295 In 2015 the Federation of American Scientists reported that federally mandated access to birth control had helped reduce teenage pregnancies in the U S by 44 percent and had prevented more than 188 000 unintended pregnancies 296 Public opinionThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information May 2022 Further information Societal attitudes towards abortion See also United States abortion rights movement and United States anti abortion movement nbsp Trend percent of Americans self identifying as either pro life or pro choice Americans have been equally divided on the issue a May 2018 Gallup poll indicated that 48 of Americans described themselves as pro choice and 48 described themselves as pro life 15 A July 2018 poll indicated that 64 of Americans did not want the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v Wade while 28 did 297 The same poll found that support for abortion being generally legal was 60 during the first trimester of pregnancy dropping to 28 in the second trimester and 13 in the third trimester 298 Support for the legalization of abortion has been consistently higher among more educated adults than less educated 299 and in 2019 70 of college graduates support abortion being legal in all or most cases compared to 60 of those with some college and 54 of those with a high school degree or less 300 In January 2013 a majority of Americans believed abortion should be legal in all or most cases according to a poll by NBC News and The Wall Street Journal 301 Approximately 70 of respondents in the same poll opposed Roe v Wade being overturned 301 A poll by the Pew Research Center yielded similar results 302 Moreover 48 of Republicans opposed overturning Roe compared to 46 who supported overturning it 302 Gallup declared in May 2010 that more Americans identifying as pro life is the new normal while also noting that there had been no increase in opposition to abortion It suggested that political polarization may have prompted more Republicans to call themselves pro life 14 The terms pro choice and pro life do not always reflect a political view or fall along a binary in one Public Religion Research Institute poll seven in ten Americans described themselves as pro choice while almost two thirds described themselves as pro life The same poll found that 56 of Americans were in favor of legal access to abortion in all or some cases 303 A 2022 study reviewing the literature and public opinion datasets found that 43 8 of survey respondents in the U S consistently support both elective and traumatic abortion whereas only 14 8 consistently oppose abortion irrespective of the reason and others differ in their degree of support for abortion depending on the circumstances of the abortion 13 90 approve of abortion when the health of the woman is endangered 77 4 when there is a strong chance of defects in the baby that could result from the pregnancy and 79 5 when the pregnancy is the result of rape 13 A January 2023 Gallup poll found that nearly 7 in 10 Americans disapprove of the country s abortion policies the highest rate in 23 years 304 Date of poll Pro life Pro choice Mixed neither Don t know what terms mean No opinion2016 May 4 8 46 47 3 3 2 2015 May 6 10 44 50 3 2 1 2014 May 8 11 46 47 3 3 2013 May 2 7 48 45 3 3 2 2012 May 3 6 50 41 4 3 3 2011 May 5 8 45 49 3 2 2 2010 March 26 28 46 45 4 2 3 2009 November 20 22 45 48 2 2 3 2009 May 7 10 51 42 0 7 2008 September 5 7 43 51 2 1 3 By gender and age Pew Research Center polling shows little change in views from 2008 to 2012 modest differences based on gender or age 305 The original article s table also shows by party affiliation religion and education level 2011 2012 2009 2010 2007 2008Legal Illegal Don t Know Legal Illegal Don t Know Legal Illegal Don t KnowTotal 53 41 6 48 44 8 54 40 6 Men 51 43 6 46 46 9 52 42 6 Women 55 40 5 50 43 7 55 39 5 18 29 53 44 3 50 45 5 52 45 3 30 49 54 42 4 49 43 7 58 38 5 50 64 55 38 7 49 42 9 56 38 6 65 48 43 9 39 49 12 45 44 11 By educational level Support for the legalization of abortion is significantly higher among more educated adults than less educated and has been consistently so for decades 299 In 2019 70 of college graduates support abortion being legal in all or most cases as well as 60 of those with some college education compared to 54 of those with a high school degree or less 300 2019Educational attainment Legal in all or most cases Illegal in all or most casesCollege grad or more 70 30 Some college 60 39 High school or less 54 44 By gender party and region A January 2003 CBS News The New York Times poll examined whether Americans thought abortion should be legal or not and found variations in opinion which depended upon party affiliation and the region of the country 306 The margin of error is 4 for questions answered of the entire sample overall figures and may be higher for questions asked of subgroups all other figures 306 Group Generally available Available but with stricter limits than now Not permittedWomen 37 37 24 Men 40 40 20 Democrats 43 35 21 Republicans 29 41 28 Independents 42 38 18 Northeasterners 48 31 19 Midwesterners 34 40 25 Southerners 33 41 25 Westerners 43 40 16 Overall 39 38 22 By trimester of pregnancy A CNN USA Today Gallup poll in January 2003 asked about the legality of abortion by trimester using the question Do you think abortion should generally be legal or generally illegal during each of the following stages of pregnancy 307 This same question was also asked by Gallup in March 2000 and July 1996 308 309 Polls indicates general support of legal abortion during the first trimester although support drops dramatically for abortion during the second and third trimester Since the 2011 poll support for legal abortion during the first trimester has declined 2018 Poll 2012 Poll 2011 Poll 2003 Poll 2000 Poll 1996 PollLegal Illegal Legal Illegal Legal Illegal Legal Illegal Legal Illegal Legal IllegalFirst trimester 60 34 61 31 62 29 66 35 66 31 64 30 Second trimester 28 65 27 64 24 71 25 68 24 69 26 65 Third trimester 13 81 14 80 10 86 10 84 8 86 13 82 By circumstance or reasons According to Gallup s long time polling on abortion the majority of Americans are neither strictly pro life or pro choice it depends upon the circumstances of the pregnancy Gallup polling from 1996 to 2021 consistently reveals that when asked the question Do you think abortions should be legal under any circumstances legal only under certain circumstances or illegal in all circumstances Americans repeatedly answer legal only under certain circumstances According to the poll in any given year 48 57 say legal only under certain circumstances 21 34 say legal under any circumstances and 13 19 illegal in all circumstances with 1 7 having no opinion 308 Legal under any circumstances Legal only under certain circumstances Illegal in all circumstances No opinion2021 May 3 18 32 48 19 2 2020 May 1 13 29 50 20 2 2019 May 1 12 25 53 21 2 2018 May 1 10 29 50 18 2 2017 May 3 7 29 50 18 3 2016 May 4 8 29 50 19 2 2015 May 6 10 29 51 19 1 2014 May 8 11 28 50 21 2 2013 May 2 7 26 52 20 2 2012 Dec 27 30 28 52 18 3 2012 May 3 6 25 52 20 3 2011 Jul 15 17 26 51 20 3 2011 June 9 12 26 52 21 2 2011 May 5 8 27 49 22 3 2009 Jul 17 19 21 57 18 4 2009 May 7 10 22 53 23 2 2008 May 8 11 28 54 18 2 2007 May 10 13 26 55 17 1 2006 May 8 11 30 53 15 2 According to the aforementioned poll 308 Americans differ drastically based upon situation of the pregnancy suggesting they do not support unconditional abortions Based on two separate polls taken May 19 21 2003 of 505 and 509 respondents respectively Americans stated their approval for abortion under these various circumstances Poll Criteria Total Poll A Poll BWhen the woman s life is endangered 78 82 75 When the pregnancy was caused by rape or incest 65 72 59 When the child would be born with a life threatening illness 54 60 48 When the child would be born mentally disabled 44 50 38 When the woman does not want the child for any reason 32 41 24 Another separate trio of polls taken by Gallup in 2003 2000 and 1996 308 revealed public support for abortion as follows for the given criteria Poll criteria 2003 Poll 2000 Poll 1996 PollWhen the woman s life is endangered 85 84 88 When the woman s physical health is endangered 77 81 82 When the pregnancy was caused by rape or incest 76 78 77 