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Abortion incidence and services in the United States in 2000. (Articles).


Induced abortion in·duced abortion
n.
Abortion caused intentionally by the administration of drugs or by mechanical means.


induced abortion 
, one of the most frequently performed surgical procedures Surgical procedures have long and possibly daunting names. The meaning of many surgical procedure names can often be understood if the name is broken into parts. For example in splenectomy, "ectomy" is a suffix meaning the removal of a part of the body. "Splene-" means spleen.  in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , is experienced by a substantial proportion of American women. More than one-fifth of all pregnancies end in abortion, (1) a reflection of the fact that almost half of U.S. pregnancies are unintended. (2) Trends in abortion may reflect a number of factors, such as variations in the underlying incidence of unintended pregnancy and changes in how women resolve unplanned pregnancies and in the availability or accessibility of abortion services. Therefore, regular and accurate estimates of abortion incidence and service provision are essential for monitoring trends in reproductive behavior Reproductive behavior

Behavior related to the production of offspring; it includes such patterns as the establishment of mating systems, courtship, sexual behavior, parturition, and the care of young.
.

After remaining fairly steady for most of the 1980s, the number of abortions in the United States declined from a high of 1.61 million in 1990 to 1.36 million in 1996, the last year for which comprehensive abortion incidence data were collected. The abortion rate declined from 29.3 per 1,000 women aged 15-44 in 1980 and 27.4 in 1990 to 22.4 in 1996. The abortion ratio abortion ratio Obstetrics The number of spontaneous and induced abortions/100 live births/yr. See Abortion.  (the proportion of pregnancies ending in abortion) also fell during the early and mid- mid-
pref.
Middle: midbrain. 
1990s. These declines meant that in the mid-1990s, measures of abortion reached the lowest levels since the 1970s. (3)

Several major developments since 1996 may have had an impact on unintended pregnancy levels and, therefore, abortion levels. Declines in teenagers' level of sexual activity (4) and continued increases in their use and effective use of contraceptives (5) could have reduced adolescent pregnancy adolescent pregnancy See Teenage pregnancy.  and abortion rates and, thus, the overall abortion rate (although only one-fifth of abortions are provided to women younger than 20). (6) Some states have expanded eligibility for family planning family planning

Use of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family, largely to curb population growth and ensure each family’s access to limited resources.
 services under Medicaid Medicaid, national health insurance program in the United States for low-income persons; established in 1965 with passage of the Social Security Amendments and now run by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. ; (7) however, Title X funds for free and low-cost family planning services have increased only enough to match inflation. (8) In addition, the number of women of reproductive re·pro·duc·tive
adj.
1. Of or relating to reproduction.

2. Tending to reproduce.



reproductive

subserving or pertaining to reproduction.
 age covered by Medicaid declined in the late 1990s, while the number with no health insurance increased; (9) these factors could have inhibited in·hib·it  
tr.v. in·hib·it·ed, in·hib·it·ing, in·hib·its
1. To hold back; restrain. See Synonyms at restrain.

2. To prohibit; forbid.

3.
 women's access to both family planning and abortion services.

Meanwhile, a continuing decline in the number of providers could result in more limited access to abortion services. The number of U.S. abortion providers a`bor´tion pro`vid´er

n. 1. same as abortionist.
 fell from a high of 2,900 in 1982 to about 2,000 in 1996, and the proportion of counties without a provider increased from 77% in 1978 to 86% in 1996. (10) A 1997 survey of obstetricians and gynecologists who perform abortions indicated that 57% were aged 50 or older, (11) fueling the perception that the number of providers will decline drastically dras·tic  
adj.
1. Severe or radical in nature; extreme: the drastic measure of amputating the entire leg; drastic social change brought about by the French Revolution.

2.
 as current providers reach retirement age. However, some evidence indicates that training opportunities for providers have begun to increase. (12)

A development that may have facilitated access to abortion was the introduction of a new method of early medical abortion medical abortion Obstetrics An elective nonoperative abortion effected in the 1st trimester by abortifacients. See Abortion. . Mifepristone Mifepristone Definition

Mifepristone is a pill that can be taken as an alternative to a surgical abortion.
Purpose

This medication most often is used for ending early pregnancies.
 (formerly known as RU 486) was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA FDA
abbr.
Food and Drug Administration


FDA,
n.pr See Food and Drug Administration.

FDA,
n.pr the abbreviation for the Food and Drug Administration.
) in September 2000, giving women seeking early abortion early abortion Obstetrics An abortion performed before the 12th wk of gestation. See Abortion.  a nonsurgical option. Some providers have also used the cancer drug methotrexate methotrexate, drug used in halting the growth of actively proliferating tissues. Introduced in the 1950s, it is used in the treatment of leukemia, psoriasis, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.  to provide early medical abortion, but mifepristone is the first drug approved specifically for that purpose. Information about the extent of mifepristone utilization has only recently become available and still is quite limited. (13)

Between 1997 and 1998, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
) reported a 2% decrease in the number of abortions performed in the United States and no change in the abortion rate. However, CDC data are compiled from state reports, and in 1998, four states did not report data to the CDC. These states (primarily California California (kăl'ĭfôr`nyə), most populous state in the United States, located in the Far West; bordered by Oregon (N), Nevada and, across the Colorado River, Arizona (E), Mexico (S), and the Pacific Ocean (W). ) accounted for 18% of all abortions tallied by The Alan Guttmacher Alan Frank Guttmacher (1898-1974) was an American physician.

He served as president of Planned Parenthood and vice-president of the American Eugenics Society, founded the Association for the Study of Abortion in 1964, was a member of the Association for Voluntary
 Institute's (AGI's) 1997 data collection effort. (14) More recent CDC statistics on national abortion incidence are not available.

Thus, new data on nationwide abortion incidence and the number, types and locations of abortion service providers are needed. To obtain this information, AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) A machine intelligence that resembles that of a human being. Considered impossible by many, most artificial intelligence (AI) research, projects and products deal with specific applications such as industrial robots, playing chess,  fielded a national survey of U.S. abortion providers (its 13th) in 2001 and 2002, collecting data primarily for 1999 and 2000. In this article, we present information from this survey on the number of abortions performed and national, regional and state abortion rates. We also examine the number and distribution of providers by location, type and caseload case·load  
n.
The number of cases handled in a given period, as by an attorney or by a clinic or social services agency.


caseload
Noun
. Furthermore, we include data from previous AGI surveys to permit examination of trends over time. To obtain baseline The horizontal line to which the bottoms of lowercase characters (without descenders) are aligned. See typeface.

baseline - released version
 estimates of mifepristone use in the United States, we report on medical abortions occurring during the first half of 2001. Finally, we report on findings regarding the incidence of abortion by dilation and extraction dilation and extraction
n. Abbr. D & E or D & X
A surgical procedure in which the cervix is dilated and the early products of conception are removed from the uterus.
, a procedure that is the primary target of many efforts to ban so-called partial-birth abortions partial-birth abortion
n.
A late-term abortion, especially one in which a viable fetus is partially delivered through the cervix before being extracted. Not in technical use.
. *

METHODS

Questionnaire Development

Our survey questionnaire was modeled on the one used in AGI's previous round of data collection, in 1997. We created versions of the questionnaire for each of three major categories of providers: clinics, physicians and hospitals. The clinic and physician questionnaires were virtually identical. All questionnaires asked the number of induced abortions performed at the provider's location in 1999 and 2000. In addition, we asked hospitals the number of inpatient inpatient /in·pa·tient/ (in´pa-shent) a patient who comes to a hospital or other health care facility for diagnosis or treatment that requires an overnight stay.

in·pa·tient
n.
 and outpatient outpatient /out·pa·tient/ (-pa-shent) a patient who comes to the hospital, clinic, or dispensary for diagnosis and/or treatment but does not occupy a bed.

out·pa·tient
n.
 procedures performed. We requested information from all providers on minimum and maximum gestations at which both surgical and medical abortions are performed, and we asked nonhospital ([dagger]) providers about fees charged, sources of payment, distance traveled by clients and antiabortion an·ti·a·bor·tion  
adj.
Opposed to induced abortion: the antiabortion movement.



an
 harassment Ask a Lawyer

Question
Country: United States of America
State: Nevada

I recently moved to nev.from abut have been going back to ca. every 2 to 3 weeks for med.
; results from these questions are presented elsewhere. (15)

In regard to early medical abortions and intact dilation and extraction Intact dilation and extraction (IDX or intact D&X), also known as intact dilation and evacuation (intact D&E), dilation and extraction (D&X), intrauterine cranial decompression and controversially in the United States as  abortions, we asked nonhospital providers the number of procedures performed in 2000 and during the first six months of 2001. We also asked whether they anticipated providing early medical abortions within the next year (if they were not already doing so). For nonhospital providers offering early medical abortion, we ascertained as·cer·tain  
tr.v. as·cer·tained, as·cer·tain·ing, as·cer·tains
1. To discover with certainty, as through examination or experimentation. See Synonyms at discover.

2.
 whether they used mifepristone or methotrexate.

Identifying Providers

Before fielding the survey, we conducted an extensive update of our list of facilities in the United States (excluding Puerto Rico Puerto Rico (pwār`tō rē`kō), island (2005 est. pop. 3,917,000), 3,508 sq mi (9,086 sq km), West Indies, c.1,000 mi (1,610 km) SE of Miami, Fla.  and U.S. territories) where abortions are performed. We began with all of the providers ([double dagger double dagger
n.
A reference mark () used in printing and writing. Also called diesis.

