Abortion Rates Keep Rising After Dobbs
Strict abortion bans do not seem to be seriously stopping abortions.

Three years ago this week, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade and conservative states rushed to pass strict new abortion bans or revive old ones still on the books but unenforceable under Roe. And for a short while, things went according to anti-abortion campaigners' wishes, with the U.S. abortion rate—which had been declining since the 1990s anyway—continuing to fall.
But over the past couple of years, the U.S. abortion rate has begun to creep back up, according to data from the Society of Family Planning. There were more abortions in the U.S. in 2024 than in either 2023 or 2022, according to the group's latest #WeCount report.
Strict abortion bans may be working to bolster conservative politicians (may being the operative word; a lot of pro-lifers are put off by the extremism baked into some of these policies). They do not, however, seem to be working at actually stopping abortions.
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1.14 Million Abortions in 2024
The latest #WeCount data, released Monday, show that the monthly number of abortions in the U.S. went from 83,930 in April 2022 to 102,040 in January 2024.
In total, there were 1.14 million abortions performed in the U.S. last year, according to the #WeCount report. Throughout 2024, the monthly abortion number mostly remained between 90,000 and 100,000, with only one month (January) seeing more abortions than that and only one month (September) seeing fewer.
The monthly average number of abortions in 2024 was 95,200, up from a monthly average of 88,000 in 2023 and a monthly average of 79,600 for April 2022 (when the #WeCount report started) through December 2022.
Comparing the #WeCount data to abortion data from years before 2022 is a bit difficult, since other estimates—like those from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)—were calculated differently. CDC data encompassing 46 states and the District of Columbia show 625,978 abortions performed in 2021 and 597,355 in 2020. The Guttmacher Institute also has measured abortion rates, finding 930,160 abortions in D.C. and all 50 states in 2020 and 916,460 abortions in 2019. The CDC's much lower numbers rely on reports from centralized state health bodies, notes the Pew Research Center, while the Guttmacher Institute attempted to tally data from all known abortion providers.
Like the Guttmacher Institute, the #WeCount researchers have counted abortions based on information given by doctors, clinics, and other abortion providers. Self-reported data from clinics, medical offices, hospitals, and virtual providers accounts for 83 percent of the abortions in the study, while the remaining data have been imputed. (See the Methods section here for more on how this was done.)
The Role of Remote Prescribing
"The #WeCount findings make clear that abortion bans haven't stopped people from seeking care," said Alison Norris, #WeCount co-chair and a professor at Ohio State University.
One reason this is possible is the abortion pill and the remote prescribing of it.
In April through June of 2022, just 5 percent of abortions involved remote appointments and prescriptions. From there, we saw a slight bump—between 7 and 8 percent—through the second quarter of June 2023. In subsequent quarters, abortions rose to 16 percent, then 19 percent, then above 20 percent.
In the last three months of 2024, a quarter of abortions involved remote appointments and prescriptions.
More doctors and services devoted to remotely prescribing abortion pills may help explain the overall increase in abortions, even though in-person procedures have declined somewhat.
Surely some women could not or would not visit a clinic for an abortion even where it was legal, due to things like work schedules, child care responsibilities, transportation difficulties, or fear of a partner or family member finding out. The increased availability of telehealth abortion may have made it possible for women in situations like these to obtain an abortion after all.
In any event, telehealth abortions make up the vast majority of abortions in states where abortion is generally banned.
"In states with 6-week bans, on average 28% of abortions were provided via telehealth each month," compared to 15 to 16 percent in states where abortion was more broadly permitted. And "in states where abortion was totally banned, there was a monthly average of only 30 abortions provided in-person, under so-called exceptions, and over 99% of abortions were provided by telehealth."
Nearly half of telehealth abortions in 2024 were provided under shield laws, which help protect abortion providers following laws in the states in which they're located from legal liability in states with bans.
Freedom and Vulnerability
The #WeCount data drive home how hard eradicating abortion will be as long as the abortion pill remains broadly legal and some states allow remote prescription. The report also demonstrates why these things remain such a target for anti-abortion activists and politicians.
No one can say for sure why abortion rates have risen since states started tightening abortion restrictions. But it is clear that state bans on abortion aren't actually curbing the total number of abortions sought or performed. And the rising percentage of abortion patients utilizing remote appointments and prescriptions suggests telemedicine has played a major role in people being able to circumvent state abortion bans.