When the woman s mental health is endangered 63 64 66 When there is evidence that the baby may be physically impaired 56 53 53 When there is evidence that the baby may be mentally impaired 55 53 54 When the woman or family cannot afford to raise the child 35 34 32 Gallup furthermore established public support for many issues supported by the anti abortion community and opposed by the abortion rights community 308 Legislation 2011 Poll 2003 Poll 2000 Poll 1996 PollA law requiring doctors to inform patients about alternatives to abortion before performing the procedure 88 86 86 A law requiring women seeking abortions to wait 24 hours before having the procedure done 69 78 74 73 Legislation 2005 Poll 2003 Poll 1996 Poll 1992 PollA law requiring women under 18 to get parental consent for any abortion 69 73 74 70 A law requiring that the husband of a married woman be notified if she decides to have an abortion 64 72 70 73 An October 2007 CBS News poll explored under what circumstances Americans believe abortion should be allowed asking the question What is your personal feeling about abortion The results were as follows 307 Permitted in all cases Permitted but subject to greater restrictions than it is now Only in cases such as rape incest or to save the woman s life Only permitted to save the woman s life Never Unsure26 16 34 16 4 4 Additional polls nbsp Results of Gallup opinion poll in the U S since 1975 legal restriction of abortion 310 A June 2000 Los Angeles Times survey found that although 57 of polltakers considered abortion to be murder half of that 57 believed in allowing women access to abortion The survey also found that overall 65 of respondents did not believe abortion should be legal after the first trimester including 72 of women and 58 of men Further the survey found that 85 of Americans polled supported abortion in cases of risk to a woman s physical health 54 if the woman s mental health was at risk and 66 if a congenital abnormality was detected in the fetus 311 A July 2002 Public Agenda poll found that 44 of men and 42 of women thought that abortion should be generally available to those who want it 34 of men and 35 of women thought that abortion should be available but under stricter than limits it is now and 21 of men and 22 of women thought that abortion should not be permitted 312 A January 2003 ABC News The Washington Post poll also examined attitudes towards abortion by gender In answer to the question On the subject of abortion do you think abortion should be legal in all cases legal in most cases illegal in most cases or illegal in all cases 25 of women responded that it should be legal in all cases 33 that it should be legal in most cases 23 that it should be illegal in most cases and 17 that it should be illegal in all cases 20 of men thought it should be legal in all cases 34 legal in most cases 27 illegal in most cases and 17 illegal in all cases 312 Most Fox News viewers favor both parental notification as well as parental consent when a minor seeks an abortion A Fox News poll in 2005 found that 78 of people favor a notification requirement and 72 favor a consent requirement 313 An April 2006 Harris poll on Roe v Wade asked In 1973 the U S Supreme Court decided that states laws which made it illegal for a woman to have an abortion up to three months of pregnancy were unconstitutional and that the decision on whether a woman should have an abortion up to three months of pregnancy should be left to the woman and her doctor to decide In general do you favor or oppose this part of the U S Supreme Court decision making abortions up to three months of pregnancy legal to which 49 of respondents indicated favor while 47 indicated opposition The Harris organization has concluded from this poll that 49 percent now support Roe vs Wade 314 Two polls were released in May 2007 asking Americans With respect to the abortion issue would you consider yourself to be pro choice or pro life May 4 6 a CNN poll found 45 said pro choice and 50 said pro life 315 Within the following week a Gallup poll found 50 responding pro choice and 44 pro life 316 In 2011 a poll conducted by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 43 of respondents identified themselves as both pro life and pro choice 317 Intact dilation and extraction Further information Intact dilation and extraction See also Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act In 2003 the U S Congress outlawed intact dilation and extraction when it passed the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act A Rasmussen Reports poll four days after the Supreme Court s opinion in Gonzales v Carhart found that 40 of respondents knew the ruling allowed states to place some restrictions on specific abortion procedures Of those who knew of the decision 56 agreed with the decision and 32 were opposed 318 An ABC poll from 2003 found that 62 of respondents thought partial birth abortion should be illegal a similar number of respondents wanted an exception if it would prevent a serious threat to the woman s health Gallup has repeatedly queried the American public on this issue 308 Legislation 2011 2003 2000 2000 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996A law that would make it illegal to perform a specific abortion procedure conducted in the last six months or second and or third trimester of pregnancy known by some opponents as a partial birth abortion except in cases necessary to save the life of the mother 64 70 63 66 64 61 61 55 57 Positions of political partiesAfter Roe there was a national political realignment surrounding abortion The abortion rights movement in the United States initially emphasized the national policy benefits of abortion such as smaller welfare expenses slower population growth and fewer illegitimate births The abortion rights movement drew support from the population control movement feminists and environmentalists Anti abortion advocates and civil rights activists accused abortion rights supporters of intending to control the population of racial minorities and the disabled citing their ties to racial segregationists and eugenicist legal reformers The abortion rights movement subsequently distanced from the population control movement and responded by taking up choice based and rights oriented rhetoric similar to what was used in the Roe decision 319 Opponents of abortion experienced a political shift The Catholic Church and the Democratic Party supported an expansive welfare state wanted to reduce rates of abortion through prenatal insurance and federally funded day care and opposed abortion at the time of Roe Afterwards the anti abortion movement in the United States shifted more to Protestant faiths that saw abortion rights as part of a liberal heavy agenda to fight against and became part of the new Christian right The Protestant influence helped make opposition to abortion part of the Republican Party s platform by the 1990s 320 321 Republican led states enacted laws to restrict abortion including abortions earlier than Casey s general standard of 24 weeks 112 Into the 21st century although members of both major U S political parties come down on either side of the issue the Republican Party is often seen as being anti abortion since the official party platform opposes abortion and considers fetuses to have an inherent right to life Republicans for Choice represents the minority of that party In 2006 pollsters found that 9 of Republicans favor the availability of abortion in most circumstances 322 Of Republican National Convention delegates in 2004 13 believed that abortion should be generally available and 38 believed that it should not be permitted The same poll showed that 17 of all Republican voters believed that abortion should be generally available to those who want it while 38 believed that it should not be permitted 323 The Republican Party was supportive of abortion rights prior to 1976 Republican National Convention at which they supported an anti abortion constitutional amendment as a temporary political ploy to gain more support from Catholics this stance brought many more social conservatives into the party resulting in a large and permanent shift toward support of the anti abortion position 324 The Democratic Party platform considers abortion to be a woman s right Democrats for Life