Protestors gather in front of the US Supreme Court in March 2023 as the Court hears arguments on the regulation of abortion medication, © Amnesty International

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Protestors gather in front of the US Supreme Court in March 2023 as the Court hears arguments on the regulation of abortion medication, © Amnesty International
Amnesty International

Abortion in the USA: The Human Rights Crisis in the Aftermath of Dobbs

Synopsis

Abortion bans are driving OB-GYNs into retirement, dissuading new doctors from coming to states with restrictions, and causing rural hospitals to close their maternity wards, creating deadly gaps in care. One Indiana woman died as a direct result of the dire shortage in physicians able to provide maternity care, according to an anonymous doctor in Indiana. The doctor said that a hospital forced a woman with an ectopic pregnancy to wait more than eight hours to be transferred to a facility that had a maternity ward. She died on the operating table. 

In Amnesty International’s report on the state of reproductive health care in America, researchers interview doctors in rural areas about what these maternal health deserts look like for doctors and patients. Fearful for the future, they warn Amnesty that Indiana could see many more stories like this.

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Amnesty International
The hardest things for us are the medical conditions that aren’t clear or obvious…I think about that all the time when I see a patient. Nothing is safe in pregnancy.
Anonymous, Indiana OB-GYN
Read the full report on AmnestyInternational.org