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    Pennsylvania abortions increasing after Roe v. Wade overturned

    By Sareen HabeshianSimran ParwaniMike D'OnofrioAdriel Bettelheim,

    26 days ago
    Data: Guttmacher Institute; Note: Includes procedural and medication abortions provided at brick-and-mortar health facilities as well as medication abortions via telehealth and virtual providers; Map: Axios Visuals

    Clinics provided roughly 37,900 abortions in Pennsylvania last year, per new data estimates from the Guttmacher Institute.

    The big picture: That's up more than 17% from 2020, two years before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade .


    Why it matters: This week marks the second anniversary of the Dobbs decision, which has left a patchwork of abortion access laws posing heightened logistical and financial challenges for patients seeking care.

    • Since then, roughly half the states have imposed restrictions of some kind on the procedure.

    Zoom in: Some 2,550 out-of-state patients traveled to Pennsylvania for abortions last year.

    • An estimated 400 more patients traveled to the Keystone State to obtain an abortion in 2023 compared to 2020, per the data from the institute, which supports abortion rights.
    • But the percentage of abortions given to out-of-state patients has remained steady at 7% during that time.

    By the numbers: People from Ohio accounted for 36% of all out-of-state abortion patients who traveled to Pennsylvania last year (or 920) — the most out of any state, per the data.

    • That was followed by patients from West Virginia (600), Delaware (330) and New Jersey (230).

    The other side: More Pennsylvania patients traveled to New Jersey for the procedure than any other state (2,910).

    State of play: Abortion is legal in Pennsylvania up to about 24 weeks of pregnancy.

    Zoom out: Across the country, about 171,300 patients traveled out-of-state for abortions in 2023.

    Between the lines: People driving the furthest to get an abortion are more likely to come from congressional districts with lower incomes and more diverse populations, according to data analysis by the left-leaning Center for American Progress.

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