of America represents the minority of that party In 2006 pollsters found that 74 of Democrats favor the availability of abortion in most circumstances 322 Of Democratic National Convention delegates in 2004 75 believed that abortion should be generally available and 2 believed that abortion should not be permitted The same poll showed that 49 of all Democratic voters believed that abortion should be generally available to those who want it while 13 believed that it should not be permitted 325 The position of U S third political parties and other U S minor political parties is diverse The Green Party supports legal abortion as a woman s right While abortion is a contentious issue and the Maryland based Libertarians for Life opposes the legality of abortion in most circumstances the Libertarian Party platform 2012 states that government should be kept out of the matter leaving the question to each person for their conscientious consideration 326 The issue of abortion has become deeply politicized In 2002 84 of state Democratic platforms supported the right to having an abortion while 88 of state Republican platforms opposed it This divergence also led to Christian right organizations like Christian Voice Christian Coalition of America and Moral Majority having an increasingly strong role in the Republican Party This opposition has been extended under the Foreign Assistance Act in 1973 Jesse Helms introduced an amendment banning the use of aid money to promote abortion overseas and in 1984 the Mexico City policy prohibited financial support to any overseas organization that performed or promoted abortions The policy was revoked by President Bill Clinton and subsequently reinstated by President George W Bush 327 President Barack Obama overruled this policy by Executive Order on January 23 2009 328 and it was reinstated on January 23 2017 by President Donald Trump 327 On January 28 2021 President Joe Biden signed a Presidential Memorandum that repealed the restoration of Mexico City policy and also called for the United States Department of Health and Human Services to suspend rescind or revoke restrictions made to Title X 329 Effects of legalization and impact of abortion bans nbsp The 2013 winter issue of Ms was about abortion rights The risk of death due to legal abortion has fallen considerably since Roe v Wade 1973 legalized it this was due to increased physician skills improved medical technology and earlier termination of pregnancy 330 From 1940 through 1970 deaths of pregnant women during abortion fell from nearly 1 500 to a little over 100 330 According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the number of women who died in 1972 from illegal abortion was thirty nine 331 The Roe effect is a hypothesis suggesting that since supporters of abortion rights cause the erosion of their own political base by having fewer children the practice of abortion will eventually lead to the restriction or illegalization of abortion 332 The legalized abortion and crime effect is another controversial theory that posits legal abortion reduces crime because unwanted children are more likely to become criminals 333 334 335 Since Roe there have been numerous attempts to reverse the decision 336 337 In the 2011 election season Mississippi placed an amendment on the ballot that redefined how the state viewed abortion The personhood amendment defined personhood as every human being from the moment of fertilization cloning or the functional equivalent thereof if passed it would have been illegal to get an abortion in the state 338 On July 11 2012 a Mississippi federal judge ordered an extension of his temporary order to allow the state s only abortion clinic to stay open The order was to stay in place until U S District Judge Daniel Porter Jordan III could review newly drafted rules on how the Mississippi Department of Health would administer a new abortion law The law in question came into effect on July 1 2012 339 Between 2008 and 2016 the Turnaway Study followed a group of 1 000 women two of whom died after giving birth 340 for five years after they sought an abortion 341 and compared their health and socio economic consequences of receiving an abortion or being denied one 341 342 The study found that those who were provided with abortion performed better and those who were denied one suffered negative consequences 343 344 Scientific American described it as landmark 340 A follow up Turnaway Study was confirmed to determinate the health and economic impact of Roe being overturned 343 345 which other scholars also analyzed 32 According to a 2019 study were Roe reversed and abortion bans implemented in states with trigger laws including states considered highly likely to ban abortion increases in travel distance are estimated to prevent 93 546 to 143 561 women from accessing abortion care 346 For the Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization case 347 which confirmed the May 2022 leaks obtained by Politico and overruled Roe and Planned Parenthood v Casey in June 2022 348 349 350 among the over 130 amici curiae briefs hundreds of scientists provided evidence data and studies in particular the Turnaway Study in favor of abortion rights and to rebuke arguments made to the Court that abortion has no beneficial effect on women s lives and careers and might even cause them harm 351 The American Historical Association AHA and the Organization of American Historians OAH were among those who signed an amici curiae brief for Dobbs 352 and were cited among others 353 by Reason 39 Syracuse University News 34 and The Washington Post 67 AHA and OAH jointly issued a statement against the Supreme Court s decision which was reported by Anchorage Daily News 354 Inside Higher Ed 355 Insight Into Diversity 356 and the Strict Scrutiny podcast from Crooked Media 357 saying they have declined to take seriously the historical claims of our amicus curiae brief Joined by at least 30 other academic and scholarly institutions they condemned the court s misinterpretation about the history of legalized abortion and said it has the potential to exacerbate historic injustices and deepen inequalities in our country 358 Unintended live birthAlthough it is uncommon 359 360 361 women sometimes give birth in spite of an attempted abortion 362 363 364 Reporting of live birth after attempted abortion may not be consistent from state to state but 38 were recorded in one study in upstate New York in the two and a half years before Roe v Wade 365 Under the Born Alive Infants Protection Act of 2002 366 367 medical staff must report live birth if they observe any breathing heartbeat umbilical cord pulsation or confirmed voluntary muscle movement regardless of whether the born alive is non viable ex utero in the long term because of birth defects and regardless of gestational age including gestational ages which are too early for long term viability ex utero 368 369 370 See also nbsp United States portalAbortion law Abortion law in the United States by state Abortion and the Catholic Church in the United States Anti abortion violence in the United States Feminism in the United States Heartbeat bill Religion and abortion Reproductive rights Types of abortion restrictions in the United States War on womenNotable casesBecky Bell an American teenage girl who died as a result of an unsafe abortion in 1988 Rosie Jimenez an American woman who was the first recorded death due to an unsafe abortion after federal Medicaid funds for abortions were removed by the Hyde Amendment in 1977 Gerri Santoro an American woman who died because of an unsafe abortion in 1964 Gerardo Flores convicted in 2005 on two counts of capital murder for giving his girlfriend who was carrying twins an at home abortion Gianna Jessen an American woman who was born alive in 1977 after an attempted saline abortion Sherri Chessen an actress who had difficulty seeking an abortion for her thalidomide deformed baby in 1962 Notes a b All states make exceptions if the mother s life is in immediate danger Exceptions for risk to mother s physical health Alabama Arizona Florida Georgia Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Missouri Montana Nebraska New Hampshire North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Pennsylvania South Carolina Tennessee Utah West Virginia Wisconsin and