A range of thinkers on the future of abortion post-Roe in America — and how that will affect everything else
is an overall blow to women’s rights and autonomy, one of its unfortunate outcomes is how it will significantly worsen Black women’s social and health conditions in the United States.
Joanne Kenen, Politico’s former executive health care editor, is the Commonwealth Fund journalist in residence at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.enetic testing and prenatal screening have given expectant parents powerful tools and knowledge. Access to legal abortions has also meant that those expectant parents can use that information — which can inform them of a severe fetal health problem — to decide whether to carry the pregnancy to term.
The decision will ‘exacerbate the partisan and regional division on abortion that is already in place.’Defenders of the Unborn: The Pro-Life Movement before Roe v. Wade.will probably confirm and exacerbate existing trends rather than substantially change them. If these trends continue for the next decade, regional variations in abortion policy will merely be exaggerated versions of those that we already see today.
If the new restrictive abortion laws in conservative states will be nearly powerless to stop legal abortions even in those regions , the reversal ofwill not have the effects that either the anti-abortion or reproductive rights movements have anticipated. It will not substantially reduce the number of legal abortions.
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