State Bioethics by Jim Fossett:
Abortion in the Fifty States

The most recent issue of Stateline.org, an on-line magazine that covers state government and politics, contains an excellent article on the legal status of abortion across the fifty states. The overwhelming focus on whether the newly constituted Supreme Court will overturn or modify Roe v. Wade doesn’t pay enough attention to the fact that state actions will be more influential in determining womens’ access to abortion than anything the Supreme Court does. Even inside the Roe framework, the accessibility of abortion varies enormously across the states. In larger, more urbanized states; access to abortion providers is better. Fewer than 10 percent of the women in California, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Jersey live in a county without an abortion provider. By contrast, 75 percent of the women in smaller rural states such as West Virginia, Mississippi, and Wyoming have to travel to another county. Some states have gone to considerable trouble to make abortions as difficult to get as possible while staying inside the Roe framework. In others, the right of a woman to terminate a pregnancy has been held to be constitutionally protected. The point is clear---Changes to Roe v. Wade are only the first step, and maybe not the most important one, in changing access to abortion. What does, or doesn’t, happen in state capitals is likely to have more far wide reaching consequences.
James Fossett, Director of the Bioethics and State Policy program of Rockefeller Institute of Government and AMBI

comments

Your link to the article is broken.

You write of "access" as if women uniformly have some enthusiasm for abortion. Some women don't want a friendly neighborhood abortionist; they want to have their babies, free of pressure to get scraped out.
It's primarily the women of the urban, abortion-friendly states that are lamenting the lack of "access" for women in states without as many abortionists. Well, clearly there's just not the demand. To lament a lack of "access" to something there's no demand for makes no sense.

Clearly the abortion rate in a particular state is influenced by a lot of things,including values, besides the availability of providers and state restrictions on the procedure.I'd be willing to bet that the demand's not zero in any state--there were over 800 abortions in South Dakota last year--although there are states that don't have any resident providers.

Christina,
Ha. Your comment had me laughing. Thanks for brightening my day.

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