Noun 1.
]) known to have performed abortions in 1996, excluding those that stopped providing abortions or closed before January 1, 1999. To this list, we added possible new providers obtained from a variety of sources, including telephone yellow pages for the entire country, Planned Parenthood Planned Parenthood

A service mark used for an organization that provides family planning services.
 affiliates, the membership directory of the National Abortion Federation The National Abortion Federation (NAF) is an organization of abortion providers. Though originally a U.S. group, NAF has expanded to include practitioners in Canada and Australia as well as many European countries.  and World Wide Web listings of abortion providers. The updated list contained 2,287 possible providers.

In addition, the clinic and physician questionnaires inquired whether providers knew of facilities not offering surgical abortion that had begun offering medical abortion. Another question asked about hospital satellite facilities that performed abortions. During follow-up follow-up,
n the process of monitoring the progress of a patient after a period of active treatment.


follow-up

subsequent.


follow-up plan
 of these questions and of survey nonrespondents, as well as the investigation of mail returns, 155 additional possible providers were identified and included in the survey universe, bringing the total to 2,442. Seven of the additional providers were identified through the question about providers who performed only medical abortion; however, all seven reported performing surgical abortions as well.

Survey Fielding

In July 2001, we mailed questionnaires to all potential providers. Those who did not respond were sent two additional mailings at three-week intervals; a fourth mailing was sent to doctors' offices and hospitals. In addition, we contacted state health statistics agencies, requesting all available data reported by providers to each state health agency on the number of abortions performed in 1999 and 2000. For the states that supplied us with data by provider, we used the health agency figures for providers who did not respond to any of our mailings.

The remaining nonrespondents were contacted by telephone and asked to complete and return the questionnaire. Providers who could not or would not do so were asked a small number of key questions, including the number of abortions they had performed and gestational gestational

pertaining to or emanating from gestation.


gestational age
the age of the fetus in terms of time lapse, e.g. three month fetus, or in terms of proportion of total gestational duration, e.g. first trimester fetus.
 limits. To obtain facility data or record a final refusal, staff members made up to 35 attempts to contact each provider by phone, mail or fax. In total, staff members made more than 6,000 attempts to reach more than 900 providers. Follow-up continued through June 2002.

Of the 2,442 facilities surveyed, 962 responded to the mailed questionnaire, and 662 faxed or mailed a response or provided information during telephone follow-up; health department data were used for 449. (Each of these three groups of respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy.  included both providers who reported having performed abortions during the survey period and those who did not.) After additional follow-up with other sources, we determined that 32 more providers had closed or performed no abortions during the survey period, and that 14 were providers for whom we had already obtained data. For 71 of the remaining 323 potential providers, we obtained estimates of the number of abortions performed in 1999 and 2000 from knowledgeable sources in their communities, and for an additional 183 facilities that we knew had provided abortions, we made our own estimates. For three-fifths of these 183 estimates, we projected the number of abortions using data from previous surveys; such projections were almost always based on past information from the facilities themselves (and not on previous estimates).

We did not attribute any abortions to the remaining 69 facilities, for which no data or estimates were available; therefore; we did not count them as providers in 1999 or 2000. However, we cannot be sure that no abortions were provided at these facilities, although we were unable to obtain any indication that they were. For 15 of these providers, data were available for 1996; these providers performed a total of 1,594 abortions in that year.

Of the abortions reported for 2000, 77% were reported by the providers, 10% came from health department data, 11% were estimated by knowledgeable sources and 2% were projections or other estimates. These figures were similar to 1996 results. Out of 2,442 potential providers, a total of 1,931 performed abortions at some time between January 1999 and June 2001. Of those that did not, 245 indicated that they were not abortion providers, 82 had stopped providing abortions before the survey period began or had begun providing after the survey period ended, 76 had closed completely and 39 were duplicates; as indicated above, we were unable to ascertain whether 69 provided any abortions in the study period.

Some providers were undoubtedly missed because we were unable to identify them; the number can be estimated by surveying a random sample of physicians or hospitals not on our list of possible providers. Results from past underreporting surveys of this kind suggest that the actual number of abortions in 2000 might have been 3-4% greater than the number we counted and that we may have missed as many as half of the providers of fewer than 30 abortions. (16) (We did not adjust the number of abortions or providers for this estimated undercount un·der·count  
tr.v. un·der·count·ed, un·der·count·ing, un·der·counts
To record fewer than the actual number of (persons in a census, for example).
.) The number of abortions missed could be greater if our list omitted facilities with large abortion caseloads, but such omissions are unlikely, since large providers usually advertise and are known by referral sources. It is unlikely that we missed providers who were offering only medical abortion, because mifepristone became available only in November 2000, and because distributor reports suggest that the bulk of mifepristone shipments have been to existing providers. (17)

The state, regional and national data reported here are based on the location at which abortions occurred. In some cases, data based on women's place of residence may be quite different. For example, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the most recent CDC data, 36% of abortions performed in Delaware Delaware, state, United States
Delaware (dĕl`əwâr, –wər), one of the Middle Atlantic states of the United States, the country's second smallest state (after Rhode Island).
 in 1998 and 64% of abortions performed in the District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States).  were obtained by nonresidents. * (18)

RESULTS

Abortion Incidence

The number of abortions in the United States declined 3% between 1996 and 2000, from 1.36 million to 1.31 million (Table 1). This was the lowest number of abortions since 1976. The abortion rate also declined through 2000, reaching 21.3 abortions per 1,000 women 15-44 in that year. This figure represents a 5% drop over the four-year interval and is the lowest rate since 1974. The abortion ratio declined to 24.5 abortions per 100 pregnancies ending in abortion or live birth in 2000; this also represents a 5% drop since 1996 and the lowest figure since 1974. Including estimated miscarriages, 21% of all pregnancies in 2000 ended in abortion (not shown). ([dagger])

The number of abortions and abortion rates vary widely by region and state of occurrence (Table 2). Six states that account for 40% of women aged 15-44--California, Florida, Illinois Illinois, river, United States
Illinois, river, 273 mi (439 km) long, formed by the confluence of the Des Plaines and Kankakee rivers, NE Ill., and flowing SW to the Mississippi at Grafton, Ill. It is an important commercial and recreational waterway.
, New Jersey, New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 and Texas--accounted for 55% of all abortions in 2000. Rates were highest in New Jersey and New York, and were relatively high (above 30 per 1,000 women 15-44) in California, Delaware, Florida and Nevada. The states with the fewest abortions--South Dakota, North Dakota North Dakota, state in the N central United States. It is bordered by Minnesota, across the Red River of the North (E), South Dakota (S), Montana (W), and the Canadian provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba (N).  and Wyoming--are largely rural states and have relatively small populations. The lowest rates were in Kentucky Kentucky, state, United States
Kentucky (kəntŭk`ē, kĭn–), one of the so-called border states of the S central United States. It is bordered by West Virginia and Virginia (E); Tennessee (S); the Mississippi R.
, South Dakota South Dakota (dəkō`tə), state in the N central United States. It is bordered by North Dakota (N), Minnesota and Iowa (E), Nebraska (S), and Wyoming and Montana (W).  and Wyoming; Idaho, Mississippi Mississippi, state, United States
Mississippi (mĭs'əsĭp`ē), one of the Deep South states of the United States. It is bordered by Alabama (E), the Gulf of Mexico (S), Arkansas and Louisiana, with most of the border formed by
, Missouri Missouri, state, United States
Missouri (mĭzr`ē, –ə), one of the midwestern states of the United States.
, Utah and West Virginia West Virginia, E central state of the United States. It is bordered by Pennsylvania and Maryland (N), Virginia (E and S), and Kentucky and, across the Ohio R., Ohio (W). Facts and Figures


Area, 24,181 sq mi (62,629 sq km). Pop.
 also had low rates (seven or fewer per 1,000 women 15-44). Among the 25 states with the largest populations of women 15-44, the lowest abortion rate was in Kentucky.

Between 1996 and 2000, the abortion rate declined in every region of the country, but changes varied by region and, even more so, by state. The abortion rate declined in 35 states and the District of Columbia; the greatest percentage decreases occurred in Kentucky and Wyoming. Percentage changes are most meaningful in states with the greatest number of abortions, since small absolute changes in states with few abortions can result in large percentage shifts. Among the states reporting at least 10,000 abortions in 1996, the largest declines occurred in Massachusetts Massachusetts (măsəch`sĭts), most populous of the New England states of the NE United States.  and Missouri. The abortion rate increased in 15 states. The largest percentage increase occurred in Delaware, and the largest increase among states with at least 10,000 abortions in 1996 occurred in Kansas (15%).

There was no clear state or regional pattern in time trends in abortion rates. Some states with rate increases between 1992 and 1996 had declines in the later period, and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. . The correlation between changes in state abortion rates in these two periods was low (r=-0.10).

Trends in Provider Numbers

A total of 1,819 providers performed at least one abortion in 2000-11% fewer than in 1996 (Table 3). In comparison, the number of providers declined by 14% from 1992 to 1996. The number of providers in 2000 was 37% lower than the all-time high of 2,908 in 1982 (not shown).

Between 1996 and 2000, the number of providers grew in nine states and fell in 38 and the District of Columbia; in the remaining three states, the number of providers did not change (Table 3). California and New York--the states with the largest numbers of providers--saw the largest absolute decreases between 1996 and 2000. The biggest absolute increases were in Connecticut Connecticut, state, United States
Connecticut (kənĕt`ĭkət), southernmost of the New England states of the NE United States. It is bordered by Massachusetts (N), Rhode Island (E), Long Island Sound (S), and New York (W).
, Hawaii and Pennsylvania Pennsylvania (pĕnsəlvā`nyə), one of the Middle Atlantic states of the United States. It is bordered by New Jersey, across the Delaware River (E), Delaware (SE), Maryland (S), West Virginia (SW), Ohio (W), and Lake Erie and New York . The increase in Pennsylvania may have resulted from the use of state health department data to identify hospitals that performed small numbers of abortions. In Connecticut, most of the increase was due to the identification of several physicians who performed a small number of abortions in 2000; some of these may have performed abortions in 1996, alt though we did not record them at that time. In Hawaii, most of the new providers were physicians as well.

