Number of abortions in US falls to lowest level since 1973

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NEW YORK (AP) — The number and rate of abortions across the United States have plunged to their lowest
levels since the procedure became legal nationwide in 1973, according to new figures released Wednesday.

The report from the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights, counted 862,000
abortions in the U.S. in 2017. That’s down from 926,000 tallied in the group’s previous report for 2014,
and from just over 1 million counted for 2011.
Guttmacher is the only entity that strives to count all abortions in the U.S., making inquiries of
individual providers. Federal data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention excludes
California, Maryland and New Hampshire because those states don’t compile comprehensive abortion data
for the CDC.
The new report illustrates that abortions are decreasing in all parts of the country — in
Republican-controlled states seeking to restrict abortion access and in Democratic-run states protecting
abortion rights. Between 2011 and 2017, abortion rates increased in only five states and the District of
Columbia.
One reason for the decline in abortions is that fewer women are becoming pregnant. The Guttmacher
Institute noted that the birth rate and the abortion rate declined during the years covered by the new
report. A likely factor, the report said, is increased accessibility of contraception since 2011. The
Affordable Care Act required most private health insurance plans to cover contraceptives without
out-of-pocket costs.
According to the report, the 2017 abortion rate was 13.5 abortions per 1,000 women aged 15-44 — the
lowest rate since the Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion. Following that
ruling, the number of abortions in the U.S. rose steadily — peaking at 1.6 million in 1990 before
starting a steady, still-continuing decline. The abortion rate is now less than half what is was in
1990.
Guttmacher noted that almost 400 state laws restricting abortion access were enacted between 2011 and
2017. But it said these laws were not the main force behind the overall decline in abortions. It said
57% of the nationwide decline occurred in the 18 states, plus the District of Columbia, that did not
enact any new restrictions.
Michael New, an abortion opponent who teaches social research at Catholic University of America, said
Guttmacher’s report understated the role played by anti-abortion activism in reducing the number of
abortions. In 1981, he said, 54% of women with unintended pregnancies opted for abortion. That number
fell to 42% by 2011.
"This shows that pro-life efforts to change public opinion, assist pregnant women, and pass
protective laws are all having an impact," New said in an email.
Between 2011 and 2017, the number of clinics providing abortion in the U.S. declined from 839 to 808,
with significant regional disparities, the report said. The South had a decline of 50 clinics, including
25 in Texas, and the Midwest had a decline of 33 clinics, including nine each in Iowa, Michigan and
Ohio. By contrast, the Northeast added 59 clinics, mostly in New Jersey and New York.
Over that period, the abortion rate dropped in Ohio by 27% and in Texas by 30%. But the rate dropped by
similar amounts in states that protected abortion access, including California, Hawaii and New
Hampshire.
Areas with the highest abortion rates in 2017 were the District of Columbia, New Jersey, New York,
Maryland and Florida. Rates were lowest in Wyoming, South Dakota, Kentucky, Idaho and Missouri — many
women from those five states go out of state to obtain abortions .
One significant trend documented in the report: People who have abortions are increasingly relying on
medication rather than surgery. Medication abortion, making use of the so-called abortion pill,
accounted for 39% of all abortions in 2017, up from 29% in 2014.
The report, which focuses on data from 2017, does not chronicle the flurry of sweeping abortion bans that
were enacted earlier this year in several GOP-controlled states, including a near-total ban in Alabama
and five bills that would ban abortion after a fetal heartbeat is detected, as early as six weeks into
pregnancy. None of those bans has taken effect and their backers hope that litigation over the laws
might eventually lead to a Supreme Court ruling weakening or overturning Roe v. Wade.
Guttmacher’s president, Dr. Herminia Palacio, said abortion restrictions, regardless of whether they lead
to fewer abortions, "are coercive and cruel by design," with disproportionate impact on
low-income women.
However, the push for tougher restrictions continues. Just last week, Texas Right to Life and some allied
groups urged Republican Gov. Greg Abbott to call a special session of the Legislature to "abolish
every remaining elective abortion" in the state.
The report comes amid upheaval in the federal family planning program, known as Title X. About one in
five family planning clinics have left the program, objecting to a Trump administration regulation that
bars them from referring women for abortions. Title X clinics provide birth control and basic health
services for low-income women.
"If your priority is to reduce abortions, one of the best things you can do is make sure that women
have access to high-quality, affordable and effective methods of birth control," said Alina
Salganicoff, director of women’s health policy for the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation.

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