The Last 5 Years Have Been Terrible for Abortion Rights (but, there is NO war on women!!)
The Last 5 Years Have Been Terrible for Abortion Rights
Of all the abortion restrictions enacted in the nearly 43 years since Roe v. Wade, 27 percent have become law in the last five years, according to a new report from the Guttmacher Institute. Thats the largest number of restrictions enacted in any five-year period since the Supreme Court decided Roe.
While states cannot legally deny women an abortion, legislators can still create laws that make it near-impossible to access the procedureand they have. In the decade that followed Roe (19731982), states adopted 380 abortion restrictions, or an average of 38 per year. In 2011, however, 92 new restrictions were put in place nationally. That is the highest number of restrictions enacted in any single year since Roe, surpassing the 81 enacted in 1973, making access to abortion services more limited now than at any time since Roe v. Wade.
According to a press release from Guttmacher:
The situation changed dramatically following the 2010 midterm elections that swept abortion opponents into power in state capitals across the country. From 2011 through 2015, states added, on average, 57 new restrictions per year. Five types of restrictionslimits on medication abortion, private insurance coverage and later abortions as well as expanded requirements for parental involvement and abortion counselingaccount for more than half of the new restrictions adopted over this period.
As of 2013, 27 states have put TRAP (Targeted Regulation of Abortion Provider) laws into place, creating onerous restrictions and requirements for abortion providers. One such TRAP law in Texas requires that abortions be performed in facilities that meet ambulatory surgical center standards, including specifics on room and doorway sizes, staffing and anesthesia, among other things. Meeting those standards can cost clinics millions. That measure, part of the omnibus anti-abortion bill HB2 that passed in 2013 and is currently before the Supreme Court, also requires physicians providing abortion services to have admitting privileges at a local hospital no more than 30 miles away, which can be difficult to obtain.
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On March 2, the Supreme Court will hear Whole Womans Health v. Cole, the biggest challenge to abortion rights since the 90s. The court will examine parts of HB2 and decide whether the states rules place an undue burden on a womans constitutional right to end a pregnancy.
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http://msmagazine.com/blog/2016/01/15/the-last-5-years-have-been-terrible-for-abortion-rights/