Provider changes may be reflected in state abortion occurrence rates, especially if the number of abortions in a state is relatively small, but the impact may be exaggerated or muted mut·ed  
adj.
1.
a. Muffled; indistinct: a muted voice.

b. Mute or subdued; softened: muted colors.

2.
 by the size of the state (area and population), by the size of providers that discontinue dis·con·tin·ue  
v. dis·con·tin·ued, dis·con·tin·u·ing, dis·con·tin·ues

v.tr.
1. To stop doing or providing (something); end or abandon:
 or initiate services and by other factors. For example, a small net increase of two providers in Delaware is probably reflected in the parallel increase in the number of abortions that occurred in that state. However, it is hard to tell whether the latter change was a real increase or a shift in where Delaware residents had abortions because the change was small compared with changes in abortion levels in nearby areas. And while the number of providers decreased in both Kansas and Missouri from 1996 to 2000, a shift in service provision within the Kansas City Kansas City, two adjacent cities of the same name, one (1990 pop. 149,767), seat of Wyandotte co., NE Kansas (inc. 1859), the other (1990 pop. 435,146), Clay, Jackson, and Platte counties, NW Mo. (inc. 1850).  area from Missouri to Kansas contributed to a sizable siz·a·ble also size·a·ble  
adj.
Of considerable size; fairly large.



siza·ble·ness n.
 decrease in the abortion rate in Missouri and an increased rate in Kansas, although the same population was probably being served. The state-level correlation between the percentage change in the abortion rate between 1996 and 2000 and the percentage change in the number of providers during the same period was only -0.02 (not shown). In addition, the state-level percentage change in provider counts between 1996 and 2000 was not highly correlated cor·re·late  
v. cor·re·lat·ed, cor·re·lat·ing, cor·re·lates

v.tr.
1. To put or bring into causal, complementary, parallel, or reciprocal relation.

2.
 (r=-0.08) with the change between 1992 and 1996.

Geographic Distribution of Providers

Abortion providers were located in 404 of the 3,141 U.S. counties in 2000. Overall, 87% of counties had no provider of abortions (Table 3). More than 90% of counties in the Midwest and South had no abortion provider; outside of these regions, the only states with no provider in at least 90% of counties were Idaho, Montana, Utah and Wyoming.

Although the vast majority of counties had no provider, only 34% of women aged 15-44 in 2000 lived in counties with no abortion providers, because many of these have relatively small populations. However, nearly half of women in the Midwest (49%) and South (45%) lived in counties that lacked abortion services. In 19 states in these regions, at least half of women lived in counties without an abortion provider. However, in six states in the same regions--Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maryland Maryland (mâr`ələnd), one of the Middle Atlantic states of the United States. It is bounded by Delaware and the Atlantic Ocean (E), the District of Columbia (S), Virginia and West Virginia (S, W), and Pennsylvania (N). , Michigan Michigan (mĭsh`ĭgən), upper midwestern state of the United States. It consists of two peninsulas thrusting into the Great Lakes and has borders with Ohio and Indiana (S), Wisconsin (W), and the Canadian province of Ontario (N,E).  and Texas (and the District of Columbia)--fewer than one-third lived in counties with no provider. Fewer than one in five women in the Northeast and West lived in counties without an abortion provider; the proportion was less than one-third in 13 states in these regions and more than one-half in only three.

These measures may overestimate o·ver·es·ti·mate  
tr.v. o·ver·es·ti·mat·ed, o·ver·es·ti·mat·ing, o·ver·es·ti·mates
1. To estimate too highly.

2. To esteem too greatly.
 or underestimate the availability of services. On the one hand, many counties with no provider are adjacent to others where services may be available. On the other hand, facilities that perform few abortions may not be well known to the general public, so the existence of a small provider in a county does not guarantee the availability of services. Thus, additional useful indicators of service availability are the presence or absence of providers in an entire metropolitan area * and the proportion of counties without a provider large enough to be likely to advertise its services and accept self-referred patients. (19) (For the purposes of this analysis, we use 400 or more abortions provided per year as the criterion for this category of provider.)

Between 1990 and 1999, the number of counties defined as metropolitan grew as some cities and urbanized areas became large enough to qualify as metropolitan areas. ([dagger]) In Table 4, where we present analyses by metropolitan status, we show figures for 2000 using two definitions of metropolitan status. This allows us to give accurate figures for 2000 (based on the 1999 metropolitan classification), while also showing true trends since 1978 (based on the 1990 classification).

The proportion of counties with no abortion provider in 2000 (87%) changed little compared with that in 1996 (86%), but remained higher than the proportion in 1978 (77%). In addition, the proportion of counties with no provider of 400 or more abortions per year has changed little over time, indicating that the drop in counties with providers has been concentrated in those where providers perform fewer than 400 abortions per year.

Most abortion providers are located in metropolitan areas: 94% of all providers and 99% of those who performed 400 or more abortions in 2000 (not shown). Even so, 61% of counties in metropolitan areas had no abortion provider, and 70% had no large provider (Table 4). Of nonmetropolitan counties, 97% had no provider, and virtually all lacked a provider of at least 400 abortions per year.

Overall, the proportion of women living in a county without a provider increased from 27% in 1978 to 30% in 1985 and 34% in 2000. However, figures based on comparable metropolitan classifications indicate that the proportion of women with no provider in their county increased from 1978 to 1996 in both metropolitan and nonmetropolitan counties, but changed only slightly between 1996 and 2000. There was no change during the 1990s in the proportion of women in metropolitan areas living in counties with no large provider, although the levels were slightly greater than those in 1978 and 1985. Almost all women in nonmetropolitan counties have lived without a large abortion provider.

The 856 metropolitan counties make up 276 metropolitan areas (on the basis of the 1999 metropolitan classification). Eighty-six of these areas (31%) have no abortion provider, and an additional 12 reported fewer than 50 abortions in 2000 (not shown). If women in these areas sought abortions at the same rate as the overall U.S. population, as many as 250-2,640 women in each metropolitan area would seek abortion services. The two largest areas without a provider are within 100 miles of each other in eastern Pennsylvania (Scranton--Wilkes-Barre--Hazleton and Lancaster), and have 124,000 and 99,000 women aged 15-44, respectively. Three other areas have populations of 80,000 or more women 15-44: Provo-Orem, Utah; Lafayette, Louisiana Lafayette is a city on the Vermilion River in Lafayette Parish, in the U.S. state of Louisiana. [1] [2] Lafayette is the parish seat. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 110,257; a 2004 census estimate put the metro area's population at ; and Cantono-Massillon, Ohio. However, all regions of the country are represented on the list of metropolitan areas with no provider of 50 or more abortions. * Ten of these metropolitan areas are located in or include Texas, seven are in Pennsylvania and six each are in Alabama, Indiana and Ohio. In some cases, active community opposition has made it difficult to establish abortion facilities in unserved cities. For example, when a provider in Lancaster, Pennsylvania Lancaster, is a city in the South Central part of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and is the county seat of Lancaster County. With a population of 55,351,[1] it is the 8th largest city in Pennsylvania, behind Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Allentown, Erie, Reading, , made plans to offer abortions in September 1998, antiabortion advocates initiated legislation that led the local zoning board to reverse its initial stance and deny the clinic a permit for surgical procedures. (20)

Types of Providers

** Clinics. In 2000, clinics made up 46% of all abortion providers (Table 5); this proportion was up from 43% in 1996 (figures cited here and below for 1996 are not shown in the table). Most abortions in 2000 were performed at clinics (93%); this figure increased from 90% in 1996. (Physicians' offices where more than 400 abortions were provided have been categorized cat·e·go·rize  
tr.v. cat·e·go·rized, cat·e·go·riz·ing, cat·e·go·riz·es
To put into a category or categories; classify.



cat
 as clinics.)

Slightly more than half of clinics (25% of all providers) were specialized spe·cial·ize  
v. spe·cial·ized, spe·cial·iz·ing, spe·cial·iz·es

v.intr.
1. To pursue a special activity, occupation, or field of study.

2.
 abortion clinics An abortion clinic is a medical facility that performs or specializes in abortions. Such clinics may be public medical centers or private medical practices.

Planned Parenthood, whose clinics offer abortions as well as other reproductive care and counseling, is the largest
, defined as those where at least half of patient visits are for abortion services. Such clinics provided 71% of abortions in 2000, about the same proportion as in 1996 (70%). Caseloads are largest at abortion clinics: Three-fourths provided at least 1,000 abortions in 2000, while only 7% of other providers did so. The remaining clinics, in which the majority of patients receive services other than abortion, made up 21% of providers and performed 22% of all abortions in 2000.

** Hospitals. One-third of abortion providers in 2000 were hospitals, nearly the same proportion as in 1996. However, the proportion of abortions performed in hospitals decreased from 7% to 5% during the four years. More than half of hospitals performing abortions (18% of all providers) performed fewer than 30; 24% performed five or fewer abortions (not shown--these hospitals were most likely performing abortions only in cases of fetal fetal /fe·tal/ (fe´tal) of or pertaining to a fetus or the period of its development.

fe·tal
adj.
Of, relating to, or being a fetus.
 anomaly Abnormality or deviation. Pronounced "uh-nom-uh-lee," it is a favorite word among computer people when complex systems produce output that is inexplicable. See software conflict and anomaly detection.  or serious risk to the woman's life or health).

Four-fifths (82%) of hospitals that provided abortions were private; 69% were nonprofit A corporation or an association that conducts business for the benefit of the general public without shareholders and without a profit motive.

