Texas Abortion Clinics Receive Last


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In May of 2013, Texas had 41 licensed abortion clinics to serve its more than 5 million women of reproductive age. On Monday, if a major provision of a new anti-abortion law goes into effect, the state will be left with only seven clinics--all concentrated in urban areas of the sprawling state.


A federal judge is expected to rule in the next several days on HB2, a law signed by Gov. Rick Perry (R) in 2013 that requires all abortions to take place in ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs), or mini-hospitals. Most of the 19 abortion clinics that remain in the state cannot afford to undergo the extensive renovations and pay the monthly operating costs to become an ASC, so they will have to close.


The new law also bans abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, requires abortion providers to obtain admitting privileges at a local hospital, and limits how doctors can administer non-surgical medication abortions.


The Center for Reproductive Rights filed a lawsuit earlier this year against the admitting privileges provision of the law and the provision requiring clinics to become ASCs. The group claims that the law is not designed to protect women's health, but to eliminate access to safe and legal abortions across the state.


'This is a battle to stop the politicians who have already done devastating and potentially irreparable harm to the health care system for women in Texas from obliterating it entirely for millions of women statewide,' said Nancy Northup, CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights, in a statement earlier this month.


Republican lawmakers have claimed that the new law is necessary for women's safety. But two of the state's expert witnesses, Drs. Mayra Jimenez Thompson and James Anderson, admitted to having been coached by Vincent Rue, an anti-abortion marriage therapist who has been discredited as a witness in previous abortion cases. According to Mother Jones, Rue has claimed that abortion 'reescalates the battle between the sexes' and 'increases bitterness toward men.'


If the judge allows HB2 to go into effect, large swaths of the state will be without an abortion provider. The Huffington Post reported earlier this year that 'back-alley' abortions are already making a comeback in the state, particularly in the Southwest part of Texas near the Mexico border. Because women in the Rio Grande Valley already have to drive roughly 250 miles to the nearest abortion clinic in San Antonio, some have opted to buy abortion-inducing pills on the black market and administer them themselves.


Women's health advocates worry that a lack of access will drive women to illegal, unsafe clinics, or bring back the days of women using sharp objects to end their pregnancies as they did before abortion became legal in 1973.


'Women will resort to other means to try to terminate a pregnancy, which will put their lives at risk,' Hal Lawrence, CEO of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, told reporters this week.






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