Wyoming Exceptions for risk to mother s general health California Connecticut Delaware Hawaii Illinois Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Nevada New York Rhode Island Virginia Washington Exception for pregnancy due to rape or incest Georgia Idaho Indiana Iowa Mississippi North Dakota South Carolina West Virginia Utah and Wyoming Exception for lethal fetal abnormality Alabama Delaware Florida Georgia Indiana Iowa Louisiana Maryland Massachusetts South Carolina West Virginia Wyoming and Utah Note that these exceptions may have a time frame in which pregnant woman can use the exceptions to get an abortion current time limits for these exceptions range from cardiac cell activity or 6 weeks to the entire pregnancy before birth no limit This generally happens in the 6th week LMP Typically it is between the 23rd or 24th week LMP Variously defined as through 27th or 28th week LMP in Massachusetts 24 weeks from implantation 27 weeks LMP According to the Supreme Court s decision in Roe v Wade 1973 a For the stage prior to approximately the end of the first trimester the abortion decision and its effectuation must be left to the medical judgment of the pregnant woman s attending physician b For the stage subsequent to approximately the end of the first trimester the State in promoting its interest in the health of the mother may if it chooses regulate the abortion procedure in ways that are reasonably related to maternal health c For the stage subsequent to viability the State in promoting its interest in the potentiality of human life may if it chooses regulate and even proscribe abortion except where it is necessary in appropriate medical judgment for the preservation of the life or health of the mother 24 The 5th edition of the Black s Law Dictionary 1979 defined abortion as knowing destruction or intentional expulsion or removal 25 Into the 21st century its free online version defines it as artificial or spontaneous termination of a pregnancy before the embryo or foetus can survive on its own outside a woman s uterus 26 References Staff June 24 2022 Roe Abolition Makes U S a Global Outlier Foreign Policy Retrieved July 31 2023 a b c Blakemore Erin May 22 2022 The complex early history of abortion in the United States National Geographic Retrieved July 26 2022 But that view of history is the subject of great dispute Though interpretations differ most scholars who have investigated the history of abortion argue that terminating a pregnancy wasn t always illegal or even controversial A pregnant woman might consult with a midwife or head to her local drug store for an over the counter patent medicine or douching device If she owned a book like the 1855 Hand Book of Domestic Medicine she could have opened it to the section on emmenagogues substances that provoked uterine bleeding Though the entry did not mention pregnancy or abortion by name it did reference promoting the monthly discharge from the uterus Balmer Randall May 10 2022 The Religious Right and the Abortion Myth POLITICO Retrieved July 31 2023 a b c Reagan Leslie J 2022 1997 When Abortion Was a Crime Women Medicine and the Law in the United States 1867 1973 1st ed Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0520387416 a b Wilson Jacque January 22 2013 Before and after Roe v Wade CNN Retrieved May 9 2022 Alesha Doan 2007 Opposition and Intimidation The Abortion Wars and Strategies of Political Harassment University of Michigan Press p 57 ISBN 9780472069750 Casey 505 U S at 877 Williams Daniel K May 9 2022 This Really Is a Different Pro Life Movement The Atlantic Retrieved August 2 2023 Taylor Justin May 9 2018 How the Christian Right Became Prolife on Abortion and Transformed the Culture Wars The Gospel Coalition Retrieved August 2 2023 Mangan Dan Breuninger Kevin June 24 2022 Supreme Court overturns Roe v Wade ending 50 years of federal abortion rights CNBC Archived from the original on June 25 2022 Retrieved June 24 2022 Wilson Joshua C 2020 Striving to Rollback or Protect Roe State Legislation and the Trump Era Politics of Abortion Publius The Journal of Federalism 50 3 370 397 doi 10 1093 publius pjaa015 S2CID 225601579 Saad Lydia August 8 2011 Plenty of Common Ground Found in Abortion Debate Gallup com Retrieved August 8 2013 a b c Osborne Danny Huang Yanshu Overall Nickola C Sutton Robbie M Petterson Aino Douglas Karen M Davies Paul G Sibley Chris G 2022 Abortion Attitudes An Overview of Demographic and Ideological Differences Political Psychology 43 29 76 doi 10 1111 pops 12803 ISSN 0162 895X S2CID 247365991 a b Saad Lydia May 14 2010 The New Normal on Abortion Americans More Pro Life Gallup Retrieved August 8 2013 a b Jeffrey Jones June 11 2018 U S Abortion Attitudes Remain Closely Divided Gallup a b Kortsmit K Jatlaoui TC Mandel MG 2020 Abortion Surveillance United States 2018 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 69 7 1 29 doi 10 15585 mmwr ss6907a1 PMC 7713711 PMID 33237897 a b Jones Rachel K February 24 2022 Medication Abortion Now Accounts for More Than Half of All US Abortions Guttmacher Institute Jones Rachel K October 19 2017 Abortion Is a Common Experience for U S Women Despite Dramatic Declines in Rates Guttmacher Institute a b Sanger Katz Margot Cain Miller Claire Bui Quoctrung December 14 2021 Who Gets Abortions in America The New York Times Six in 10 women who have abortions are already mothers and half of them have two or more children according to 2019 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention One of the main reasons people report wanting to have an abortion is so they can be a better parent to the kids they already have Professor Upadhyay said a b Zerwick Phoebe June 24 2022 The Latest Abortion Statistics and Facts Parenting Did you know that a majority of people who have abortions are already parents Of those who received an abortion 60 percent had one or more previous children according to 2019 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC a b Peipert Jeffrey F Madden Tessa Allsworth Jenifer E Secura Gina M December 2012 Preventing Unintended Pregnancies by Providing No Cost Contraception Obstetrics amp Gynecology 120 6 1291 1297 doi 10 1097 AOG 0b013e318273eb56 PMC 4000282 PMID 23168752 Conclusion We noted a clinically and statistically significant reduction in abortion rates repeat abortions and teenage birth rates Unintended pregnancies may be reduced by providing no cost contraception and promoting the most effective contraceptive methods a b Dreweke Joerg March 18 2016 New Clarity for the U S Abortion Debate A Steep Drop in Unintended Pregnancy Is Driving Recent Abotion Declines Guttmacher Institute Retrieved January 22 2021 a b Guyot Katherine Sawhill Isabel V July 29 2019 Reducing access to contraception won t reduce the abortion rate Brookings Institution Retrieved January 22 2021 While the new rules were motivated by opposition to abortion the state experiences we highlight in our paper show that increasing access to highly effective methods of contraception and thus preventing unintended pregnancies is a more effective way to reduce abortion rates Barriers to contraceptive access will impede further progress in reducing unintended pregnancy rates will raise government costs for Medicaid and other social programs and will lead to more women seeking an abortion Roe v Wade 410 U S 113 1973 Justia January 22 1973 Retrieved May 12 2022 Caron Wilfred R Spring 1982 The Human Life Federalism Amendment An Assessment The Catholic Lawyer 27 2 87 111 PMID 11655614 Retrieved May 12 2022 5th ed 1979 abortion is defined simply as the knowing destruction of the life of an unborn child or the intentional expulsion or removal of an unborn child from the womb other than for the principal purpose of producing a live birth or removing a dead fetus What is abortion The Law Dictionary July 12 2013 Archived from the original on March 2 2021 Retrieved May 12 2022 Watson Katie December 20 2019 Why We Should Stop Using the Term Elective Abortion AMA Journal of Ethics 20 12 1175 1180 doi 10 1001 amajethics 2018 1175 PMID 30585581 a b Acevedo Zachary P V Summer 1979 Abortion in early America Women Health 4 2 159 167 doi 10 1300 J013v04n02 05 PMID 10297561 This piece describes abortion practices in use from the 1600s to the 19th century among the inhabitants of North America The abortive techniques