Nonprofits are also called not-for-profit corporations. Nonprofit corporations are created according to state law.
 and 13% were for-profit. The remaining hospital providers were under the jurisdiction of either a state (5%), a county (5%), a city (3%) or a hospital district, a public entity created by a state and covering a specific community (6%). Eighty-eight percent of hospital abortions were outpatient procedures, nearly the same proportion as in 1996 (91%) and 1992 (89%). In 2000, some 8,000 abortions involved hospitalization hospitalization /hos·pi·tal·iza·tion/ (hos?pi-t'l-i-za´shun)
1. the placing of a patient in a hospital for treatment.

2. the term of confinement in a hospital.
 (not shown).

** Physicians. One-fifth (21%) o f providers were physicians' offices (defined here as providers that appear from their name to be physicians' offices and reported performing fewer than 400 abortions in 2000), representing a decline from 23% in 1996. Forty-one percent of these practices (9% of all providers) performed fewer than 30 abortions in 2000. In total, these offices performed 27,500 abortions, and their share of abortions fell from 3% in 1996 to 2% in 2000.

Provider Caseloads and Types of Procedures

A majority (62%) of abortion providers performed fewer than 400 abortions in 2000. However, most abortions were obtained at large facilities where 1,000 or more abortions were performed (80%), nearly the same proportion as in 1996 (79%). Large providers were predominantly pre·dom·i·nant  
adj.
1. Having greatest ascendancy, importance, influence, authority, or force. See Synonyms at dominant.

2.
 abortion clinics; 65% of abortions in 2000 were performed in abortion clinics that had caseloads of 1,000 or more procedures per year. Between 1996 and 2000, the number of providers declined in each size category except the largest (5,000 or more); thus, abortions were increasingly concentrated among a small number of very large providers.

** Early medical abortion. Mifepristone received FDA approval in September 2000, and distribution of the drug to providers began in November 2000. (21) Thus, the first six months of 2001 represent the initial period in which the method was available to American women outside of clinical trials. During that period, one-third of all abortion providers in the 2000 provider universe performed at least one early medical abortion--that is, an abortion in the first trimester Noun 1. first trimester - time period extending from the first day of the last menstrual period through 12 weeks of gestation
trimester - a period of three months; especially one of the three three-month periods into which human pregnancy is divided
 using mifepristone or methotrexate (Table 6); medical abortions with mifepristone and methotrexate are always prescribed pre·scribe  
v. pre·scribed, pre·scrib·ing, pre·scribes

v.tr.
1. To set down as a rule or guide; enjoin. See Synonyms at dictate.

2. To order the use of (a medicine or other treatment).
 with misoprostol.

About half of abortion clinics (51%) and nonspecialized clinics (45%) provided early medical abortion, as did one in five (19%) hospital abortion providers. Large providers were the most likely to offer early medical abortion during this initial time period: At least 60% of those performing 1,000 or more abortions per year offered medical abortion, compared with at most 23% of providers performing fewer than 400 abortions. All of the providers offering early medical abortions during our survey period also performed surgical abortions.

Nonhospital facilities made up 81% of sites where early medical abortions were provided in the first half of 2001 (not shown). These sites provided an estimated 35,000 early medical abortions in that time period; 72% of these were performed with mifepristone, and the rest with methotrexate (Table 6). Roughly three-quarters of medical abortions were provided at abortion clinics.

Early medical abortions represented an estimated 6% of abortions performed in nonhospital facilities during the first half of 2001. Providers with annual caseloads of fewer than 30 abortions reported a higher proportion of medical abortions than those with larger caseloads (although larger providers reported a greater number of early medical abortions). We did not ask hospitals the number of medical abortions they provided, but if 6% of all abortions at hospitals were early medical abortions, an estimated 2,000 additional early medical abortions were performed, for a total of 37,000 early medical abortions in the first half of 2001.

Of providers performing medical abortions, 54% used only mifepristone, and 18% used only methotrexate (not shown). A smaller proportion of physician offices (54%) than of clinics (75-77%) performed medical abortions with mifepristone; larger providers were more likely than smaller ones to perform medical abortions with mifepristone.

Among nonhospital facilities that did not offer medical abortion in the first half of 2001, 30% reported that they "probably will" offer it in the future, 23% said "maybe" and 47% said they "probably won't" (not shown). Providers with larger caseloads were more likely than those with smaller caseloads to report that they would offer the method, as were providers in the Northeast and Midwest.

* Dilation and extraction abortions. Abortions performed by dilation and extraction * are quite rare: Eighteen providers reported 1,274 such abortions in 2000, and 16 providers reported 742 for the first half of 2001; an additional provider reported performing dilation and extraction abortions in both 2000 and 2001, but could not say how many. Assuming that the provision of dilation and extraction abortions by providers who responded to the question reflects the experience of nonrespondents of similar type and size, an estimated total of 31 providers performed the procedure 2,200 times in 2000, and 0.17% of all abortions performed in that year used this method. While these data confirm that the absolute number of abortions performed by dilation and extraction is very small, this figure should be interpreted cautiously, because projections based on such small numbers are subject to error. (22)

DISCUSSION

Between 1996 and 2000, the U.S. abortion rate fell 5%, a decline less than half as steep as that seen between 1992 and 1996 (12%). The number of abortion providers continued to decline between 1996 and 2000, at a rate slightly lower than that during 1992-1996. The 1996-2000 period saw the continuing consolidation of abortion provision at clinics, particularly specialized clinics; only 7% of abortions in 2000 were performed in nonclinic facilities. This trend may be partially due to increasing legal constraints CONSTRAINTS - A language for solving constraints using value inference.

["CONSTRAINTS: A Language for Expressing Almost-Hierarchical Descriptions", G.J. Sussman et al, Artif Intell 14(1):1-39 (Aug 1980)].
 on the circumstances CIRCUMSTANCES, evidence. The particulars which accompany a fact.
     2. The facts proved are either possible or impossible, ordinary and probable, or extraordinary and improbable, recent or ancient; they may have happened near us, or afar off; they are public or
 under which abortions may be performed, such as zoning rules and state licensing and inspection requirements. Specialized clinics may be better able to deal with new restrictions than physicians' offices and nonspecialized clinics, which may not be willing or able to undertake the expenses and time required to comply with them. This factor may be most relevant in South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures


Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15.
 and Mississippi, where new licensing laws have created burdensome requirements for small providers; at least one South Carolina provider has reportedly closed in response to the new regulations. (23)

Another factor that may have contributed to the decline in the number of providers since 1096 is harassment. Despite the reported decline in severe forms of harassment of abortion providers, (24) several high-profile incidents of violence have occurred since 1996. In addition to the murder of Buffalo abortion provider Barnett Slepian Barnett Slepian (October 21, 1946 – October 23, 1998) was an abortion provider and physician in Amherst, New York in the United States who was shot and killed in his home by anti-abortionist James Charles Kopp.  and the death of a police officer in a Birmingham, Alabama Birmingham (pronounced [ˈbɝmɪŋˌhæm]) is the largest city in the U.S. state of Alabama and is the county seat of Jefferson County. , clinic bombing in 1998, two doctors were shot and wounded in 1997. (25) These incidents may have increased providers' fear of physical threats and, thus, contributed to the drop in the number of providers.

The decrease in providers was concentrated among those with small caseloads. Because many hospitals and physicians who did not perform abortions in 2000 performed few abortions in 1996, this decline probably had little impact on abortion incidence nationally, although it may have had a significant impact on abortion accessibility for residents of some rural areas and small towns.

For most American women, access to abortion is directly tied to where they live. Only 3% of nonmetropolitan counties have a provider, and almost none of those providers performed more than 400 abortions in 2000. Of metropolitan counties, only 30% have a large abortion provider. Surprisingly, although the proportion of nonmetropolitan counties with a provider has declined, the proportion of women in nonmetropolitan counties with a provider appears to have increased slightly, probably because of population shifts toward counties with providers. In metropolitan areas, the proportion of women living in counties with providers has changed little.

The Northeast and West are characterized char·ac·ter·ize  
tr.v. character·ized, character·iz·ing, character·iz·es
1. To describe the qualities or peculiarities of: characterized the warden as ruthless.

2.
 by higher abortion rates and greater access to providers than are the Midwest and South, and also by more supportive laws regarding abortion. (26) In some states, abortion decreases may be due to regulatory requirements Regulatory requirements are part of the process of drug discovery and drug development. Regulatory requirements describe what is necessary for a new drug to be approved for marketing in any particular country.  placed on women seeking abortion. For example, in Wisconsin, the imposition The printing of pages on a single sheet of paper in a particular order so that they come out in the correct sequence when cut and folded.  of a two-day delay law may have contributed to the 21% decline in the abortion rate (although women there may increasingly have gone to Illinois, particularly Chicago, to obtain abortions). In other states, rates may decline because many women travel out of state to have abortions. (27) This may occur when the barriers to obtaining an abortion--such as gestational limits or other restrictions, or expense--are lower in neighboring neigh·bor  
n.
1. One who lives near or next to another.

2. A person, place, or thing adjacent to or located near another.

3. A fellow human.

4. Used as a form of familiar address.

v.
 states.

During the first six months of 2001, early medical abortion (largely mifepristone) accounted for a small but non-negligible proportion of all abortions. As of April 2002, 69% of National Abortion Federation members offered the method. (28) The growing acceptance of mifepristone raises the possibility that the decrease in surgical abortion providers may be offset by an increase in the number of providers that offer medical abortion, particularly in areas with no current providers. However, the reformation Reformation, religious revolution that took place in Western Europe in the 16th cent. It arose from objections to doctrines and practices in the medieval church (see Roman Catholic Church) and ultimately led to the freedom of dissent (see Protestantism).  available from this early phase of provision suggests that the availability of this new procedure has not reduced travel distances for abortions (29) or increased the overall abortion rate. In addition, our findings show that mifepristone is being used mostly by existing (surgical) abortion providers rather than by new providers.

