Texas Reports 60% Plunge in Abortions Under New Law

Data for the first month also show no one filed a suit to collect $10K state offers
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Feb 10, 2022 4:12 PM CST
Texas Reports 60% Plunge in Abortions Under New Law
FILE - Protesters walk along Jackson St. during the North Texas March for Life, celebrating the passage and court rulings upholding the Texas law known as Senate Bill 8, on Saturday, Jan. 15, 2022, in Dallas. Abortions in Texas fell by 60% in the first month under the most restrictive abortion law in...   (Shafkat Anowar/The Dallas Morning News via AP)

Abortions in Texas fell by 60% in the first month under the most restrictive abortion law in the US in decades, according to new figures that for the first time reveal a full accounting of the immediate impact. The nearly 2,200 abortions reported by Texas providers in September came after a new law took effect that prohibits the procedure once cardiac activity is detected, usually around six weeks of pregnancy, without exceptions in cases of rape or incest. The figures were released this month by the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, the AP reports.

In August, there had been more than 5,400 abortions statewide. State health officials said more data will be released on a monthly basis. The numbers offer a fuller picture of the sharp drop in patients that Texas doctors have described in their clinics over the past five months, during which time courts have repeatedly allowed the restrictions to stay in place. That has left some Texas patients traveling hundreds of miles to clinics in neighboring states or farther, causing a backlog of appointments in those places. The Texas law conflicts with landmark US Supreme Court rulings that prevent a state from banning abortion early in pregnancy, but it was written in a way that has essentially outmaneuvered those precedents.

Under the state law, any private citizen is entitled to collect $10,000 or more if they bring a successful lawsuit against someone who performed or helped a woman obtain an abortion after the time limit—which opponents have condemned as a bounty. So far, no anti-abortion supporters have filed any suits. With few options left, Texas abortion providers have acknowledged the law is likely to stay on the books for the foreseeable future. It comes as the US Supreme Court has signaled a willingness to weaken or reverse the landmark Roe v. Wade precedent in a ruling that is expected later this year.

(More Texas abortion law stories.)

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