of women from different ethnic and racial groups as found in historical literature are revealed Thus the point is made that abortion is not simply a now issue that effects select women Instead it is demonstrated that it is a widespread practice as solidly rooted in our past as it is in the present Mohr James 1978 Abortion in America The Origins and Evolution of National Policy New Oxford University Press p 50 ISBN 0 19 502249 1 Dine Ranana August 8 2013 Scarlet Letters Getting the History of Abortion and Contraception Right Center for American Progress Retrieved July 26 2022 a b Reagan Leslie J June 2 2022 What Alito Gets Wrong About the History of Abortion in America Politico Retrieved July 26 2022 a b c Georgian Elizabeth July 1 2022 The End of Roe in Historical Perspective Clio and the Contemporary Retrieved July 27 2022 a b Brockell Gillian May 17 2019 How a sex scandal led to the nation s first abortion law 200 years ago The Washington Post Retrieved May 9 2022 a b Maxwell Faculty Experts Discuss Future Implications and Historical Context of Dobbs v Jackson Ruling Syracuse University News July 13 2022 Retrieved July 27 2022 Feng Emily Restrepo Manuela Lopez May 18 2022 Benjamin Franklin gave instructions on at home abortions in a book in the 1700s NPR Retrieved March 24 2023 Farrell Molly May 5 2022 Ben Franklin Put an Abortion Recipe in His Math Textbook Slate ISSN 1091 2339 Retrieved March 24 2023 Did Ben Franklin Publish a Recipe in a Math Textbook on How to Induce Abortion May 16 2022 a b c A Conversation About Abortion Between Justice Blackmun and the Founding Fathers a b Root Damon June 23 2022 Alito s Leaked Abortion Opinion Misunderstands Unenumerated Rights Reason Retrieved July 27 2022 Gelman Sheldon February 1994 Life and Liberty Their Original Meaning Historical Antecedents and Current Significance in the Debate over Abortion Rights Minnesota Law Review 78 3 585 698 PMID 11656344 Retrieved July 27 2022 via University of Minnesota Law School Scholarship Repository The Historical Roots of Abortion Law National Review June 17 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l Hardin Garrett December 1978 Abortion in America The Origins and Evolution of National Policy 1800 1900 James C Mohr The Quarterly Review of Biology 53 4 499 doi 10 1086 410954 The long silence had led us to assume that opposition to abortion had existed from time immemorial Not so most of the opposition to and all of the laws against abortion arose in the 19th century Historian Mohr amply documents the earlier acceptance of abortion In the 19th century even many of the feminists expressed horror at abortion urging abstinence instead Not so in the 20th century In the 19th century the medical profession was fairly united against abortion Mohr argues that this arose from the commercial competition between the regulars men with M D s and the irregulars women without M D s A key role in generating prohibition laws was played by the press By 1900 the abortion prohibition laws were immune to questioning as they remained until the 1960 s when feminists and a new breed of physicians combined to arouse the public to the injustice of the law the Roe v Wade decision of the Supreme Court essentially returned the practice of abortion to the permissive state ante 1820 Buell Samuel 1991 Criminal Abortion Revisited New York University Law Review 66 6 1774 1831 PMID 11652642 Retrieved July 27 2022 via Duke edu Jacobson Donna 2019 When Abortion Became Illegal Connecticut History Review 58 2 49 81 doi 10 5406 connhistrevi 58 2 0049 S2CID 211430012 a b c Alford Suzanne M 2003 Is Self Abortion a Fundamental Right Duke Law Journal 52 5 1011 1029 JSTOR 1373127 PMID 12964572 Paul M Lichtenberg ES Borgatta L Grimes DA Stubblefield PG Creinin MD Joffe C 2009 Abortion and Medicine A Sociopolitical History PDF Management of Unintended and Abnormal Pregnancy 1st ed Oxford John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4443 1293 5 OL 15895486W Archived PDF from the original on January 19 2012 a b Mohr James C 1978 Abortion in America The Origins and Evolution of National Policy Oxford University Press pp 35 36 ISBN 978 0195026160 Mohr James C 1978 Abortion in America The Origins and Evolution of National Policy Oxford University Press p 34 ISBN 978 0195026160 Samuels Alex Potts Monica July 25 2022 How The Fight To Ban Abortion Is Rooted In The Great Replacement Theory FiveThirtyEight Retrieved July 26 2022 Throughout colonial America and into the 19th century abortions were fairly common with the help of a midwife or other women and could be obtained until the point that you could feel movement inside according to Lauren MacIvor Thompson a historian of early 20th century women s rights and public health Most abortions were induced through herbal or medicinal remedies and like other medical interventions of the time weren t always effective or safe Mohr James C 1978 Abortion in America The Origins and Evolution of National Policy Oxford University Press pp 76 82 ISBN 978 0195026160 Mohr James C 1978 Abortion in America The Origins and Evolution of National Policy Oxford University Press pp 100 101 ISBN 978 0195026160 Gordon Sarah Barringer 2006 Law and Everyday Death Infanticide and the Backlash against Woman s Rights after the Civil War In Sarat Austin Douglas Lawrence Umphrey Martha eds Lives of the Law University of Michigan Press p 67 a b Schiff Stacy October 13 2006 Desperately Seeking Susan The New York Times Retrieved February 5 2009 Federer William 2003 American Minute Amerisearch p 81 ISBN 978 0965355780 Anthony Susan B July 8 1869 Marriage and Maternity The Revolution Archived October 5 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved July 26 2022 via the University Honors Program Syracuse University Mohr James C 1978 Abortion in America The Origins and Evolution of National Policy Oxford University Press p 110 ISBN 978 0195026160 a b Mohr James C 1978 Abortion in America The Origins and Evolution of National Policy Oxford University Press p 112 ISBN 978 0195026160 States Probe Limits of Abortion Policy The Pew Charitable Trusts June 22 2006 Retrieved July 26 2022 Updated April 23 2007 Samuels Alex Potts Monica July 25 2022 How The Fight To Ban Abortion Is Rooted In The Great Replacement Theory FiveThirtyEight Retrieved July 26 2022 Declining white birth rates along with the rising eugenics movement a now discredited pseudoscience focused on the genetic fitness of white Americans were connected to the practice of abortion and this helped bolster flawed racist arguments for a total ban of the procedure The physicians trying to pass these anti abortion laws were concerned about how abortion was a danger to our society and the ways we want our country to be said Shannon Withycombe a professor of history at the University of New Mexico who studies 19th century women s health Their tactics worked By the 1900s abortion was illegal in every U S state Samuels Alex Potts Monica July 25 2022 How The Fight To Ban Abortion Is Rooted In The Great Replacement Theory FiveThirtyEight Retrieved July 26 2022 It took time for the anti abortion movement to attract supporters and unlike today religious groups were not originally an active part of it Still momentum built as a small but influential number of physicians began arguing that licensed male doctors as opposed to female midwives should care for women throughout the reproductive cycle In the late 1850s one of the leaders of the nascent anti abortion movement a surgeon named Horatio Robinson Storer began arguing that he didn t want the medical profession to be associated with abortion He was able to push the relatively new American Medical Association to support his cause and soon they were working to delegitimize midwives and enforce abortion bans In an 1865 essay issued by order of the AMA Storer went so far as to say of white women that upon their loins depends the future destiny of the nation Hartmann B 1997 Population control I Birth of an ideology International Journal of Health Services 27 3 523 540 doi 10 2190 bl3n xajx 0yqb vqbx PMID 9285280 S2CID 39035850 Lewis Jone Johnson 2006 Abortion History A History of Abortion in the United States Women s History About com Archived from the original on March 3 2017 Retrieved July 26 2022 Abdeltath Rund Arablouei Ramtin Caine Julie Kaplan Levenson