In the past, the U.S. abortion rate has been distinctly higher than the rate in other industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 countries. Although the U.S. rate (21.3 per 1,000 women 15-44) is still higher than those in many western European countries, it is now within the range of rates in a few other developed countries, such as Sweden (18.7) and Australia (22.2). (30) Furthermore, U.S. rates vary by women's ethnicity ethnicity Vox populi Racial status–ie, African American, Asian, Caucasian, Hispanic  and socioeconomic so·ci·o·ec·o·nom·ic  
adj.
Of or involving both social and economic factors.


socioeconomic
Adjective

of or involving economic and social factors

Adj. 1.
 standing; the rate among white non-Hispanic women is in the middle range of other developed countries, but other ethnic groups have higher rates. Moreover, poor and near-poor women have rates roughly twice as high as their wealthier counterparts. (31)

This article has documented current levels of abortion and abortion service provision. More research needs to be done both to understand why abortion service provision is changing and the impact on women of the small number and geographic concentration of providers. In addition, further work is needed to determine the causes of declines in the abortion rate. Increasing use of emergency contraception Emergency Contraception Definition

Emergency contraception or emergency birth control uses either emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs) or a Copper-T intrauterine device (IUD) to help prevent pregnancy following unprotected vaginal intercourse.
 appears to have been a major contributor in recent years: An estimated 51,000 pregnancies were averted a·vert  
tr.v. a·vert·ed, a·vert·ing, a·verts
1. To turn away: avert one's eyes.

2.
 by emergency contraception in 2000, accounting for 43% of the decrease in abortions since 1994. (32) Contraceptive contraceptive /con·tra·cep·tive/ (-sep´tiv)
1. diminishing the likelihood of or preventing conception.

2. an agent that so acts.
 use trends through 1995--improvements in use (e.g., a shift to greater use of long-acting, highly effective methods) and reductions in the proportion of women using no method--may have continued. The abortion rate decline between 1994 and 2000 was greatest among teenagers. (33) Both a decline in sexual activity among adolescents and increased use of contraceptives at first intercourse INTERCOURSE. Communication; commerce; connexion by reciprocal dealings between persons or nations, as by interchange of commodities, treaties, contracts, or letters.  contribute to decreasing pregnancy and abortion rates among adolescents. (34)

It is also important to understand better the societal so·ci·e·tal  
adj.
Of or relating to the structure, organization, or functioning of society.



so·cie·tal·ly adv.

Adj.
 and personal factors that can have an impact on sexual and contraceptive behavior and the ways women deal with unintended pregnancies, as well as the factors that affect women's ability to obtain abortions when they seek them. The impacts of various influences may also change over time. For example, one previous study found no consistent relationship between economic conditions (as measured by income, employment and government benefits) and abortion rates at the state level. (35) However, new data indicate that trends in abortion rates were similar among lower- and higher-income women between 1987 and 1994, but have diverged since then. (36) This may indicate that increased economic pressures are discouraging dis·cour·age  
tr.v. dis·cour·aged, dis·cour·ag·ing, dis·cour·ag·es
1. To deprive of confidence, hope, or spirit.

2. To hamper by discouraging; deter.

3.
 greater numbers of lower-income women from having children, or that it is more difficult for them to avoid unintended pregnancy because of decreased access to contraceptive services.

With more than one in five U.S. pregnancies ending in abortion, it is clear that American women are becoming pregnant far more often than they desire. More than half of these pregnancies occur among women who had difficulty using contraceptive methods Noun 1. contraceptive method - birth control by the use of devices (diaphragm or intrauterine device or condom) or drugs or surgery
contraception

birth control, birth prevention, family planning - limiting the number of children born
 effectively or who experienced method failure, and nearly half occur among the minority of sexually active women who use no contraceptives, reflecting the high rate of pregnancy among this group. (37) The challenge of reducing U.S. abortion rates without increasing unintended births requires action on several fronts, but foremost among these are increasing (and increasing the effectiveness of) contraceptive use by sexually active women and their partners, improving access to contraceptive services for those who are disadvantaged This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims.

Please help Wikipedia by adding references. See the for details.
This article has been tagged since September 2007.
 and ensuring the availability of a broader range of more-effective and user-friendly contraceptive methods.
TABLE 1. Number of reported abortions, abortion rate and
abortion ratio, United States, 1973-2000

Year   No. (in 000s)   Rate *   Ratio ([dagger])

1973      744.6         16.3     19.3
1974      898.6         19.3     22.0
1975    1,034.2         21.7     24.9
1976    1,179.3         24.2     26.5
1977    1,316.7         26.4     28.6
1978    1,409.6         27.7     29.2
1979    1,497.7         28.8     29.6
1980    1,553.9         29.3     30.0
1981    1,577.3         29.3     30.1
1982    1,573.9         28.8     30.0
1983   (1,575)         (28.5)   (30.4)
1984    1,577.2         28.1     29.7
1985    1,588.6         28.0     29.7
1986   (1,574)         (27.4)   (29.4)
1987    1,559.1         26.9     28.8
1988    1,590.8         27.3     28.6
1989   (1,567)         (26.8)   (27.5)
1990   (1,609)         (27.4)   (28.0)
1991    1,556.5         26.3     27.4
1992    1,528.9         25.7     27.5
1993   (1,495)         (25.0)   (27.4)
1994   (1,423)         (23.7)   (26.6)
1995    1,359.4         22.5     25.9
1996    1,360.2         22.4     25.9
1997   (1,335)         (21.9)   (25.5)
1998   (1,319)         (21.5)   (25.1)
1999    1,314.8         21.4     24.6
2000    1,313.0         21.3     24.5

* Abortions per 1,000 women aged 15-44 as of July 1 of each year.
([dagger]) Abortions per 100 pregnancies ending in abortion or live
birth; for each year, the ratio is based on births occurring during
the 12-month period starting in July of that year (to match times of
conception for pregnancies ending in births with those for pregnancies
ending in abortions). Notes: Figures in parentheses are estimated by
interpolation of numbers of abortions. Number of abortions for
1993-1996, abortion rates for 1992-1996 and abortion ratios for
1994-1996 are revised from previously published figures on the basis of
a corrected 1996 abortion incidence figure and revised 1992-1996
populations. Sources: Number of abortions, 1973-1996; population
data, 1973-1990; and birth data, 1973-1991: reference 1. Number of
abortions, 1997-2000: 2001-2002 AGI Abortion Provider Survey and
interpolations. Population data, 1991-2000: US. Census Bureau,
Estimates for the population of the U.S., regions, divisions and
states, by five-year age-groups and sex: time series estimates, July
1,1990 to July 1, 1999 and April 1, 1990 census population counts,
2000, <http://eire.census.gov/popest/archives/state/st-99-08.txt> [for
1991-1999], accessed Jun. 28, 2002; and Campbell PR, Population
Projections for States by Age Sex, Race, and Hispanic Origin: 1995 to
2025, Washington, DC: U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1996 [for 1999 and
2000]; both adjusted to 2000 U.S. census figures. Birth data, 1992-2000:
National Center for Health Statistics, Advance report of final
natality statistics, Monthly Vital Statistics Report, 1994, Vol. 43,
No. 5, Suppl. [for 1992]; 1995, Vol. 44, No. 3, Suppl. [for 1993];
1996, Vol. 44, No. 11 [for 1994]; Report of final natality statistics
Monthly Vital Statistics Report, 1997, Vol. 45, No. 11, Suppl. [for
1995]; 1998, Vol. 46, No, 11, Suppl. [for 1996]; Births: final data,
National Vital Statistics Reports, 1999, Vol. 47, No. 18 [for 1997];
2000, Vol. 48, No. 3 [for 1998]; 2001, Vol. 49, No.1 [for 1999]; and
2002, Vol. 50, No. 5 [for 2000].

Table 2. Number of reported abortions and abortion rate, 1992, 1996
and 2000; and percentage change in rate, 1996-2000, by region and
state in which the abortions occurred

Region and            No.
state                 1992       1996       2000

U.S. total            1,528,930  1,360,160  1,312,990

Northeast               378,810    341,500    325,540
Connecticut              19,720     16,230     15,240
Maine                     4,200      2,700      2,650
Massachusetts            40,660     41,160     30,410
New Hampshire             3,890      3,470      3,010
New Jersey               55,320     63,100     65,780
New York                195,390    167,600    164,630
Pennsylvania             49,740     39,520     36,570
Rhode Island              6,990      5,420      5,600
Vermont                   2,900      2,300      1,660

Midwest                 262,150    238,710    221,230
Illinois                 68,420     69,390     63,690
Indiana                  15,840     14,850     12,490
Iowa                      6,970      5,780      5,970
Kansas                   12,570     10,630     12,270
Michigan                 55,580     48,780     46,470
Minnesota                16,180     14,660     14,610
Missouri                 13,510     10,810      7,920
Nebraska                  5,580      4,460      4,250
North Dakota              1,490     1,290       1,340
Ohio                     49,520     42,870     40,230
South Dakota              1,040      1,030        870
Wisconsin                15,450     14,160     11,130

South                   450,330    424,740    418,630
Alabama                  17,450     15,150     13,830
Arkansas                  7,130      6,200      5,540
Delaware                  5,730      4,090      5,440
District of Columbia     21,320     15,220      9,800
Florida                  84,680     94,050    103,050
Georgia                  39,680     37,320     32,140
Kentucky                 10,000      8,470      4,700
Louisiana                13,600     14,740     13,100
Maryland                 31,260     31,310     34,560
Mississippi               7,550      4,490      3,780
North Carolina           36,180     33,550     37,610
Oklahoma                  8,940      8,400      7,390
South Carolina           12,190      9,940      8,210
Tennessee                19,060     17,990     19,010
Texas                    97,400     91,270     89,160
Virginia                 35,020     29,940     28,780
West Virginia             3,140      2,610      2,540