On one level, the #WeCount data tell a positive story. It's a tale of technology and capitalism enabling individuals to get around government restrictions on bodily autonomy. Of federalism working. Of reproductive freedom winning.
But it's hard to read this report without thinking about the vulnerabilities here.
States with abortion bans have already been trying to restrict the ability of people in them to access out-of-state abortion providers and receive abortion pills through the mail. We've also seen efforts to target federal approval of abortion pills or prescribing rules around them. The state efforts have largely failed, so far, since states can't control the actions of doctors and clinics in other states where abortion is legal or change the fact that the abortion pill is still permitted by the federal government to be prescribed and mailed. And an attempt to change federal rules through the courts was also unsuccessful.
There are other ways to attack abortion pills, however, like getting the Food and Drug Administration to revisit its rules or reviving enforcement of the Comstock Act. And these ways wouldn't just restrict access for people in conservative states, but for people everywhere across the country.
If the #WeCount report suggests that advocates for abortion access are currently winning, it also makes all the more clear that ways that anti-abortion counterparts can strike back.
More Sex & Tech News
• A French rule requiring European Union-based porn websites to verify user ages was suspended by the Administrative Court of Paris last week. "The crux of the issue facing the French government is the procedure it's used to try to bypass the EU's country-of-origin principle," Euractiv reports. "This principle, rooted in the EU's free movement of goods - and established by the 2002 E-Commerce Directive - means a country cannot regulate a company that's based in another EU state unless a formal objection process involving the country and the Commission is followed."
• Katherine Dee takes issue with the way some people are talking about a New York Times piece on how generative AI chatbots are exacerbating mental illness issues. "Positioning artificial intelligence as the primary culprit in these stories… is well, kind of lazy?" Dee writes.
My friend, the writer, artist, and cultural theorist Ruby Justice Thelot, brought up something important, something that almost every voice in the AI reporting ecosystem seems determined to miss: this always happens with new communication technology.
And with similar severity, too!
Twenty-five years ago, media scholar Jeffrey Sconce traced this history in his book Haunted Media, showing how we have consistently linked new communication technologies with the paranormal and esoteric. It's not a random coincidence or sign that we're in a "uniquely enchanted" age but rather a predictable cultural response, one we've been replaying over and over for hundreds of years.
Read the whole thing here.
• NBC has a surprisingly balanced article about the new anti-porn crusaders (same as the old anti-porn crusaders!) and what's at stake.
• Mike Masnick suggests that stories about Bluesky's supposed failure "fundamentally misunderstand what people want from social media and who gets to decide what constitutes healthy discourse."
• Swedish sex workers speak out against a new law that targets customers of online sexual performances and content. "The [Swedish] law doesn't just affect me as a creator - it takes away the freedom to do what we want with our own lives," Swedish porn creator Amanda Breden said. "People may not realise that this is just the beginning." (More on Sweden's new law here.)
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It would be helpful to know how the distribution of gestational ages has changed over time.
If all these abortions are now at 10 weeks or earlier, at the expense of later term abortions, a lot of voters would see that as a win.
It never occurs to the baby killers that one of the babies aborted was the one who could have led their movement to victory.
Maxine Waters knows: I have to March because my mother could not have an abortion.
Maxine Waters is a good argument for abortion.
Every illegal immigrant will cure cancer, every aborted baby was a criminal.
10 weeks is not always enough time to know. If you have an irregular cycle, missing 2 in a row may not cause an alarm or may just start to make you wonder. Also, a new mom might not show a bump yet because her ab wall isn't stretched yet. Or if overweight, you might combo many failed signals. 10 weeks is not always enough.
On the other side, I think yall are way overestimating late term abortions that aren't medically necessary. Very small percentages go full or near full term and then decide to abort for little to no reason.
We cannot deport illegals because they can end up being super helpful.
HOWEVER, killing babies, that is OK.
I feel for your child, ENB. The child deserves so much better.
Has she started them on puberty blockers yet?
So, in essence, if a woman has a bunch of unprotected sex and misses a few cycles it's really too much trouble to spend ten bucks on an OTC test to determine if maybe all that unprotected sex is the reason for two missed cycles in a row.
