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36 Years of Roe v. Wade

Just got my first Roe anniversary email of the year and figured I’d share. Yes, I know it’s early. They know it’s early. It’s okay. This year is the 36th anniversary of the landmark decision, and the Guttmacher Institute issues their “where are we now” email.

A little about Guttmacher – you might not be familiar with them, but if you belong to or follow any of the major women’s/reproductive rights groups, you know their work. Guttmacher does endless research on U.S. and global women’s reproductive health, and lot of groups use their research to buttress their own lobbying efforts, policy and advocacy work. I like them. They stay out of the fray for the most part, just doing their honest broker thing and a lot of behind the scenes coordination. They do good work.

Although the rate of abortion in the United States has fallen to its lowest level since 1974, slightly more than one in five pregnancies end in abortion, and stark disparities persist in rates of unintended pregnancy and abortion; poor and low-income women are at particularly high risk. Compared with higher income women, poor women are four times as likely to have an unplanned pregnancy, three times as likely to have an abortion and five times as likely to have an unplanned birth. Consequently, the need for publicly funded family planning services is as critical as ever.

Publicly funded family planning clinics provide contraceptive services to about seven million women each year. Without these services, unintended pregnancy rates would be nearly 50% higher for all women and about two-thirds higher among low-income women. According to recent Guttmacher research, 1.4 million unintended pregnancies, which would likely result in about 640,000 unintended births and 600,000 abortions, are averted each year because of these services. Research shows that these services save $4.3 billion in public funds. Nationally, every $1.00 invested in helping women avoid pregnancies they do not want saves $4.02 in Medicaid expenditures that otherwise would be needed—in addition to providing clear benefits to individual women and their families by helping them avoid unintended pregnancies and plan the pregnancies they do want.

Guttmacher research has also found that each $20 million increment in new funding under the Title X family planning services program alone would help women avoid another 17,200 unintended pregnancies, including 7,000 that would end in abortion. Expanding eligibility for Medicaid-covered family planning services nationwide to the same income eligibility levels used for pregnant women would yield even greater results, further reducing unintended pregnancy and abortion by 15%, while achieving an additional $1.5 billion in net savings annually.

While in the Senate, President-elect Obama cosponsored numerous bills, such as the Prevention First Act, aimed at expanding access to contraceptives, health information and preventive services to help women avoid unwanted pregnancies. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (NV), himself antiabortion, reintroduced the Prevention First Act in early January, and companion legislation in the House was reintroduced soon thereafter.

Click here for:

Facts on induced abortion in the United States

A comprehensive resource on trends in abortion in the United States since 1974

State facts about abortion

Information on who has abortions in the United States and why


3 thoughts on 36 Years of Roe v. Wade

  1. Speaking of Roe v. Wade, has anyone else seen those “commercials” on tv with Norma McCorvey (“Jane Roe”) basically saying she regrets it all and the only way to go is pro-life? Something about “natrual conception to natural birth”. I’ve been seeing them EVERY NIGHT on tv lately. I’ve been too squicked out to google it, but the “natural conception” bit made me squirm. Anti-contraception, perhaps? Ugh, one day I’ll actually google it.

  2. The issue that gets missed here amidst all the joy that I have that women in America have the right to choose is that the Right seeks to control not only the womb but the access that millions of women have to contraception. The entire drive by the Religious Right and their GOP lickspittles in Congress for the first 5 years of the Bush presidency to limit access to birth control, of all forms, has been one of the greatest travesties in US history.

    I’m celebrating Roe XXXVI with a pint of ice cream tonight knowing that my nieces and cousins will have cjhoices that their grandmothers didn’t have.

    Qu’ul cuda praedex nihil!~

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