Saturday, March 18, 2023

Have you ever wanted or needed an abortion you did not get?

The Abortion I Didn’t Have: Our faith trapped us:
We needed to believe we could be good more
than we needed to protect ourselves.

Data from a 2022 nationally-representative online survey in the United States


Ariana H. Bennett, Cassondra Marshall, Katrina Kimport, Julianna Deardorf, Anu Manchikanti Gomez
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.contraception.2023.110007Get rights and content

Objective


Describe the prevalence of considering, wanting, and not obtaining a wanted abortion among a nationally-representative sample of 15-44 year olds in the United States who had ever been pregnant.

Study Design


We analyzed data from ever-pregnant respondents (unweighted n=1,789) from a larger online survey about contraceptive access using the nationally-representative AmeriSpeak panel. Among those not obtaining wanted abortions, weighted frequencies for sociodemographic characteristics and reasons for not getting the abortion are presented.

Results


Nearly 6% of the full sample [107-108 челreported having wanted an abortion they did not obtain. In open-ended responses, respondents most frequently reported individual reasons (43.8%) for not getting an abortion (e.g., changing their mind; personal opposition) and financial, logistical, or informational barriers (24.7%) likely related to policy. A quarter (24.1%) of the sample reported a past abortion. Among those who reported no past abortions, about one-fifth had considered abortion in the past, and 6.8% had wanted or needed one. Among those reporting no prior abortions who had considered abortion, only a third (34.3%) also report ever wanting or needing one.

Conclusions


This study begins to quantify the experience, even before the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, of being unable to obtain a wanted abortion. Additionally, findings suggest that people in a national sample will answer questions about whether and why they did not obtain a wanted abortion.

Implications


This study provides the first known national estimates of lifetime history of not getting a wanted abortion. Survey questions can be used for future research. Prospective and ongoing measurement of the inability to get a wanted abortion could be one part of documenting the effects of Dobbs on abortion access.

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