Absolute abortion appears to be decreasing, after ROE first
For many Americans, obtaining miscarriage has become more difficult since the Supreme Court has turned Ro against a valley in 2022. But even in the face of countries that impose new restrictions and clinics, the number of miscarriages continued to climb every year – even this.
About 518,940 miscarriages were provided by doctors in states that do not prohibit semi-cortical abortion in the first six months of 2025-decrease by 5 % compared to the same period in the previous year, according to a new research issued by the Guttmacher Institute, which studies and supports sexual and reproductive health. The number of people traveling via state lines also decreased to perform abortion at that time – by 8 % – connected to the same period in 2024.
The new results are a sign of the reflection of the direction seen in the previous research issued by the Guttmacher Institute: Previous data revealed that the number of abortion provided by doctors in most of the United States He jumped 11 % in 2023A year after the court’s decisionand Compared to 2020. In 2024, this number increased slightly – by less than 1 % – his previous year’s adherence. Nevertheless, travel outside the country that year witnessed a slight decrease compared to 2023.
While the number of people traveling through the state lines for abortion this year continued, this number is still “much higher” than it was before Row Pushedand Note the researchers.
Isabel Dukambo, one of the senior fellow researchers at Guttmacher who worked in the new analysis, notes that one of the explanations for the total decrease in the group’s results may be that the increasing use of the so -called provisions of the Shield Law means that more people in the states that the prohibition near the ban may receive abortion pills in mail via mail via, instead of having to travel via status lines.
Docampo tells the time that researchers have analyzed abortion only by doctors in states that are not prohibited from prohibiting, so Guttmacher’s estimates do not include abortion pills sent to states that have a semi -specific ban under the laws of shield or miscarriage. This means that “we should not think about these estimates to reflect trends in abortion at the country level.”
Instead, Docampo says the data “highlights that the shield laws, I think, are a crucial option that people use.”
“This is an innovation during the past two years. I think it was incredibly important, and it is important for politicians and preachers to continue to protect and expand these provisions because it is clear that it was incredibly important to the scene of access to abortion in the United States.”
Read more: What are the laws of abortion?
Another explanation for the direction may be the increasing burden of travel across the state lines to reach care, which Docampo says indicates “the need for policy makers to address some of these financial strains.”
Docampo also indicates that there is a variation in data between cases.
The decrease in the number of abortion provided in the states that carried out a ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy in 2024, and in the states that limit the near ban. In Florida, for example, there were 27 % of the abortion of doctors in the first six months of 2025 compared to the same period of the previous year. Florida carried out a six -week ban in 2024; Before that, the state had a 15 -week ban.
Illinois, which Dukambo says it is a major destination for people traveling from other states to reach abortion, a significant decrease in the number of travelers outside the country so far this year. This decrease represented nearly three quarters of the total decrease in the number of miscarriages stipulated in the state. “The decrease in travel is the main source of the decline in cases in Illinois,” she says.
Meanwhile, in New York, the number of abortion by doctors in the state decreased by about 5 %, but the number of people traveling to the state to reach the care by about 51 %. Docampo says this was likely that there were more people traveling from Florida to New York, given the new Florida restrictions on abortion.
In general, however, Docampo says that the research indicates a reverse trend since previous years, when the number of miscarriages that are provided is rising.
Diana Green Foster – a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, who was not affiliated with Goette Station – indicates that the total decrease in the abortion provided so far this year may be due to people who reach care under Shield laws, which are not picked up by data. But she says she is concerned that some people may not be able to access the birth control pills through shield laws or travel outside the state to obtain care.
“The decline, for me, is concerned that there can be people who want abortion they do not get,” says Foster. She conducted her own for a period of years Research project This has been found that people who deprived abortion have suffered from economic and health results worse than those who received care.
“My big occupy is whether the people who need to travel are able to travel,” she says. “We don’t know from these data that they are not, but it is worrying.”