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Wednesday, November 2, 2022

The Morning: The new abortion landscape

How women are obtaining abortions since Roe v. Wade was overturned.
Author Headshot

By Emily Bazelon

Staff Writer, NYT Magazine

Good morning. Women in states with abortion bans are turning to telemedicine.

The misoprostol pill is used to terminate early pregnancies.George Frey/Reuters

A practical shift

Just two years ago, about 250,000 people had abortions in the U.S. states where the procedure is now banned or severely restricted, or probably soon will be. Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade on June 24, allowing those prohibitions to take effect, where have women in these states turned?

They're increasingly using telemedicine to get abortion pills. Because of access to the pills, a gray zone for providing abortions has emerged in the months since the court's decision. The method is safe and effective, though in states with bans, the delivery mechanism is not legal.

Only one telemedicine service, Aid Access, openly provides pills in states with abortion bans. In the months preceding a leaked draft of the Supreme Court's decision, Aid Access received an average of about 83 requests a day from people seeking abortion pills in 30 states, new research found. In 27 of those states, abortion is now banned, likely to be banned or allowed only during the first six weeks of pregnancy. For comparison's sake, the study also included three states where the procedure is still widely available.

Across the 30 states, requests to Aid Access for pills has risen to about 218 a day since the court released its decision at the end of June through September. The largest increases in queries came from states that enacted total abortion bans, as this chart shows:

Data is from Sept. 1, 2021 to June 23, 2022 and from June 24 to Sept. 30, 2022, before and after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. | Source: Aid Access

This shift accompanies another one in how people get abortions. In states that have banned or restricted access, clinic-based procedures fell in July and August, according to other new research. As a result, women are carrying pregnancies they didn't plan or want. The increase in women seeking pills, however, mostly offset the drop, The Times reported. (Most, though not all, requests for pills to Aid Access end up being filled.)

Clinics in states like Colorado, Illinois and New York have also seen more patients as women travel out of state for abortions. But the shift to telemedicine makes sense for practical reasons. First, having an abortion with pills at home, which has the physical effects of miscarrying, is as safe and effective in the first trimester as going to a clinic.

Second, a quarter of women of childbearing age in the United States live — or will soon live — at least 200 miles from an abortion clinic. That distance is likely to pose an insurmountable obstacle for a significant number of people, especially those with low incomes. The telemedicine option is far cheaper than traveling. Aid Access asks patients for $105 to $150 and will accept less or nothing from people who can't afford to pay. By contrast, a trip out of state for an abortion often takes a few days and can run to $1,500 or more.

It's also notable that abortion by telemedicine has risen in states that have not restricted abortion access, suggesting that more women are choosing it for "comfort and privacy" as well as necessity, said Abigail Aiken, a public health researcher at the University of Texas at Austin and a co-author of the study of the Aid Access data.

Is it legal?

Providing abortion pills via telemedicine, across state lines, raises legal questions. The Dutch physician Dr. Rebecca Gomperts, the founder of Aid Access, writes prescriptions for abortion pills for women in red states, using her Austrian medical license. I wrote a cover story for The New York Times Magazine last month about the efforts of American doctors and midwives to work with Gomperts. "I just want to scream, 'This is a public health emergency!'" one of the doctors, Linda Prine, texted me while I was reporting. Abortion opponents, on the other hand, say their state laws should bind out-of-state providers.

Doctors like Prine, who is 71 and lives in New York, want their home states to shield them from out-of-state prosecutions, lawsuits and threats to their medical licenses. So far, several blue states have passed laws that seek to shield providers who perform abortions for women who travel from states with bans. Over the summer, Massachusetts went a step further, passing a law that aims to shield its providers when they offer telemedicine abortions to people within red states.

A basic premise of the federalist system in the U.S. is that states help enforce each other's laws. Whether blue states can refuse to do so, on behalf of abortion providers, is an open question.

The bottom line

The answer depends on politics as well as law. Republicans have expected to pay a price for the end of Roe in Tuesday's midterm elections. If they perform better than expected, legislators and prosecutors in red states may be more likely to aggressively pursue doctors like Prine if they follow through on defying the state abortion bans. They could also try to punish women who receive abortions via telemedicine, though abortion opponents currently say that's not their plan.

Aiken's study suggests that the end of Roe may not have yet succeeded in reducing abortion as much as its proponents hoped. Women are proving resourceful in avoiding states' restrictions. But the real test is probably yet to come.

For more

  • Democrats are worried their party has focused too much on abortion access as a midterm election issue and not enough on the cost of living.
  • J.D. Vance, the Republican Senate nominee in Ohio, and Representative Tim Ryan, his Democratic opponent, sparred over abortion in a town hall event.