I mean, that does check out for at least 1.14 million people a year it seems.
Those can be wrong and most women have no access to healthcare!!!1!1!!
Well, since the overwhelming share of 'healthcare' in these United States is used by women specifically it would appear that no amount of 'healthcare' is enough for chicas.
It's right up there with 'women don't make enough money' despite being the lions share of college graduates. Hilarious.
If you have an irregular cycle , you likely have it for life. Why do you want someone to pay thousands of dollars to have a test every 10 or so weeks over the entire fertility period of life until menopause-ish just because some political busybody can't keep their nose out of other people's business ?.
And why are you projecting promiscuity on somebody else ? It could have been a one-time occurrence, it could have been a married couple that isn't ready for kids yet, it could have been a sex crime, or it could have been a plethora of other scenarios that aren't anybody else's business.
Why would a woman pay thousands of dollars for pregnancy tests if they aren't having sex with a lot of people without protection? Are most women under the impression that immaculate conception is the norm?
Last I checked, a promiscuous person has more sex and more sex means more chances for a contraceptive to fail. If a person is promiscuous and doesn't use birth control at all one might assume that nature would take it's course. Are women just especially ignorant of how conception works? I suppose if we believe you the answer must be 'yes'.
it could have been a plethora of other scenarios that aren't anybody else's business.
It only becomes the publics business when a woman wants to legally kill the baby. This is at least in part because unless the reason the baby dies is 'abortion' there are a host of punishments for negligence right up to murder for ending the babies life before being born.
Observe that someone prosecuted for murdering a pregnant woman is often charged with two counts of murder even if the mother was on her way to get an abortion. Curious, that.
You know perfectly stable, married couples also sometimes agree on an abortion, right ? It's not just naked witches running around in the forest under a full moon.
Since the interpersonal status of the mother and father have absolutely no bearing on anything I've said, I'll file this under 'non-sequiturs' and assume you simply can't answer any of the questions I've put forward honestly or cogently.
I've known swingers that were married, and know what? They used birth control during their sex parties. I know, I know. That's insane when they could just have several abortions instead. After all, why not use abortion as birth control?
The dollar store actually has some pretty accurate ones. And plan B is less than $50.
ENB is cheering on Gen Z being sluts soaking up creampies and taking no precautions or responsibility. None of this is good and it's seriously grotesque to see anyone cheer on abortions.
late term abortions that aren't medically necessary
The point of laws is to make sure that late term abortions are theologically necessary. Or maybe judicially necessary. Or electorally necessary. Just three of the plethora of reasons why doctors/patients should not really be the main decision makers how.
"The [Swedish] law doesn't just affect me as a creator - it takes away the freedom to do what we want with our own lives,"
She can still get naked and wiggle around her bedroom, she just can't get paid for it.
If a stripper gets naked, and there is no one to see it, is she still a stripper?
More dead babies! Yay!
“Imputed data” accounts for all of the increase, huh?
No agendas here
Say I ordered Mifepristone from my doctor. How do you know I took it ? How do you know I didn't chicken out ? Or change my mind ?
What if I'm a klutz and I dropped the pill down the sink ? Now I have to order a replacement ... are they going to count that as 1 or 2 abortions ?
What if I obtained it as a man, and slipped it into my ex-girlfriends drink so I won't be saddled with child support payments for at least 18 years.
Or is that murder? I can't keep track.
Murder whether you do it sneakily or she does it intentionally. I'm fine with the law making some distinction between killing in utero vs. after birth, but both are the killing of a human.
That's the joke, so to speak.
The idea put forward by these elder clumps of cells is that abortion isn't murder if the mother doesn't want the child, but is murder if she does.
Thus the personhood of the fetus is entirely contingent on the mothers opinion at the exact time the question was asked, and her opinion at the precise moment the question was asked has no bearing on any future time she is asked the same question. This changing of her mind can even occur after the abortion has been performed, but only against non-abortion providers. I.E. if I help her get an abortion by getting the drugs for her, and she changes her mind after the fact, I can still be arrested for murder based on literally nothing more than her statements.
Yes, this is absurd but it's what these people really believe if you manage to drill through their many layers of bullshit and rationalization. This is what you end up with when your entire thinking process is emotive.
That's a terrible thing to hinge legality on considering how neurotic most women are.
