Short Wave - Why Abortion Access Is Important For A Healthy Community
Episode Date: May 24, 2022Abortion access has been leading political news in recent weeks. But what happens when we look at abortion as a health care tool that betters public health? Today, Emily talks to Liza Fuentes, a Senio...r Research Scientist at the Guttmacher Institute, a research organization that focuses on sexual and reproductive health. Fuentes says abortion access is an important part of health care for a community and losing access can exacerbate income and health inequalities. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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Earlier this month, a draft majority opinion for a pending Supreme Court case was leaked by Politico.
The case the court is considering is Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization.
It deals with the Mississippi law that shortened the window for abortion from 20 weeks to 15.
In other words, this would end Roe v. Wade and federal abortion protection, as we've known it for nearly
50 years. If Roe is overturned, decisions about regulating abortions would fall to individual states,
including states with so-called trigger laws, laws that would go into effect soon after the Supreme
Court decision and would severely restrict most abortions, establishing near total bans or bans
after six weeks of gestation. In the earliest, a lot of people know they're pregnant is around four weeks.
You can ban abortion people's Soviet abortions that is important to know that people will be denied care and that that will put their health at risk.
Liza Fuentes is a senior research scientist at the Gutmacher Institute, a research organization that focuses on sexual and reproductive health and supports abortion rights.
As a researcher, Liza says access to a safe abortion is health care.
And protecting that access is protecting public health.
Public health is a broader practice that ensures the health of communities. So what goes into public health isn't just collecting data and looking at risk factors, but partnering with communities and looking at broader priorities in communities to promote health.
Within any community in the U.S., a lot of different types of people seek abortion care.
60% of people obtaining abortion care are already mothers. Three quarters of people obtaining abortion abortion live with lower.
incomes or below the poverty line. Sixty-one percent of people obtaining abortion care women of
color. One in four abortion patients identify as Catholic. About half of people who get an abortion are
in their 20s. And in the U.S., according to the Guttmacher Institute, about one in four women will
obtain an abortion by the time they're 45. That number changes by country, for sure. But certainly
there's no country on this planet where people who are pregnant do not require the ability
to terminate a pregnancy when they no longer want to be pregnant. Given how common abortion is worldwide,
it's striking how seldom our society talks about it. When statistically speaking,
everyone knows someone who has had one. To lose access to this procedure not only impacts an
individual, but their family and community too. If a person is forced to take on,
the risks of pregnancy when they didn't want to and they become sick or even die, that affects
their children's health and well-being. It affects their partner's health and well-being.
And frankly, it affects the whole community when a person dies before their time because they
couldn't get the care that they needed.
Today on the show, the intersection of abortion and public health, how abortion fits into
health care and the safety of pregnant people. This is part one of our discussion with Liza. In part
Two, we'll talk about what it looks like in practice for health agencies to treat abortion as a
matter of public health. I'm Emily Kwong. Thanks for listening to Shortwave, the Daily Science
podcast from NPR. Public health is the practice of ensuring the health and well-being of communities
that's done through data collection, but also a lot of on-the-ground work, partnering with community
groups and really thinking about what policies lead to the best health outcomes for the population
you're trying to serve. So in the case of abortion, the question becomes, how do we protect the health
of a pregnant person? For Liza, it means looking at abortion as part of family planning.
Family planning is the ability to decide if when and how to become pregnant to parent. More specifically,
more traditionally, family planning refers to contraceptive services. So ensuring that anyone who can
become pregnant, is able to use contraceptives that meet their needs so that they can delay or plan
for pregnancy when the timing is right for them. And abortion fits into family planning because
it's an essential component of being able to decide if someone wants to continue to be pregnant.
And abortion is also critical for ensuring that people can avoid the adverse health effects
of an unintended pregnancy, or in some cases, pregnancies where people develop conditions
that threaten their life or health.
From where you said, why is abortion access a public health issue, Dr. Fuentes?
Abortion is a public health issue for a few reasons. First, like I said, abortion is just a
central and essential component of the full range of sexual and reproductive health care that
everybody needs to be able to live a healthy life at every phase in their life. And then if someone
does become pregnant, they need to be able to decide if they want to continue that pregnancy.