Times journalists are on the ground reporting from across the U.S., covering the biggest issues in all their complexity throughout the 2022 election season. This work is only made possible with the support of subscribers. Become a subscriber today with this special offer.

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Lives Lived: Julie Powell found an audience when she spent a year cooking every recipe in Julia Child's "Mastering the Art of French Cooking." That led to a blog, a book and the movie "Julie & Julia." Powell died at 49.

SPORTS NEWS FROM THE ATHLETIC

Phillies take 2-1 lead: Philadelphia tied a record with five home runs in its 7-0 win in Game 3 of the World Series over the heavily favored Astros. The Phillies' storied hitting coach is a key to the team's success, The Times's Tyler Kepner writes. Game 4 is tonight.

Nets swap coaches: Brooklyn fired coach Steve Nash, The Times reported. The more surprising move, according to The Athletic's Shams Charania: The Nets plan to hire Ime Udoka — whom the Celtics had suspended for the season for violating team policies — to replace Nash.

N.F.L. trading deadline: The Bears acquired wide receiver Chase Claypool from the Steelers and the Lions sent tight end T.J. Hockenson to the Vikings. The Athletic's staff rated the major trades.

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ARTS AND IDEAS

Brendon Babenzien.Mark Sommerfeld for The New York Times

Preppy meets streetwear

Not long ago, J. Crew's chic but affordable suits changed the world of men's wear, disrupting a market long dominated by high-end designers. But its preppy style has fallen out of fashion, supplanted by more casual, cutting-edge brands. Can J. Crew become cool again?

That's the goal for Brendon Babenzien, the former design director at the iconic streetwear label Supreme. Under his guidance, J. Crew's aesthetic has expanded to embrace the new ways people dress — hoodies, funky shorts, pastels. His first major hit came at the intersection of the two worlds: super-wide chinos, which seem equally suited for a conference room or a skate park.

Related: As Ye's corporate partnerships dissolve, his sneakers have also seemed to vanish from stores.

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

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Kate Sears for The New York Times

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Late Night

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Now Time to Play

The pangrams from yesterday's Spelling Bee were embolden and emboldened. Here is today's puzzle.

Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Single-handedly (five letters).

And here's today's Wordle. After, use our bot to get better.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow.

P.S. The word "villainsplains" — from a review of Percival Everett's new, James Bond-riffing novel — appeared for the first time in The Times yesterday.

"The Daily" is about the attack on Nancy Pelosi's husband.

Matthew Cullen, Lauren Hard, Lauren Jackson, Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Saturday, May 28, 2022

Daily Skimm Weekend: There is still a light that shines

Memorial Day weekend is always a lot of things. It's the end of the school year, the unofficial start to summer, and a time to honor those lost in our nation's wars. This year, though, our thoughts are likely to be a little closer to home.
May 28, 2022
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Daily Skimm

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This Is America

Design: Camille Rapay | Photo: Getty Images

In Our Backyard: Memorial Day weekend is a lot of things. It's the end of the school year, the unofficial start to summer, and a time to honor those lost in our nation's wars. This year, though, our thoughts are also likely to be a little closer to home

The Story

The country is still grieving the 21 people, including 19 children, who were murdered at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas this week. And it isn't the only mass shooting that's top of mind. There was the grocery store in Buffalo, NY. And the church in Laguna Woods, CA. In fact, since 2022 began, our country has experienced more mass shootings than days of the year. Which has lots of people asking, 'Why does this keep happening in America?'

Should we talk about it…

The Second Amendment? Yes. The US is one of only three countries in the world that gives anyone the constitutional right to keep and bear arms. And it's a right that some Americans take very seriously. Case in point: There are more civilian-owned guns in America than there are people. But with rising gun violence in the US, many have called on Congress to pass gun control legislation so that guns aren't so easily accessible. Worth noting: In some US states, it's harder to register to vote or to get a puppy than it is to buy a gun. But most gun control measures have been met with pushback or inaction.

Why is that?

In large part, the National Rifle Association — the most powerful gun rights group in the US. Which, by the way, is holding its annual convention in Houston this weekend, just a few hundred miles from Uvalde. In recent decades, the NRA has obstructed gun control in Washington through lobbying, 5 million extremely vocal and active members, and political donations to lawmakers like Mitt Romney, Marco Rubio, and former President Donald Trump. It successfully pushed Congress to roll back gun sale restrictions and to quash an assault weapons ban proposed after Sandy Hook. However, some think the org's power is starting to fade due to financial and legal issues.