Laine Wu Lawrence Yvellez Victor Miner Casey Sangweni Yolanda Steinberg Anya George Deborah Before Roe The Physicians Crusade Throughline NPR Retrieved July 26 2022 Bennett DeRobigne Mortimer 1878 Anthony Comstock His Career of Cruelty and Crime A Chapter from The Champions of the Church Their Crimes and Persecutions New York D M Bennett Retrieved July 27 2022 via Internet Archive Kevles Daniel J July 22 2001 The Secret History of Birth Control The New York Times Retrieved October 21 2006 A Political Public amp Moral Look at Abortion New York University February 28 2006 Archived from the original on October 4 2016 Retrieved July 27 2022 a b Cohen Patricia Cline June 24 2022 The Dobbs decision looks to history to rescind Roe The Washington Post Retrieved July 27 2022 Sanger Margaret November 18 1921 The Morality of Birth Control Retrieved July 27 2022 via American Rhetoric Cullen DuPont Kathryn 2000 Encyclopedia of Women s History in America Infobase Publishing p 11 ISBN 978 0816041008 Retrieved November 28 2011 via Google Books Boyer Paul S ed 2006 The Oxford companion to United States history Oxford Oxford University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0195082098 Retrieved July 27 2022 via Internet Archive Sherri Finkbine s Abortion Its Meaning 50 Years Later Planned Parenthood Advocates of Arizona August 15 2012 Retrieved December 2 2017 Braun Whitny December 29 2015 Thalidomide The Connection Between a Statue in Trafalgar Square a 1960s Children s Show Host and the Abortion Debate The Huffington Post Retrieved December 2 2017 Debating Reproductive Rights Reproductive Rights and Feminism History of Abortion Battle History of Abortion Debate Roe v Wade and Feminists Cliohistory org Retrieved December 2 2017 Abortion Who int Retrieved December 16 2020 Dore Kate June 24 2022 Supreme Court s overturning of Roe v Wade will financially hurt the most marginalized women experts say CNBC Retrieved June 28 2022 Lenharo Mariana June 24 2022 After Roe v Wade US researchers warn of what s to come Nature 607 7917 15 16 Bibcode 2022Natur 607 15L doi 10 1038 d41586 022 01775 z PMID 35750925 S2CID 250022457 Johnson Linnea Something Real Jane and Me Memories and Exhortations of a Feminist Ex Abortionist CWLU Herstory Project Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Retrieved May 23 2010 Griswold v Connecticut 381 U S 479 1965 Eisenstadt v Baird 405 U S 438 1972 American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Terminology Bulletin Terms Used in Reference to the Fetus No 1 Philadelphia Davis September 1965 Medicine Abortion on Request Time March 9 1970 Archived from the original on December 1 2010 Retrieved October 15 2012 subscription required Abortion Reform in Washington State HistoryLink org Historylink org Retrieved October 9 2017 Kliff Sarah January 22 2013 Charts How Roe v Wade changed abortion rights The Washington Post Cassidy Keith 1995 The Right to Life Movement In Donald T Critchlow ed The Politics of Abortion and Birth Control in Historical Perspective Issues in Policy History Penn State Press p 140 ISBN 978 0271015705 Staggenborg Suzanne 1994 The Pro Choice Movement Organization and Activism in the Abortion Conflict Oxford University Press p 35 ISBN 978 0195089257 Content Module Example Page Archived from the original on February 9 2019 Retrieved October 21 2019 Lessons from Before Roe Will Past be Prologue The Guttmacher Policy Review Vol 6 Iss 1 March 1 2003 Retrieved January 11 2017 a b Roe v Wade 410 U S 113 154 1973 We therefore conclude that the right of personal privacy includes the abortion decision but that this right is not unqualified and must be considered against important state interests in regulation a b Roe v Wade 410 U S 113 1972 Findlaw com Retrieved April 14 2011 Roe v Wade 410 U S 113 164 1973 If the State is interested in protecting fetal life after viability it may go so far as to proscribe abortion during the third trimester except when it is necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother Doe v Bolton 410 U S 179 192 1973 Frontline Abortion Wars Roe v Wade and Beyond PBS Retrieved October 5 2015 The Right to Choose at 25 Looking Back and Ahead ACLU Retrieved October 5 2015 Dailard Cynthia June 1999 Issues and Implications Abortion Restrictions and the Drive for Mental Health Parity A Conflict in Values The Guttmacher Report on Public Policy 2 3 Archived from the original on October 4 2015 Retrieved October 2 2015 Palley Marian Lief and Howard 2014 The Politics of Women s Health Care in the US New York amp London Palgrave Pivot p 74 ISBN 978 1137008633 Retrieved October 5 2015 Abortion after the First Trimester in the United States PDF Planned Parenthood February 2014 Retrieved October 5 2015 Fetal Viability And Late Term Abortion The Facts And The Law Democratic Underground Retrieved October 5 2015 a b Planned Parenthood v Casey 505 U S 833 878 1992 a To protect the central right recognized by Roe v Wade while at the same time accommodating the State s profound interest in potential life we will employ the undue burden analysis as explained in this opinion An undue burden exists and therefore a provision of law is invalid if its purpose or effect is to place a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion before the fetus attains viability Planned Parenthood v Casey 505 U S 833 846 1992 Denniston Lyle June 27 2016 Whole Woman s Health v Hellerstedt Opinion analysis Abortion rights reemerge strongly SCOTUSblog Retrieved June 29 2016 a b Liptak Adam June 29 2020 Supreme Court Strikes Down Louisiana Abortion Restrictions The New York Times Retrieved June 29 2020 Barnes Robert October 4 2019 Supreme Court to review ruling on Louisiana abortion law The Washington Post Retrieved October 4 2019 Quinn Melissa May 17 2021 Supreme Court takes up blockbuster case over Mississippi s 15 week abortion ban CBS News Retrieved May 17 2021 Rabin Roni Caryn September 1 2021 Answers to Questions About the Texas Abortion Law The New York Times Archived from the original on October 1 2021 Gerstein Josh Ward Alexander May 2 2022 Exclusive Supreme Court has voted to overturn abortion rights draft opinion shows Politico Retrieved May 3 2022 The Dobbs v Jackson Decision Annotated The New York Times June 24 2022 Retrieved July 27 2022 Breuninger Kevin Mangan Dan June 24 2022 Supreme Court overturns Roe v Wade ending 50 years of federal abortion rights CNBC Retrieved June 24 2022 Wolfe Elizabeth May 3 2022 13 states have passed so called trigger laws bans designed to go into effect if Roe v Wade is overturned CNN Retrieved July 27 2022 Chiwaya Nigel May 3 2022 Map These trigger law states would ban abortion only if Roe is overturned NBC News Retrieved July 27 2022 Jimenez Jesus May 4 2022 What is a trigger law And which states have them The New York Times Retrieved July 27 2022 Thomson DeVeaux Amelia June 24 2022 The Supreme Court s Argument For Overturning Roe v Wade FiveThirtyEight Retrieved July 27 2022 a b Thomson DeVeaux Amelia June 24 2022 Roe v Wade Defined An Era The Supreme Court Just Started A New One FiveThirtyEight Retrieved July 27 2022 a b Weixel Nathaniel August 21 2022 State ballot measures are new abortion battleground The Hill Retrieved September 9 2022 Terkel Amanda Wu Jiachuan August 9 2023 Abortion rights have won in every election since Roe v Wade was overturned NBC News Retrieved August 9 2023 Weiss Elias June 28 2022 Arizona Women Eye Mexico for Abortions Amid Conflicting Advice Phoenix New Times Retrieved July 26 2022 Linares Albinson Telemundo Noticias Telemundo Gutierrez Maricruz July 1 2022 We re here Mexican groups slam U S abortion restrictions as they help more American women NBC News Retrieved July 26 2022 Flores Silvana August 31 2023 Abortion is now decriminalized in 12 Mexican states NBC News Reuters Retrieved August 31 2023 Aborto legal y seguro PDF in Spanish GIRE September 2021 p 19 Retrieved July 26 2022 Aborto legal y seguro PDF in Spanish Sistema de Indicadores Estadisticos de Genero Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres 2022 pp 1 4 Retrieved July 26 2022 FDA approval letter for Mifepristone FDA September 28 2000 Archived from the original on November 16 2001 Retrieved September 16 2006 Medication Abortion in the United States Mifepristone Fact Sheet PDF Gynuity Health Projects 2005 Archived from the