People may think that contraceptives that are used before someone becomes pregnant could be a solution,
for example, to abortion, but they're not. Half of people seeking abortion care report
using a contraceptive in the month they became pregnant.
Half? Half. Yes. Wow. Yeah. And that doesn't mean that contraceptives don't work. We're talking about
people seeking abortion care. The vast majority of people using contraceptive care are not seeking
abortions in the next month. But contraceptives are not 100% foolproof, not even sterilization,
right? And sterilization, what do you mean by that? Somebody could have a tubuligation or a
vasectomy and it can fail. Even that can fail. Right?
It's not common, but if it does, abortion needs to be part of the options for somebody.
In public health, we want to make sure people have the resources to make the best choices where they're at.
This is public health thinking in action.
It's this move where individual health is woven into the tapestry of the broader community.
And in thinking on the community level, Liza considers abortion an issue of racial and economic justice too.
That's because most people who seek an abortion are low income.
Almost half live below the poverty line.
So any policies designed to deny, delay, or impede abortion access will affect those groups disproportionately.
Because why?
Attempts to restrict or deny abortion care can often be overcome by people if they simply have the money and the means to do so.
So people can travel out of state to avoid an abortion restriction.
But for people who are struggling to make ends meet, who are disproportionately likely to be lowly,
income or uninsured, which are black and brown women in this country, they're more likely to
experience the delays, the denial of abortion care and the harms that go along with it.
States that seek to restrict and ban abortion are the least likely to offer the social
supports that people need to be able to raise children. They rank among the highest states
for maternal mortality and infant mortality. And finally, abortion is a public health.
health issue because it's a human right. And human rights frameworks and social justice frameworks
really undergird the scientific practice of public health because our goal is not simply to observe
and produce knowledge, but channel it towards eliminating health inequities and ensuring that everyone
has the chance to be healthy in the community where they live. Since this leak, a lot of people
for maybe the first time in their lives, because of how long, road-we weight has been around,
are wondering what its removal would mean for pregnant people in the U.S.
If that were to happen, how do you think it would affect those who become pregnant in the U.S.?
First of all, clearly, even in places where abortion is highly restricted or illegal,
people still seek and obtain abortion care.
But many people will be denied abortion care.
as well. And we can't ignore that, right? People who need abortion care will go to great lengths.
And I know this personally for King of Abortion Funds to be able to ensure that they can get the care
they need, but it's not possible for everyone to overcome those tremendous costs. So people will be
forced to continue a pregnancy and take on the risks of doing so. For some of those people, it will be
at the detriment of their health or potentially even their life. Other people will be delayed in
their care. Abortion is extremely safe, but the further along it is, the risk uptick slightly,
still safer than continuing a pregnancy and giving birth, still safer than getting a wisdom tooth out.
But forcing people to take on any risk when they've done everything they can to take care of themselves
contravenes, certainly public health values and practice. But secondly, all pregnant people will be put at
risk if Roe falls because people will be monitored, surveilled, and harassed for the outcomes of
their pregnancy, potentially. We already saw that with a young woman in Texas recently, like last
month, who went to seek care for a miscarriage of pregnancy and her clinician called the police
on her. And it went to a grand jury and she was charged with murder, even though self-managing an abortion
is not illegal and it certainly is not considered murder. But the political climate,
made it possible for somebody to even think that that was okay. So people even seeking health care
for bleeding during pregnancy for potential miscarriage may be put under scrutiny. And finally,
if Roe has overturned or severely gutted, that also impedes the ability of health care
providers to be trained to take care of pregnant people. The fall of Roe really has the potential
to deny anyone who's pregnant or is thinking about becoming pregnant, the ability to get the highest
quality, timely care when they need it throughout their pregnancy.
This is part one of our conversation with Liza Fuentes.
Listen for part two, where we'll talk about what it looks like in practice for health agencies
to treat abortion as a matter of public health.
This episode was produced by Burley McCoy.
It was edited by Rebecca Ramirez and fact-checked by Margaret Serino.
The audio engineers for this episode were Josh Newell and Gilly Moon.
Giselle Grayson is our senior supervising editor.
Beth Donovan is our senior director, and Anya Grunman is our senior vice president of programming.
I'm Emily Kwong.
Thank you for listening to Shortwave, the Daily Science Podcast from NPR.