Where are lawmakers in all this?

Good question. Especially since an estimated 90% of Americans — as in, we the people — support background checks. Two bills to achieve that passed the House more than a year ago. Those are HR 8, a background check bill for all gun sales. And HR 1446, which would close a loophole that allows a gun sale to move forward if a background check takes longer than three days. Both have since collected dust in the Senate, since Dems know they don't have the votes for them to clear the floor. And that's unlikely to change. Nearly all 50 Senate Republicans, when asked after this week's massacre, either refused to move background checks forward or declined to comment. But some Dems are still crossing their fingers.

How have other countries handled this?

Places like Britain, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand restricted gun access after mass shootings — and some included other measures, like buyback programs. Unlike in the US, many semiautomatic weapons (think: the AR-15) are restricted or banned in those countries as well. Plus, they have robust checks and licensing requirements. All in all, guns are an American epidemic. We are 25 times more likely to be killed in a gun homicide than people in other high-income countries.

theSkimm

This week, we witnessed the worst elementary school shooting since Sandy Hook in 2012. And the government has taken little to no action to protect its most vulnerable citizens.

PS: Learn more about the NRA's grip on Washington here.

PPS: Traumatic events like this can take a toll on your health. Remember to take care of yourself.

What's Happening

…in your phone: A 'constellation of apps' for dating.

…in your TikTok feed: One chef's bread and (compound) butter

…in your closet: An exercise dress for success.

…in your Twitter feed: Halsey calling out their record label.

Bookmark'd

The weekend means more time to do the things you love. For many of us, that's reading. But we can't Skimm it all for you. So instead, we're giving you a look at the reads we've saved, texted, and emailed to our friends…

'Grandfluencers' Are Sharing a New Vision of Old Age…meet the four "Old Gays" who are definitely having more fun than you.

Can Golden Hour Fix Your Brain?...why you might want to watch a week's worth of sunrises and sunsets.

Welcome to the Era of Unapologetic Bad Taste…a look at why bad taste is now oh-so-good.

Downtime

Design: theSkimm | Photo: Getty Images

Downtime doesn't have to mean doing nothing. Here's one idea for making the most of your weekend.

Memorial Day weekend is here, and many are planning to grill. Whether you're hosting a casual hangout or a big backyard barbecue, consider sprucing up your space (think: string lights, extra pillows). And make sure you have all the essentials, like a grill set, a grill basket, and grilling planks

Next, decide what to make. Classic options like burgers and hot dogs are sure-fire crowd pleasers. Or try something new and experimental, like a seafood spread (habanero BBQ shrimp, brown sugar-cured salmon) or a totally vegan menu with roasted veggie skewers and Mediterranean grilled tofu. Add a few star sides (loaded crispy potatoes, watermelon tomato salad) and desserts (brownie ice cream sandwiches). And whatever you choose, don't forget to have a refreshing drink on hand — be it a cocktail or a mocktail.

Skimm Picks

1. One-on-one coaching with an expert. Future's coaches have trained everyone from pro athletes to working professionals. So you're always in good hands. Whether you're a first-time gym-goer or you could basically run the show. Psst…Skimm'rs get 50% off their first three months.*

2. Memorial Day sales that are hot this weekend. From 40% off sale items at Urban Outfitters to $800 off Casper mattresses, these deals won't last much longer. Cha-ching.

3. Products for those with mobility or gut issues. From arthritis and back injuries to IBS and stomach problems, we spoke with experts to cover all the bases. Check out these top-notch product recs.

Programming Note

Skimm HQ will be observing Memorial Day. See you back in your inbox on Tuesday.

Skimm More

More Skimm, more knowledge. Here's what else we covered this week…

Save the Date

Like ours, your work and personal calendars are probably hectic. So here are some events you should know about... 

The Indy 500. Ready, set, go.

Scripps National Spelling Bee Finals. Better bee-lieve it.

The start of the four-day weekend celebrating the Queen's Platinum Jubilee. Keep calm and party on.

Mercury retrograde ends. About time.

PS: Want more events like this on your cal? theSkimm App gives you a heads-up on when everything from holidays to sports games to awards shows are going down. Download it here.

theSkimm Loyalty Program

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3x the sign up points?* You bet. More earnings. More quickly. Hello, more rewards. Sign up for theSkimm Loyalty Program and watch (triple) the points roll in.

Skimm'd by Rasheeda Campbell, Maria del Carmen Corpus, Xian Chiang-Waren, Melissa Goldberg, Niven McCall-Mazza, and Clem Robineau

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