original PDF on September 24 2007 Jones RK Jerman J March 2017 Abortion Incidence and Service Availability In the United States 2014 Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health 49 1 1 17 27 doi 10 1363 psrh 12015 PMC 5487028 PMID 28094905 Archived from the original on October 17 2017 Retrieved October 16 2017 FDA Allows Abortion Pill to Stay Available by Mail WebMD Retrieved September 22 2022 Kimball Spencer June 27 2022 Women in states that ban abortion will still be able to get abortion pills online from overseas CNBC Retrieved February 27 2023 Marea Verde Feminist Collective Defends the Right To Decide in Mexico Sick and Tired of Seeing Our Sisters Go to Jail Ms Magazine Ms Retrieved September 22 2022 I need an abortion The text that gets pills sent in secret BBC News August 25 2022 Retrieved September 22 2022 Abortion doulas in Mexico anticipate influx of U S women seeking abortions Dallas News July 5 2022 Retrieved September 22 2022 Sanchez Alejandra May 25 2022 Ayudan chihuahuenses a mujeres de EU a abortar El Diario de Juarez in Spanish Retrieved September 22 2022 El Diario de Chihuahua Covert network provides pills for thousands of abortions in U S post Roe Washington Post October 18 2022 Retrieved February 27 2023 Shepardson David January 4 2023 U S Postal Service can continue to deliver prescription abortion medication DOJ says Reuters Retrieved February 27 2023 Get abortion pills by mail in all 50 U S states The help desk and Aid Access doctors are here to support you through the whole online order process www aidaccess org April 15 2023 Archived from the original on April 15 2023 Retrieved April 15 2023 Marimow Ann E Kitchener Caroline Stein Perry April 7 2023 Texas judge suspends FDA approval of abortion pill mifepristone The Washington Post Retrieved April 7 2023 a b VanSickle Abbie Belluck Pam April 8 2023 With Dueling Rulings Abortion Pill Cases Appear Headed to the Supreme Court The New York Times Retrieved April 13 2023 Cheney Kyle Gerstein Josh Ollstein Alice April 13 2023 Appeals court keeps abortion pill on the market but sharply limits access Politico Retrieved April 13 2023 Medication Abortion Now Accounts for More Than Half of All US Abortions Guttmacher Institute February 22 2022 Gambino Lauren April 8 2023 Democrats condemn judge s draconian decision threatening abortion drug The Guardian Greenhouse Linda April 19 2007 Justices Back Ban on Method of Abortion The New York Times Retrieved January 3 2010 Interactive maps comparing U S abortion restrictions by state LawServer Report Committee on the Judiciary U S Senate on Senate Joint Resolution 3 98th Congress 98 149 June 7 1983 p 6 Perinatal Management of Extreme Preterm Birth before 27 weeks of gestation A Framework for Practice PDF British Association of Perinatal Medicine October 2019 Retrieved December 4 2019 Baptist Hospital of Miami Fact Sheet at the Wayback Machine archived March 26 2009 archived from the original on March 26 2009 Access to Abortion PDF National Abortion Federation 2003 Archived PDF from the original on June 19 2007 Retrieved June 17 2007 Public Funding for Abortion map PDF Retrieved August 8 2013 Alder Madison November 30 2021 Roe Abortion Decision Fueled Supreme Court Confirmation Wars Retrieved December 13 2022 Women s Health Protection Act of 2021 Congress June 8 2021 Retrieved June 26 2022 Senate rejects Democratic bill to codify abortion rights NBC News February 28 2022 Retrieved June 26 2022 Jacob Knutson June 24 2022 AG Garland States can t ban FDA approved abortion pills on safety grounds Axios When Massachusetts tried to ban an opioid a court said no What about abortion pills ZOGENIX INC v DEVAL PATRICK in his official capacity as GOVERNOR OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS et al ORDER April 15 2014 Sen Graham introduces bill to ban abortion nationwide at 15 weeks NBC News Retrieved September 13 2022 Graham s abortion ban stuns Senate GOP POLITICO September 13 2022 Retrieved September 13 2022 Karni Annie September 13 2022 Graham Proposes 15 Week Abortion Ban Seeking to Unite Republicans The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 13 2022 Graham Reintroduces 20 Week Abortion Ban Office of U S Senator Lindsay Graham Retrieved September 16 2022 Where abortion stands in your state A state by state breakdown of abortion laws EXPLAINER What s the role of personhood in abortion debate ABC News Prosecuting pregnancy loss Why advocates fear a post Roe surge of charges ABC News Losing a pregnancy could land you in jail in post Roe America NPR org HB314 Retrieved July 28 2022 HB314 Retrieved July 28 2022 Section 5 No woman upon whom an abortion is performed or attempted to be performed shall be criminally or civilly liable Arizona Revised Statutes Title 13 Criminal Code 13 3603 Retrieved October 8 2022 SB6 Retrieved July 28 2022 SB6 Retrieved July 28 2022 5 61 404 Prohibition c This section does not 1 Authorize the charging or conviction of a woman with any criminal offense in the death of her own unborn child Title 18 Crimes and Punishments Chapter 6 Abortion and Contraceptives PDF Retrieved July 28 2022 Title 18 Crimes and Punishments Chapter 6 Abortion and Contraceptives PDF Retrieved July 28 2022 18 606 2 Every woman who knowingly submits to an abortion or solicits of another for herself the production of an abortion or who purposely terminates her own pregnancy otherwise than by a live birth shall be deemed guilty of a felony Senate Bill 1 Retrieved October 8 2022 Senate Bill 1 Retrieved October 8 2022 The following sections of this chapter do not apply to a pregnant woman who terminates her own pregnancy or kills a fetus that she is carrying KRS Chapter 311 Retrieved July 28 2022 KRS Chapter 311 Retrieved July 28 2022 311 772 5 Nothing in this section may be construed to subject the pregnant mother upon whom any abortion is performed or attempted to any criminal conviction and penalty SB342 Retrieved July 28 2022 SB342 Retrieved July 28 2022 87 7 D This Section does not apply to a pregnant female upon whom an abortion is committed or performed in violation of this Section and the pregnant female shall not be held responsible for the criminal consequences of any violation of this Section Mississippi Code Title 41 Public Health Retrieved July 28 2022 Mississippi Code Title 41 Public Health Retrieved July 28 2022 41 41 45 4 Any person except the pregnant woman who purposefully knowingly or recklessly performs or attempts to perform or induce an abortion in the State of Mississippi Title XII Public Health and Welfare Chapter 188 Retrieved July 28 2022 Title XII Public Health and Welfare Chapter 188 Retrieved July 28 2022 188 017 2 A woman upon whom an abortion is performed or induced in violation of this subsection shall not be prosecuted for a conspiracy to violate the provisions of this subsection Century Code Chapter 12 1 31 Miscellaneous Offenses Retrieved July 28 2022 Century Code Chapter 12 1 31 Miscellaneous Offenses Retrieved July 28 2022 12 1 31 12 2 It is a class C felony for a person other than the pregnant female upon whom the abortion was performed to perform an abortion SB612 Retrieved July 28 2022 SB612 Retrieved July 28 2022 B 3 This section does not a authorize the charging or conviction of a woman with any criminal offense in the death of her own unborn child Codified Laws 22 17 5 1 Retrieved July 28 2022 T C A 39 15 217 PDF Retrieved July 28 2022 T C A 39 15 217 PDF Retrieved July 28 2022 No penalty may be assessed against the woman upon whom the abortion is performed or induced or attempted to be performed or induced Health and Safety Code Title 2 Health Subtitle H Public Health Provisions Chapter 170A Performance of Abortion Retrieved July 28 2022 Health and Safety Code Title 2 Health Subtitle H Public Health Provisions Chapter 170A Performance of Abortion Retrieved July 28 2022 Sec 170A 003 Construction of Chapter This chapter may not be construed to authorize the imposition of criminal civil or administrative liability or penalties on a pregnant female on whom an abortion is performed induced or attempted Utah Criminal Code Section 314 Retrieved July 28 2022 HB 302 Retrieved October 9 2022 HB 302 Retrieved October 9 2022 c This section may not be construed to subject a mother to a criminal penalty for any violation of this section Wisconsin Code 940 