It's a terrible thing to hinge legality on for anything, really, regardless of the involvement of a fickle woman.
In total, there were 1.14 million abortions performed in the U.S. last year, according to the #WeCount report.
Yikes. I wonder if they have a breakdown by race and economic status.
By the end of 2024, 1 in 4 abortions was provided via telehealth.
Also yikes.
I went looking to see if they tracked abortions by race or income, and surprise they did not.
And lots of pill abortions are listed as miscarriages - - - - - -
They have come full circle from abortions need to be regulated for the health of the mother and at-home abortions are dangerous, to straight up encouraging at-home abortion without any oversight or guardrails.
It would be funny if it wasn't for the 1.14 million deaths last year. I guess Stalin was right, it's just a statistic.
Almost like getting rid of Roe wasn't the end all be all. Like getting rid of the super precedent forced the states to govern on the issue. And now Congress may no longer need to be a place where the abortion litmus tests takes place.
But emanations and penumbras!
>Abortion Rates Keep Rising After Dobbs
Then I guess your fears that young women would no longer be able to fuck tons of men without worry or contraception were completely unfounded.
Why are you so worried about other people's sex lives ?
Why are you so keen on making sure that abortion has zero restrictions when it's a legal ending of another humans life? In what other circumstances do you believe that execution without a trial is appropriate, and the only innocent party in the situation is the one being executed?
And no, I don't give a flying fuck if you're the biggest slut on the planet. I only start to care when your right to ruin your own life runs up against someone else's right to live at all. It's called a conflict of natural rights, which requires legislation to balance the interests of both involved parties. That you created one of those parties through your own negligence or happenstance is beside the point.
That is a PURELY religious position. Abortion laws are a violation of the First Amendment, imposing a state religion on other people.
I don't even know where to start with your comment here, but I would perhaps ask you in what other circumstances murder of an innocent party in a two-person dispute is appropriate in secular humanism. I must have missed that portion in my comparative philosophy courses back in the day.
The 5th Commandment says not to kill, does that mean laws against murder are imposing religion on other people?
Parody, right? It’s hard to tell around here sometimes.
SO this is good for you I gather. More abortions, that is good, right. you are happy
just bear in mind the secret male-induced mifepristone abortions I see weekly in the news. a real horrific loss for women.
Abortion maxxing is the most important thing ever.
What strict abortion bans? A few states?
Women in america have easier access to abortion than any other group on the planet.
A point of pride for democrats.
Abortion is a natural, human and civil right.
If all violent criminals, career criminals, 2nd and 3rd generation welfare recipients, and children of single left wing females were aborted, America would be an even greater nation.
Don't understand why many in the GOP still want to ban single poor women from having an abortion, as doing so simply creates far more welfare recipients and unwanted children.
Because their invisible friend (through hearsay) told them abortion was murder, even though it is clearly described otherwise in the Old Testament (which most have never read).
So you're telling me if I walk up to a pregnant woman and punch them in the stomach, thus causing their fetus to die, the worst I can expect is an assault charge?
Cool story. Wrong, but fanciful.
Of course, in nature before modern science took over a woman who attempted an abortion had little chance of surviving it.
Hence I'm a bit hesitant to claim there's a 'natural' right to abortion.
You may infer such a right as originating from one's natural right to bodily autonomy, but notably the pro-abortion crowd seem to believe in that right only in very narrow circumstances and they ignore the babies right to life in doing so. Ask a pro-abortion supporter if they think people should be forced to be vaccinated, or be thrown in jail for doing drugs, or a host of other infractions that don't involve any murder at all and that much becomes clear.
Hence why legislation is required. The rights of the mother must be balanced against the rights of the unborn child. Circumstances like this are exactly the purpose of law, like it or not.
Laws can make abortions illegal but they can not stop abortions. What laws really do is penalize poor people who don't have resources to circumvent the laws. Also as we have seen the law penalize pregnant woman by interfering with their care when a problem arises during pregnancy. If you are wealth or middleclass and want to end a pregnancy the laws will not stop you.
Ah yes. The democrat bullshit lime about how we can’t have the rule of law because it might hypothetically be harder on a particular group, or individual in some extreme situation.
We’re better off with the rule of law than rule of democrats.
That as meant as a response to Mod.
Let me remind you that this is a libertarian site. