High-resabortion
Showing 155 posts tagged abortion
High-resAt Planned Parenthood, we’re committed to connecting people to accurate, timely information about their abortion options and where they can get care — no matter what. As abortion access becomes increasingly restricted, patients need to be able to get accurate, personalized information on their options, and where they can go for abortion services.
That’s why we’ve launched the Abortion Care Finder. With this tool, patients can view their closest Planned Parenthood health centers that provide abortion care, and get the information they need to schedule an appointment.
Check it out>>
The Supreme Court’s Next Abortion Case Could Upend Abortion Access in Louisiana — and Test Whether the Court Will Protect Our Rights

By Miriam Berg
The U.S. Supreme Court has decided to take up a huge case that could leave Louisiana with just one provider of safe, legal abortion.
The case, June Medical Services v. Gee, gained wide notoriety right after Justice Brett Kavanaugh, soon after he joined the Court, voted to let the law that would decimate abortion access take effect. The case will be decided this term — by the end of June 2020 — and if the Supreme Court rules in favor of Louisiana’s anti-abortion law, it would take the country one step closer to making abortion impossible to access.
But the danger doesn’t stop there. The case also has far-reaching implications for our nation’s court system. You see, the Supreme Court already ruled against this exact type of law. Any decision that would permit Louisiana’s anti-abortion law to stand would flout precedent and how the court is supposed to treat cases that have already been decided.

Keeping Abortion Out of Reach in Louisiana
The Louisiana law at issue in June Medical Services v. Gee would impose a medically unnecessary requirement that abortion providers get admitting privileges at nearby hospitals. Louisiana politicians pushing this targeted restriction against abortion providers (TRAP) law claim to support “women’s health.” But in reality TRAP laws threaten patient health and safety because they restrict access to reproductive health care — which is a devastating possibility in a state where people already have few reproductive health care providers, and some of the lowest health outcomes (including maternal health) in the country.
The Louisiana TRAP law would particularly harm people who already have trouble accessing health care because of systemic barriers — for example, people with low incomes, those in rural areas, and people of color. Picture yourself in this situation: You need an abortion. But you don’t have insurance, you can’t take off work, you can’t get childcare (most people who get an abortion are already parents), and you can’t drive miles and miles and hours and hours away to reach the lone abortion provider in your state who meets the legislature’s restrictions.
It’s easy to see this common scenario would put abortion out of reach in Lousiana, even if not banning it technically. And that’s exactly what the law is intended to do: keep safe, legal abortion out of reach.
Sound Familiar?
The law at the center of the Louisiana case is nearly identical to a Texas law that was struck down by the Supreme Court in 2016, in Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt. At the time, the Court said a local admitting privileges requirement would place an unconstitutional undue burden on access to abortion.

Pictured above: Cecile Richards, the former president of Planned Parenthood, outside the Supreme Court building at a demonstration over the Texas TRAP law at issue in Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt
If the Supreme Court upholds Louisiana’s TRAP law in June Medical Services v. Gee, then it would essentially be flouting its own ruling from just three years ago in Whole Woman’s Health — and calling into question the undue burden test enshrined by Planned Parenthood v. Casey.
So if you remember 2016 and felt that Whole Woman’s Health was that year’s biggest abortion case, keep watch. The Louisiana case marks an equal or perhaps even larger inflection point for abortion access and the U.S. legal system.
About the Case: Louisiana Health Care Providers vs. Anti-Abortion Politicians
The Center for Reproductive Rights — which litigated the Texas case before the Supreme Court — is now representing several abortion providers in the Louisiana case.
The plaintiffs sued Dr. Rebekah Gee, the Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals. Dr. Gee is in charge of enforcing Louisiana’s admitting privileges requirement.
(Planned Parenthood is not a plaintiff in the Louisiana case, and neither of Planned Parenthood’s two health centers in Louisiana provide abortion.)
Louisiana Case Could Decide the Future of Abortion Access in America
Louisiana’s dangerous, unconstitutional, anti-abortion law is currently on hold and it will stay that way until the Supreme Court issues a decision in the case which it will do some time before the end of June 2020.
If the Court rules in favor of the Louisiana law, it would leave only one doctor providing abortion care in a state where roughly 10,000 people have abortions every year.
And it’s not just about Louisiana. Access to abortion is hanging by a thread in this country. With a ruling in favor of the Louisiana law in June, the Supreme Court could allow that thread to snap.
Three years ago, the Court decided that laws such as this one in Louisiana have no purpose other than to make abortion more difficult to access. There’s only one reason to revisit that decision now: because Justice Brett Kavanaugh has replaced Justice Kennedy, who voted to protect abortion access in 2016.
Trump Packed Courts With Judges Against Safe and Legal Abortion

Pictured above: Justices Neil Gorsuch (left) and Brett Kavanaugh (right), with retired justice Anthony Kennedy (center)
And Justice Kavanaugh is far from President Trump’s only nominee.
Trump has packed federal courts with judges who have track records of restricting reproductive rights and overall health care access. In fact, Trump has filled 152 lifetime seats in America’s courts, and has over 40 pending nominees.
Despite all of these threats, we will never stop fighting to ensure that every single person is still able to access abortion. Join us in the fight for our rights and freedoms.
Supreme Court Revisits Abortion With Louisiana Case
10/4/19: The Supreme Court just announced it will take up an abortion case this term, which could decide the future of abortion access in this country. Our right to safe, legal abortion hangs in the balance.
Wondering how to “induce a miscarriage?” Here are the facts.

