Colorado is experiencing a significant increase in women traveling here for abortion services following the tightening of restrictions in nearby states and the Supreme Courts ruling from this past summer.
In the first nine months of this 2022, 2,477 people crossed state lines for abortion care in Colorado, according to preliminary data from the Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment. This far surpasses the 1,560 out-of-state patients who came here last year.
The increase started in 2020 due to pandemic restrictions on abortion clinics in other states. Then, in 2021, Texas passed , as did . The U.S. Supreme Court eliminated the constitutional right to abortion in June through its decision on Dobbs vs. Jackson Womens Health Organization.
So definitely Dobbs, largest impact as far as the number of states that have restricted or eliminated access to abortion, Kate Coleman-Minahan, an assistant professor at the University of Colorados College of Nursing, said. But we've been seeing an increase in out-of-state people coming from out-of-state because of several different periods of abortion restrictions from different states.
Abortion is legal in Colorado at any point in pregnancy. Earlier this year, state lawmakers voted to reaffirm that right. With the midterm elections looming, that protecting abortion through legislation will be his top priority next year if Democrats retain control of congress.