Abortion’s Underground Railroad
By Pandit, Eesha | |
Proquest LLC |
The patient arrived in
Susanna S., a member of the Houstonbased Clinic Access Support Network (CASN), met her as she left the building. The patient was distressed, Susanna recalls; she'd been unaware that she'd have to return two days later for her procedure, due to a mandatory waiting period. She wasn't prepared for-and couldn't pay for-the extra nights, nor the three bus tickets needed to get home and then back to the clinic.
The medical procedure was, of course, an abortion. No other healthcare procedure is so heavily regulated and politicized. And a new
Among other restrictions, HB2 requires patients who undergo a common form of abortion-a "medical abortion," via pill-to visit the clinic for each of the two doses of medication, rather than taking the second dose at home, as is typical. The law also requires a 14-day follow-up visit, in addition to the existing 24-hour waiting period between initial consultation and procedure for women who live within 100 miles of a clinic. That means medical abortions now require a minimum of four visits, if not more.
The bill will also make it more dif- ficult for the state's 22 remaining abortion clinics to stay open. HB2 instituted a new slate of rules for clinics, including that they have patient-admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles and that they qualify as ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs), which requires cumbersome and expensive changes like wider corridors. In order to comply, many would need to be rebuilt from the ground up. Since the bill was passed, 14 of the original 36 clinics have closed. When the ASC requirement goes into effect on
The advocacy group
That's the impetus behind CASN, which was founded last summer in response to the new law, and aims to help
But regulations and requirements like those in HB2 are not limited to
The trend has given rise to networks like CASN nationwide that help close the gap between the legal right to an abortion and the ability to get one.
The work of Access Women's Health Network in
Another valuable support offered by these networks is emotional. loan Lamunyon Sanford, director of the New Mexico RCRC, recounts that one woman broke down in relief when she wasn't the only person who couldn't afford an abortion.
But advocates eagerly anticipate the day their support is no longer needed. The example of
The patient who arrived in
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Copyright: | (c) 2014 Institute for Public Affairs, Inc. |
Wordcount: | 1077 |
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