Someone asked us:
How would one go about safely (and affordably) inducing a miscarriage?
If by “inducing a miscarriage,” you mean ending a pregnancy that would otherwise continue, what you’re talking about is having an abortion. A miscarriage is the loss of pregnancy in the first 20 weeks of pregnancy. In fact, the medical terminology for a miscarriage is “spontaneous abortion.”
Abortion is a safe, legal, and common way of ending a pregnancy. Your abortion options depend on where you live and how far along in your pregnancy you are. If your pregnancy is fewer than 10 weeks along, you can take the abortion pill. Your doctor or nurse will give you medicines and detailed instructions about where, when, and how to take the medicines. The process is very similar to an early miscarriage, and you have the option to end the pregnancy in private, in your own home or at another place of your choosing.
If you’re further than 10 weeks into your pregnancy, you can have an in-clinic abortion.
If you’re asking this question because you’ve been diagnosed with a pregnancy that won’t continue — like if there’s an embryo without a heartbeat, or there is an empty pregnancy sac without an embryo, talk with your doctor or nurse about your options. This tissue usually passes on its own, but treatment similar to the abortion pill or in-clinic abortion procedures is sometimes necessary or preferred.
Many Planned Parenthood health centers provide this kind of care, and they provide or can connect you with financial assistance so it can be affordable. If you have insurance, it may cover some or all of the cost. Contact your nearest Planned Parenthood health center to learn more and make an appointment.
-Emily at Planned Parenthood
We’re banding together — quite literally — for abortion access.

Artists and musicians are stepping up and standing with Planned Parenthood to protest the extreme abortion bans sweeping the country and the attacks on our fundamental right to make decisions about our bodies. From commitments to boycott filming in Georgia, to generous donations from their tours being given to Planned Parenthood, to signing an ad against the abortion bans, these artists are challenging abortion stigma and helping change the conversation about abortion.
And together, we’re sharing our stories, reclaiming our bodies, and owning our power.
As summer comes to a close, here are some of the artists on our end-of-summer playlist who’ve stood up and spoken out to say: get your #BansOffMyBody:
1. Lizzo
Owning your body = good as hell. And we agree with Lizzo 110%: we’re capable of making our own decisions about our bodies. At this year’s VMAs, Lizzo rocked a necklace by Sophie Ratner that reads “Bans Off.”

©Kevin Mazur/Getty Images.
2. Dua Lipa
We got new rules and they’re all about protecting access to abortion. Shout out to Dua Lipa for showing up for the millions of people whose rights are under attack.

3. Sia
It’s not just abortion that’s under attack, it’s all sexual and reproductive health care. But together, we are a movement and we are unstoppable.

4. Hayley Kiyoko
Girls like girls — and abortion access too, it’s nothing new. Hayley Kiyoko joined nearly 140 artists and musicians who stood up for abortion access.

5. Paulina Rubio
Our bodies are our own. If they are not, we can not be truly free. Or equal.

6. John Legend
All of us at Planned Parenthood will continue to provide health care for all of you. Thanks, John Legend, for speaking up for our rights!

7. The National
We’re in no mood to have our rights be taken away. No way in hell. The National is banding together with us to stand up for abortion access.

8. Bon Iver
When it comes to securing access to abortion for everyone, we’re not out of the woods yet. But we’re one step closer, thanks to Bon Iver and thousands of others, who are standing up to say Bans Off My Body.

9. Billie Eilish
“I’m proud to be standing up for Planned Parenthood as they fight for fair and equal access to reproductive rights. We cannot live freely and move fully in the world when our basic right to access the reproductive health care we need is under attack. Every person deserves the right to control their body, their life, and their future."
We all know the real bad guy is anyone who thinks they can make decisions about your body for you.

10. Ariana Grande
So grateful for artists like Ariana who are stepping up and spreading their generosity for Planned Parenthood and abortion funds. We’re not letting up in the fight to protect abortion access; we gotta keep breathin’ and breathin’ and continue to fight back.

11. Selena Gomez
We agree with Selena: stop telling us what to do with our bodies.

This is just a snapshot of the many artists who are standing with Planned Parenthood. Find out who else is banding together for abortion access and sign the petition alongside them today: bansoffmybody.org
What a 38-Year-Old Abortion Story Can Teach Us Today
Rosie Jimenez is thought to be the first victim of The Hyde Amendment — an unjust federal policy that prohibits federal dollars from paying for abortion with very few exceptions. The Texas Observer highlighted Rosie’s story in 2015.
High-resvai @ppaction
High-resWith abortion bans sweeping the nation, it’s more important than ever to share your stories. Call us at 646-870-4484 to tell us your abortion story and let us know why you support access to safe, legal abortion.
For answering our questions
For dealing with red tape and regulations
For traveling hundreds of miles
For teaching the providers of the future
For being there for patients every day
For their compassion
For their commitment
For their care
We thank the doctors, nurses, and health care staff who provide abortion.