West                    437,640    355,210    347,600
Alaska                    2,370      2,040      1,660
Arizona                  20,600     19,310     17,940
California              304,230    237,830    236,060
Colorado                 19,880     18,310     15,530
Hawaii                   12,190      6,930      5,630
Idaho                     1,710      1,600      1,950
Montana                   3,300      2,900      2,510
Nevada                   13,300     15,450     13,740
New Mexico                6,410      5,470      5,760
Oregon                   16,060     15,050     17,010
Utah                      3,940      3,700      3,510
Washington               33,190     26,340     26,200
Wyoming                     460        280        100

Region and            Rate *
state                 1992   1996   2000  % change
                                          1996-2000

U.S. total             25.7   22.4  21.3   -5

Northeast              31.8   29.1  28.0   -4
Connecticut            25.9   21.9  21.1   -4
Maine                  14.8    9.8   9.9    1
Massachusetts          28.1   28.8  21.4  -26
New Hampshire          14.6   12.9  11.2  -13
New Jersey             30.5   34.9  36.3    4
New York               45.7   39.7  39.1   -2
Pennsylvania           18.6   15.0  14.3   -5
Rhode Island           29.5   23.3  24.1    3
Vermont                21.5   17.3  12.7  -27

Midwest                18.8   16.9  15.9   -6
Illinois               25.2   25.3  23.2   -8
Indiana                12.0   11.1   9.4  -15
Iowa                   11.3    9.3   9.8    5
Kansas                 22.4   18.6  21.4   15
Michigan               25.1   22.1  21.6   -2
Minnesota              15.6   13.7  13.5   -2
Missouri               11.5    9.0   6.6  -27
Nebraska               15.6   12.2  11.6   -4
North Dakota           10.7    9.2   9.9    7
Ohio                   19.5   17.1  16.5   -3
South Dakota            6.9    6.5   5.5  -15
Wisconsin              13.5   12.2   9.6  -21

South                  21.8   19.8  19.0   -4
Alabama                18.1   15.5  14.3   -8
Arkansas               13.5   11.2   9.8  -12
Delaware               34.9   24.0  31.3   31
District of Columbia  134.6  104.5  68.1  -39
Florida                29.3   30.7  31.9    4
Georgia                23.7   20.8  16.9  -19
Kentucky               11.4    9.5   5.3  -44
Louisiana              13.5   14.5  13.0  -10
Maryland               26.2   26.2  29.0   11
Mississippi            12.4    7.1   6.0  -17
North Carolina         22.2   19.5  21.0    8
Oklahoma               12.5   11.6  10.1  -13
South Carolina         14.2   11.4   9.3  -18
Tennessee              16.2   14.6  15.2    4
Texas                  23.0   20.2  18.8   -7
Virginia               22.6   19.0  18.1   -5
West Virginia           7.8    6.6   6.8    3

West                   33.9   26.6  24.9   -6
Alaska                 16.6   14.2  11.7  -18
Arizona                23.4   19.2  16.5  -14
California             41.8   32.8  31.2   -5
Colorado               23.6   19.9  15.9  -20
Hawaii                 46.4   26.8  22.2  -17
Idaho                   7.3    6.1   7.0   15
Montana                18.5   15.4  13.5  -12
Nevada                 43.0   41.7  32.2  -23
New Mexico             17.7   14.1  14.7    4
Oregon                 23.9   21.2  23.5   11
Utah                    9.2    7.5   6.6  -11
Washington             27.7   20.9  20.2   -3
Wyoming                 4.4    2.6   1.0  -64

* Abortions per 1,000 women aged 15-44. Notes: Abortion rates for 1996
are revised from previously published figures on the basis of revised
population data. Figures for the District of Columbia in 1996 are
corrected from data originally published in 1998. Numbers of abortions
are rounded to the nearest 10. Sources: see Table 1.

Table 3. Number of providers, 1992, 1996 and 2000, and percentage
change between 1996 and 2000; and number of counties, percentage of
counties without an abortion provider and percentage of women aged
15-44 living in a county without a provider, 2000--all by region and
state

Region and state      No. of providers

                      1992   1996   2000   % change
                                           1996-2000

U.S. total            2,380  2,042  1,819  -11

Northeast               620    562    536   -5
Connecticut              43     40     50   25
Maine                    17     16     15   -6
Massachusetts            64     51     47   -8
New Hampshire            16     16     14  -13
New Jersey               88     94     86   -9
New York                289    266    234  -12
Pennsylvania             81     61     73   20
Rhode Island              6      5      6   20
Vermont                  16     13     11  -15

Midwest                 260    212    188  -11
Illinois                 47     38     37   -3
Indiana                  19     16     15   -6
Iowa                     11      8      8    0
Kansas                   15     10      7  -30
Michigan                 70     59     50  -15
Minnesota                14     13     11  -15
Missouri                 12     10      6  -40
Nebraska                  9      8      5  -38
North Dakota              1      1      2  100
Ohio                     45     37     35   -5
South Dakota              1      1      2  100
Wisconsin                16     11     10   -9

South                   620    505    442  -12
Alabama                  20     14     14    0
Arkansas                  8      6      7   17
Delaware                  8      7      9   29
District of Columbia     15     18     15  -17
Florida                 133    114    108   -5
Georgia                  55     41     26  -37
Kentucky                  9      8      3  -63
Louisiana                17     15     13  -13
Maryland                 51     47     42  -11
Mississippi               8      6      4  -33
North Carolina           86     59     55   -7
Oklahoma                 11     11      6  -45
South Carolina           18     14     10  -29
Tennessee                33     20     16  -20
Texas                    79     64     65    2
Virginia                 64     57     46  -19
West Virginia             5      4      3  -25

West                    880    763    653  -14
Alaska                   13      8      7  -13
Arizona                  28     24     21  -13
California              554    492    400  -19
Colorado                 59     47     40  -15
Hawaii                   52     44     51   16
Idaho                     9      7      7    0
Montana                  12     11      9  -18
Nevada                   17     14     13   -7
New Mexico               20     13     11  -15
Oregon                   40     35     34   -3
Utah                      6      7      4  -43
Washington               65     57     53   -7
Wyoming                   5      4      3  -25

Region and state      Counties, 2000

                      Total  Without a provider

                             % of      % of
                             counties  women *

U.S. total            3,141  87        34

Northeast               217  50        16
Connecticut               8  25         9
Maine                    16  63        45
Massachusetts            14  21         7
New Hampshire            10  50        26
New Jersey               21  l0         3
New York                 62  42         8
Pennsylvania             67  75        39
Rhode Island              5  80        39
Vermont                  14  43        23

Midwest               1,055  94        49
Illinois                102  90        30
Indiana                  92  93        62
Iowa                     99  95        64
Kansas                  105  96        54
Michigan                 83  83        31
Minnesota                87  95        58
Missouri                115  97        71
Nebraska                 93  97        46
North Dakota             53  98        77
Ohio                     88  91        50
South Dakota             66  98        78
Wisconsin                72  93        62

South                 1,425  91        45
Alabama                  67  93        59
Arkansas                 75  97        79
Delaware                  3  33        17
District of Columbia      1   0         0
Florida                  67  70        19
Georgia                 159  94        56
Kentucky                120  98        75
Louisiana                64  92        61
Maryland                 24  67        24
Mississippi              82  98        86
North Carolina          100  78        44
Oklahoma                 77  96        56
South Carolina           46  87        66
Tennessee                95  94        56
Texas                   254  93        32
Virginia                136  84        47
West Virginia            55  96        83

West                    444  78        15
Alaska                   27  85        39
Arizona                  15  80        18
California               58  41         4
Colorado                 63  78        26
Hawaii                    4   0         0
Idaho                    44  93        67
Montana                  56  91        43
Nevada                   17  82        10
New Mexico               33  88        48
Oregon                   36  78        26
Utah                     29  93        51
Washington               39  74        17
Wyoming                  23  91        88

* Population counts are for April 1, 2000. Note: Numbers of abortions
are rounded to the nearest 10. Sources: Providers, 1992 and 1996:
reference 1. Providers, 2000: 2001-2002 AGI Abortion Provider Survey.
Population data, 2000: U.S. Census Bureau, American fact finder,
summary file 2, detailed table PCT3, <http://factfinder.census.gov/
servlet/DTGeoSearchByListServlet?ds_name=DEC_2000_SF2_U&_lang=en&_ts=
55786803406>, accessed May 21, 2002.

TABLE 4. Percentage of counties with no abortion providers and with no
large providers, and percentage of women aged 15-44 living in those
counties, by metropolitan status, selected years

Provider and         1978  1985  1992  1996  2000
metropolitan status
                                             Based    Based
                                             on 1990  on 1999
                                             status   status

COUNTIES
No provider          77    82    84     86    87       87
Metropolitan         47    50    51     55    57       61
Nonmetropolitan      85    91    94     95    96       97

No large provider *  93    92    92     92    92       92
Metropolitan         69    65    68     66    67       70
Nonmetropolitan      99    99    99    >99   >99      >99

WOMEN
No provider in
 county              27    30    30     32    34       34
Metropolitan         12    15    16     18    19       21
Nonmetropolitan      69    79    85     87    86       91

No large provider
 in county *         43    43    41     41    41       41
Metropolitan         25    26    27     27    27       29
Nonmetropolitan      96    98    97     98    94       99

* Provider of at least 400 abortions per year. Note: The classification
of some counties as metropolitan areas changed between 1990 and 1999.
Figures for 1978-1996 use 1990 definition. Sources: 1978-1996:
reference 1. 2000: 2001-2002 AGI Abortion Provider Survey.