04 Retrieved October 8 2022 Wisconsin Code 940 04 Retrieved October 8 2022 Any person other than the mother who intentionally destroys the life of an unborn child is guilty of a Class H felony Title 35 Public Health and Safety PDF Retrieved July 28 2022 Tracking Abortion Laws by State The New York Times May 24 2022 Retrieved May 25 2022 Using Abortion Pills for Safe Abortion in the USA Self Managed Abortion Safe and Supported SASS Women Help Women Consultation Consult womenhelp org January 12 2017 Retrieved July 21 2017 Politics February 10 2017 Here s how many abortion clinics are in each state Business Insider Retrieved July 21 2017 Strict Texas abortion law struck down BBC News June 27 2016 Liptak Adam June 29 2020 Supreme Court Strikes Down Louisiana Abortion Law With Roberts the Deciding Vote The New York Times Parental Involvement in Minors Abortions Guttmacher Institute March 1 2022 New York Dems Flex Muscles Pass Reproductive Health Act CBSNewYork January 22 2019 Russo Amy January 23 2019 Andrew Cuomo Signs Abortion Bill Into Law Codifying Roe v Wade HuffPost Retrieved May 15 2022 Legal opinion backs abortion Saipan Tribune May 12 2000 Retrieved May 15 2022 Lang Abortion is illegal in CNMI Saipan Tribune May 17 2000 Retrieved May 15 2022 Boyette Chris Croft Jay June 7 2019 Abortion is legal in Guam But the closest provider is a long flight away CNN Retrieved May 15 2022 Stracqualursi Veronica May 1 2019 Alabama House passes bill that would make abortion a felony CNN Retrieved May 2 2019 Elliott Debbie May 1 2019 Alabama Lawmakers Move To Outlaw Abortion In Challenge To Roe V Wade NPR org Retrieved May 6 2019 Smith Kate May 13 2019 Ahead of Alabama abortion bill debate Lieutenant Governor fights against rape and incest exceptions CBS News Retrieved May 14 2019 Garrand Danielle May 15 2019 Alabama just criminalized abortions and every single yes vote was cast by a white man CBS News Retrieved May 15 2019 Kelly Caroline May 15 2019 Alabama governor signs nation s most restrictive anti abortion bill into law CNN Retrieved May 15 2019 Rambaran Vandana May 15 2019 Alabama has gone too far with extreme abortion bill Pat Robertson says Fox News Retrieved May 15 2019 Louisiana s Democratic governor signs abortion ban into law NBC News Associated Press May 30 2019 Retrieved August 27 2019 Totenberg Nina Montanaro Domenico May 28 2019 Supreme Court Upholds Indiana Provision Mandating Fetal Burial or Cremation NPR Supreme Court declines to hear Kentucky ultrasound law December 9 2019 Ariane de Vogue Devan Cole and Caroline Kelly John Roberts sides with liberals on Supreme Court to block controversial Louisiana abortion law CNN Supreme Court s Louisiana abortion case could have implications in Ohio Capitol Letter cleveland June 30 2020 Najmabadi Shannon June 29 2020 Supreme Court affirms abortion protections strikes down Louisiana abortion law The Texas Tribune Waller Allyson September 8 2021 Texas has banned abortions at about six weeks But the time frame for pregnant patients to get one is less than two The Texas Tribune Retrieved May 4 2022 Texas Legislature Online 85 R Text for SB 8 Capitol texas gov Retrieved May 28 2021 De Vogue Ariane September 1 2021 Texas 6 week abortion ban takes effect after Supreme Court inaction CNN Archived from the original on September 1 2021 Retrieved September 2 2021 Totenberg Nina September 2 2021 Supreme Court Upholds New Texas Abortion Law For Now NPR Retrieved September 2 2021 Docket for United States v State of Texas 1 21 cv 00796 CourtListener com Retrieved September 13 2021 a b Barrett Devlin Marimow Ann E September 9 2021 Justice Department sues Texas to block six week abortion ban The Washington Post Retrieved September 9 2021 a b Johnson Carrie Sprunt Barbara September 9 2021 Justice Department Sues Texas Over New Abortion Ban NPR News Retrieved September 9 2021 includes full text of lawsuit Tierney Sneed September 10 2021 The Justice Department s uphill battle against Texas abortion ban CNN Retrieved September 13 2021 The Editorial Board September 9 2021 Merrick Garland s Texas Two Step The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved September 13 2021 Mizelle Shanwa April 4 2022 Colorado governor signs bill to protect access to abortion CNN Retrieved April 4 2022 a b Oklahoma governor signs nation s strictest abortion ban MSN Retrieved May 27 2022 World Barbara Hoberock Tulsa Bill making abortion illegal starting at conception signed by Oklahoma governor San Francisco Examiner Archived from the original on May 27 2022 Retrieved May 26 2022 Legal challenge filed to stop Oklahoma anti abortion bill ABC News Associated Press May 26 2022 Retrieved May 26 2022 Weber Andy May 20 2022 Lawsuit planned over extreme very dangerous latest abortion ban ACLU Oklahoma says KOCO Retrieved May 26 2022 Forman Carmen Oklahoma governor signs nation s strictest abortion ban It starts immediately USA TODAY Retrieved May 27 2022 Yahoo News Yahoo News May 25 2022 Oklahoma governor signs into law strictest abortion ban in the U S Yahoo News pp Full Article Retrieved May 25 2022 Vagianos Alanna June 24 2022 Abortion Is Now Illegal In These States HuffPost Retrieved June 25 2022 Munce Megan June 25 2022 What you need to know about abortion in Texas The Texas Tribune Retrieved June 26 2022 Druker Simon Minn Senate passes law guaranteeing right to abortion reproductive care upi Kashiwagi Sydney January 31 2023 Minnesota governor signs bill codifying fundamental right to abortion into law CNN Archived from the original on February 2 2023 Retrieved February 24 2023 Stempel Jonathan Pierson Brendan Five women who say they were denied abortions sue Texas Reuters Retrieved March 7 2023 a b Gold Hannah April 7 2020 Every State That s Tried to Ban Abortion Over the Coronavirus The Cut Retrieved April 7 2020 In Texas Oklahoma Women Turned Away Because Of Coronavirus Abortion Bans NPR Retrieved April 8 2020 Millhauser Ian January 13 2021 The Supreme Court hands down its first anti abortion decision of the Amy Coney Barrett era Vox Retrieved January 13 2021 Glenza Jessica April 27 2021 The tiny American towns passing anti abortion rules The Guardian Retrieved May 11 2022 Texas town bans abortion in all male council vote BBC News June 13 2019 Retrieved January 23 2020 Miller Ryan W June 14 2019 Sanctuary city for the unborn All male city council in Texas town bans most abortions USA Today Retrieved January 23 2020 Stanley Becker Isaac June 13 2019 Five men outlaw abortion in a Texas town declaring a sanctuary city for the unborn The Washington Post Retrieved May 11 2022 Hargett Kenley July 6 2019 Abortion is Freedom billboards cause controversy in Waskom city declared the act illegal Ksla com Retrieved January 23 2020 Wax Thibodeaux Emily October 1 2019 Anti abortion law spreads in East Texas as sanctuary city for the unborn movement expands The Texas Tribune Retrieved January 23 2020 Parke Caleb January 16 2020 Banning abortion more Texas towns become sanctuary cities for the unborn Fox News Retrieved January 23 2020 Walters Edgar January 15 2020 Three Texas towns vote in favor of sanctuary cities for the unborn hoping to ban abortion Click2Houston com Retrieved January 23 2020 Standiford Melanie April 7 2021 Hayes Center is first Nebraska town to make abortion illegal and punishable by law 1011now com Archived from the original on April 18 2021 Retrieved April 15 2021 Blue Hill is second Nebraska town to outlaw abortion in city limits 1011now com April 15 2021 Retrieved April 15 2021 Shatara Jay April 16 2021 Two Nebraska towns outlaw abortion Nebraska tv Retrieved April 16 2021 Najmabadi Shannon May 1 2021 Lubbock votes to become the state s largest sanctuary city for the unborn The Eagle Retrieved May 11 2022 Lubbock votes to become largest city in U S to ban abortion KAMC May 2 2021 Retrieved May 11 2022 Lubbock s Sanctuary City for the Unborn ordinance wins passage by wide margin The Dallas Morning News May 2 2021 Retrieved May 11 2022 Abortion Sanctuary Cities A Local Response to The Criminalization of Self Managed Abortion California Law Review Retrieved September 6 2022 St Louis Passes Bill to Become Abortion Sanctuary City Washington Free Beacon February 13 2017 Retrieved September 6 2022 a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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