TABLE 5. Number and percentage distribution of all abortion providers
and all abortions, and number and percentage of providers and abortions
represented by each type of facility, by caseload

                               Abortion     Other
Caseload       All             clinics      clinics

               No.        %    No.      %   No.      %

Providers          1,819  100      447  25      386  21
1-29                 523   29        1  <1       33   2
30-399               599   33       19   1      112   6
400-999              264   15       91   5      154   8
1,000-4,999          405   22      313  17       82   5
[greater than
 or equal to]
 5,000                28    2       23   1        5  <1

Abortions      1,312,990  100  927,200  71  292,710  22
1-29               5,340   <1        0   0      470  <1
30-399            78,240    6    4,840  <1   19,440   1
400-999          177,450   14   65,150   5  100,920   8
1,000-4,999      858,340   65  701,900  53  133,570  10
[greater than
 or equal to]
 5,000           193,620   15  155,310  12   38,310   3

                           Physicians'
Caseload       Hospitals   offices *

               No.     %   No.     %

Providers         603  33     383  21
1-29              332  18     157   9
30-399            242  13     226  12
400-999            19   1      na  na
1,000-4,999        10   1      na  na
[greater than
 or equal to]
 5,000              0   0      na  na

Abortions      65,590   5  27,490   2
1-29            2,970  <1   1,900  <1
30-399         28,370   2  25,600   2
400-999        11,390   1      na  na
1,000-4,999    22,860   2      na  na
[greater than
 or equal to]
 5,000              0   0      na   na

* Physicians' offices reporting 400 or more abortions a year are
classified as clinics (either abortion clinics, if at least half
of patient visits are for abortion services, or other clinics).
Notes: na=not applicable. Abortion counts may not sum to totals
and percentages may not add to 100 because of rounding.

TABLE 6. Estimated number and percentage of providers
performing early medical abortion; and among nonhospital
abortions, number and percentage that were medical,
and percentage of medical abortions that used mifepristone--all
by selected characteristics of providers, January-June 2001

Characteristic       Providers Nonhospital abortions

                     No.  % *      No. that     % that    % of
                                   were         were      medical
                                   medical      medical   that used
                                   ([dagger])             mifepristone

Total                603   33      35,300        6        72

Provider type
Abortion clinics     229   51      25,900        6        75
Other clinics        174   45       8,600        6        77
Hospitals            112   19          u         u         u
Physicians' offices   88   23         800        6        54

Region
Northeast            201   38       9,800        6        81
Midwest               82   44       6,000        6        70
South                148   33      13,300        7        64
West                 173   26       6,200        4        73

2000 abortion caseload
1-29                  74   14         200       18        57 ([double
                                                            dagger])
30-399               138   23       1,300        5         u
400-999              128   48      6,200         7        75
1,000-4,999          245   60      22,900        6        78 ([double
                                                            dagger])
[greater than         19   68       4,600        5         u
 equal to] 5,000

* The denominator is the provider universe for the year 2000.

([dagger]) Rounded to the nearest 100.

([double dagger]) Caseload category 1-29 includes 30-399, and
category 1,000-4,999 includes

[greater than or equal to] 5,000, because cell sizes are too small
to break them out individually.

Note: u=unavailable.


Acknowledgements

The authors thank Kathleen Manzella and Jennifer Swedish for coordinating fieldwork field·work  
n.
1. A temporary military fortification erected in the field.

2. Work done or firsthand observations made in the field as opposed to that done or observed in a controlled environment.

3.
; Jacqueline Darroch, Rachel Jones Rachel Elizabeth Jones (born March 29, 1974 in Kidderminster, Worcestershire) is the current live producer of The Chris Moyles Show on BBC Radio 1 in the UK.

Having originally produced the old Saturday show, Jones joined the team in September 2003.
 and Susheela Singh for reviewing drafts of this article; and Karen D'Angelo, April Fehling, Loft Frohwirth, Sarah Kirshen and Ednesha Saulsbury for providing research assistance. The research on which this article is based was funded in part by the Robert Sterling Clark Robert Sterling Clark (June 25, 1877 - December 29, 1956) an American art collector, horse breeder, and philanthropist, heir to the Singer Sewing Machine fortune.

He owned several residences: New York City, Cooperstown, New York, "Sundridge Farm" in Upperville, Virginia, and
 Foundation and the Educational Foundation of America.

* In June of 2000, the Supreme Court rebuffed Nebraska's (and, by implication, other states') attempts to outlaw a broad range of abortion procedures that the state gathered under the rubric RUBRIC, civil law. The title or inscription of any law or statute, because the copyists formerly drew and painted the title of laws and statutes rubro colore, in red letters. Ayl. Pand. B. 1, t. 8; Diet. do Juris. h.t.  of "partial-birth abortion" (source: Stenberg v. Carhart Stenberg, Attorney General of Nebraska, et al. v. Carhart, 530 U.S. 914 (2000), is a case heard by the Supreme Court of the United States dealing with a Nebraska law which made performing "partial-birth abortion" illegal, without providing exceptions to preserve a mother's , 120 S. Ct. 2597, 2000). Despite this ruling, efforts to ban some procedures continue. H.R. 4965, the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act The Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act (Public Law 108-105, HR 760, S 3, 18 U.S. Code 1531)[1] (or "PBA Ban") is a United States law prohibiting a form of late-term abortion that the Act calls partial-birth abortion. The U.S.  of 2002, was introduced by Rep (programming) REP - A directive used in IBM object code card decks (and later PTF Tapes) to REPlace fragments of already assembled or compiled object code prior to link edit. . Steve Chabot Steven (Steve) Chabot (born January 22, 1953) is a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Ohio, representing that state's 1st congressional district, in the Cincinnati area. Early life and career
Chabot was born in Cincinnati.
 (R-OH R-OH Alcohol (chemistry) ) on June 20, 2002, and was passed by the House on July 24, 2002, by a vote of 274-151.

* The District of Columbia's abortion count and rates are not strictly comparable to those of states; they are more typical of urban areas.

* A metropolitan area is defined by the Office of Management and Budget The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), formerly the Bureau of the Budget, is an agency of the federal government that evaluates, formulates, and coordinates management procedures and program objectives within and among departments and agencies of the Executive Branch.  as "a core area containing a large population nucleus nucleus, in physics
nucleus, in physics, the extremely dense central core of an atom. The Nature of the Nucleus
Composition
 together with adjacent communities having a high degree of economic and social integration with that core" (source: National Institute of Standards and Technology National Institute of Standards and Technology, governmental agency within the U.S. Dept. of Commerce with the mission of "working with industry to develop and apply technology, measurements, and standards" in the national interest. , FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standards) A series of publications issed by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) that specifies information security guidelines for federal government departments and agencies.  8-6: metropolitan areas, <http//www.itl.ist.gov/fipspubs/fip8-6-0. htm>, accessed May 14, 2002). Metropolitan areas consist of one county or two or mom (1) (Messaging-Oriented Middleware) See messaging middleware.

(2) (Microsoft Operations Manager) Software that monitors and captures system and application events throughout the network.
 that are contiguous Adjacent or touching. Contrast with fragmentation. See contiguous file. .

* The full list of metropolitan areas with no provider of 50 or more abortions is available from the authors.

* The definition of dilation and extraction, as printed on the questionnaire, was as follows: deliberate dilation dilation /di·la·tion/ (di-la´shun)
1. the act of dilating or stretching.

2. dilatation.


di·la·tion
n.
1.
 of the cervix cervix /cer·vix/ (ser´viks) pl. cer´vices   [L.]
1. neck.

2. the front portion of the neck.

3. cervix uteri.
, usually over several days; instrumental conversion of the fetus fetus, term used to describe the unborn offspring in the uterus of vertebrate animals after the embryonic stage (see embryo). In humans, the fetal stage begins seven to eight weeks after fertilization of the egg, when the embryo assumes the basic shape of the newborn  to a footling breech Footling breech
A position of the fetus while in the uterus where the feet of the fetus are nearest the cervix and will be the first part of the fetus to exit the uterus, with the head of the fetus being the last part to exit the uterus.
; breech breech (brech) the buttocks.

breech
n.
The lower rear portion of the human trunk; the buttocks.



breech, britch

the buttocks of an animal; the backs of the thighs.
 extraction of the body excepting the head; and partial evacuation evacuation /evac·u·a·tion/ (e-vak?u-a´shun)
1. an emptying.

2. catharsis; emptying of the bowels.


e·vac·u·a·tion
n.
 of the intracranial intracranial /in·tra·cra·ni·al/ (-kra´ne-al) within the cranium.

in·tra·cra·ni·al
adj.
Within the cranium.
 contents of a living fetus to effect vaginal vag·i·nal
adj.
1. Of or relating to the vagina.

2. Relating to or resembling a sheath.



vaginal

pertaining to the vagina, the tunica vaginalis testis, or to any sheath.
 delivery of a dead but otherwise intact fetus (source: American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) is a professional association of medical doctors specializing in obstetrics and gynecology in the United States. It has a membership of over 49,000[1] and represents 90 percent of U.S.  (ACOG ACOG American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
ACOG American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists
), ACOG statement of policy: statement on intact dilatation dilatation /dil·a·ta·tion/ (dil?ah-ta´shun)
1. the condition, as of an orifice or tubular structure, of being dilated or stretched beyond normal dimensions.

2. the act of dilating or stretching.
 and extraction, Washington, DC: ACOG, Jan. 12,1997).

([dagger]) We asked hospitals a more limited set of questions because their administrative structures make it more difficult to obtain Information beyond abortion counts and gestation GESTATION, med. jur. The time during which a female, who has conceived, carries the embryo or foetus in her uterus. By the common consent of mankind, the term of gestation is considered to be ten lunar months, or forty weeks, equal to nine calendar months and a week.  limits.

([dagger]) For the purposes of this calculation, miscarriages are estimated as 10% of abortions plus 20% of births. These proportions attempt to account for pregnancies that end in miscarriage miscarriage: see abortion.
miscarriage
 or spontaneous abortion

Spontaneous expulsion of an embryo or fetus from the uterus before it can live outside the mother.
 after lasting long enough to be noted by the woman, typically 6-7 weeks after the last menstrual period last menstrual period Gynecology The most recent time that a ♀ notes menstruation, a datum recorded in a chart during a routine gynecologic visit. See Menstruation. . (Source: Leridon H, Human Fertility fertility: see infertility.
fertility

Ability of an individual or couple to reproduce through normal sexual activity. About 80% of healthy, fertile women are able to conceive within one year if they have intercourse regularly without contraception.
: The Basic Components, Chicago: University of Chicago Press The University of Chicago Press is the largest university press in the United States. It is operated by the University of Chicago and publishes a wide variety of academic titles, including The Chicago Manual of Style, dozens of academic journals, including , 1977, Table 4.20.)

([dagger]) Under the 1990 definition, 745 counties were in metropolitan areas; in 1999, the number rose to 856. Our previous analyses through 1996 used the 1990 metropolitan definition, but our current analyses use the 1999 definition. As a result, trends in measures broken down by metropolitan status may show change even if changes did not occur in individual counties.

([double dagger]) For the purpose of our survey, a provider is defined as a site where abortions are performed. Several physicians providing abortions at one location would count as one provider; a health agency with several clinics would be counted as multiple providers.

REFERENCES

(1.) Henshaw SK, Abortion incidence and services in the United States, 1995-1996, Family Planning Perspectives, 1998, 30(6):263-270 & 287.

(2.) Henshaw SK, Unintended pregnancy in the United States, Family Planning Perspectives, 1998, 30(1):24-29 & 46.

(3.) Henshaw SK, 1998, op. cit. (see reference 1).

(4.) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Trends in sexual risk behaviors among high school students--United States, 1991-2001, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) is a weekly epidemiological digest for the United States published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The 5 June 1981 issue of the MMWR published the cases of five men in what turned out to be the first report of AIDS. , 2002, 51(38):856-859.

(5.) Ibid.; and Darroch JE and Singh S, Why Is Teenage Pregnancy teenage pregnancy Adolescent pregnancy, teen pregnancy Social medicine Pregnancy by a ♀, age 13 to 19; TP is usually understood to occur in a ♀ who has not completed her core education–secondary school, has few or no marketable skills, is  Declining? The Roles of Abstinence abstinence: see fasting; temperance movements. , Sexual Activity and Contraceptive Use, Occasional Report, New York: The Alan Guttmacher Institute (AGI), 1999, No. 1.

(6.) Jones RK, Darroch JE and Henshaw SK, Patterns in the socioeconomic characteristics of women obtaining abortions in 2000-2001, Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health Within the framework of WHO's definition of health[1] as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, reproductive health, or sexual health/hygiene , 2002, 34(5):226-235.

(7.) Gold RB, State efforts to expand Medicaid-funded family planning show promise, The Guttmacher Report on Public Policy, 1999, 2(2):8-11.

(8.) Gold RB, Implications for family planning of post-welfare reform insurance trends, The Guttmacher Report on Public Policy, 1999, 2(6):6-9.

(9.) AGI, Fulfilling the Promise: Public Policy and U.S. Family Planning Clinics family planning clinic nclínica de planificación familiar

family planning clinic ncentre m de planning familial

, New York: AGI, 2000.

(10.) Henshaw SK, 1998, op. cit. (see reference 1).

(11.) Kaiser Family Foundation The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), or just Kaiser Family Foundation, is a U.S.-based non-profit, private operating foundation headquartered in Menlo Park, California. , Abortion, Issue Update, Menlo Park Menlo Park.

1 Residential city (1990 pop. 28,040), San Mateo co., W Calif.; inc. 1874. Electronic equipment and aerospace products are manufactured in the city. Menlo College and a Stanford Univ. research institute are there.

2 Uninc.
, CA: Kaiser Family Foundation, May 1999.

(12.) Almeling R et al., Abortion training in U.S. obstetrics and gynecology obstetrics and gynecology

Medical and surgical specialty concerned with the management of pregnancy and childbirth and with the health of the female reproductive system.
 residency A duration of stay required by state and local laws that entitles a person to the legal protection and benefits provided by applicable statutes.

States have required state residency for a variety of rights, including the right to vote, the right to run for public office, the
 programs, Family Planning Perspectives, 1998, 32(6):268-271 & 320.

(13.) Danco Laboratories Danco Laboratories is an LLC which was incorporated in the Cayman Islands in 1995. Danco has a license from the Population Council to distribute the drug mifepristone, under the brand name Mifeprex. Mifeprex is the only drug distributed by Danco. , More than 100,000 U.S. women have chosen Mifeprex for their non-surgical abortion, New York: Danco Laboratories, Sept. 24, 2002; and Gerhardt A and Tews L, Mifepristone 2002: availability and utilization patterns of mifepristone in National Abortion Federation clinics, paper presented at the annual meeting of the Association of Reproductive Health Professionals, Denver, Sept. 12, 2002.

(14.) Henshaw SK, 1998, op. cit. (see reference 1).

(15.) Henshaw SK and Finer LB, The accessibility of abortion services in the United States, 2001, Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, 2003, 35(1):16-24.

(16.) Henshaw SK and Van Vort J, Abortion services in the United States, 1991 and 1992, Family Planning Perspectives, 1994, 26(3):100-106 & 112; and Henshaw SK, 1998, op. cit. (see reference 1).

(17.) Danco Laboratories, 2002, op. cit. (see reference 13).

(18.) Herndon J et al., Abortion surveillance--United States, 1998, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 2002, 51(SS-3): 1-32.

(19.) Henshaw SK, 1998, op. cit. (see reference 1).

(20.) Antkowiak L, Abortion prevented, delayed and de-funded in three American communities, <http://www.nrlc.org/news/2000/nrl08/ laura.html>, accessed May 8, 2002.

(21.) California Abortion & Reproductive Rights Reproductive rights or procreative liberty is what supporters view as human rights in areas of sexual reproduction. Advocates of reproductive rights support the right to control one's reproductive functions, such as the rights to reproduce (such as opposition to forced  Action League, Information about mifepristone (formerly RU-486), 2002, <http://www. choice.org/researchcenter/mifepristone.html>, accessed July 15, 2002.

(22.) Henshaw SK, 1998, op. cit. (see reference 1).

(23.) Osby L, Economic factors close Greenville abortion clinic, July 18, 2002, <http://greenvilleonline.com/news/2002/07/18/ 2002071825981.htm>, accessed Nov. 7, 2002.

(24.) Henshaw SK and Finer LB, 2003, op. cit. (see reference 15).

(25.) National Abortion Federation (NAF NAF National Arbitration Forum
NAF National Academy Foundation
NAF National Abortion Federation
NaF sodium fluoride
NAF Naval Air Facility
NAF National Ataxia Foundation
NAF New America Foundation (think tank) 
), Violence statistics, <http://www.prochoice.org/Violence/Statistics/Statistics.asp?Sec=1997> [for 1997] and <http://www.prochoice.org/Violence/Statistics/ Statistics.asp?Sec=1998> [for 1998], accessed Jul. 7, 2002.

(26.) AGI, Mandatory Waiting Periods for Abortion, State Policies in Brief, New York: AGI, 2002; AGI, State Funding of Abortion Under Medicaid, State Policies in Brief, New York: AGI, 2002; and AGI, Parental Involvement in Minors' Abortions, State Policies in Brief, New York: AGI, 2002.

(27.) Herndon J et al., 2002, op. cit. (see reference 18).

(28.) NAF, Mifepristone in NAF member facilities: an update, Providing Early Options, 2002, 1(1):2.

(29.) Henshaw SK and Finer LB, 2003, op. cit. (see reference 15).

(30.) AGI, Sharing Responsibility: Women, Society and Abortion Worldwide, New York: AGI, 1999.

(31.) Jones RK, Darroch JE and Henshaw SK, 2002, op. cit. (see reference 6).

(32.) Jones RK, Darroch JE and Henshaw SK, Contraceptive use among U.S. women having abortions in 2000-2001, Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, 2002, 34(6):294-301.

(33.) Jones RK, Darroch JE and Henshaw SK, 2002, op. cit. (see reference 6).

(34.) Piccinino LJ and Mosher A mosher is a person who is crossed between goth/punk/skater they have long hair and listen to music like slipknot and metal music. Some people call them headbangers. At certain music shows they have something called a mosh pit, basically its a fight pit with loads of people bashing each other.  WD, Trends in contraceptive use in the United States: 1982-1995, Family Planning Perspectives, 1998, 30(1):4-10 & 46; Darroch JE and Singh S, 1999, op. cit. (see reference 5); and CDC, 2002, op. cit. (see reference 4).

(35.) Matthews S Matthews may refer to:

In places:
  • Matthews, Indiana
  • Matthews, Missouri
  • Matthews, North Carolina
People with the surname Matthews:
  • Matthews (surname)
See also
  • Mount Matthews
  • St.
 et al., The effects of economic conditions and access to reproductive health services on state abortion rates and birthrates, Family Planning Perspectives, 1997, 29(2):52-60.

(36.) Jones RK, Darroch JE and Henshaw SK, 2002, op. cit. (see reference 6).

(37.) Jones RK, Darroch JE and Henshaw SK, 2002, op. cit. (see reference 32).

Author contact: lfiner@guttmacher.org

Lawrence B. Finer is assistant director of research, and Stanley K. Henshaw is senior fellow, both with The Alan Guttmacher Institute, New York.
COPYRIGHT 2003 The Alan Guttmacher Institute
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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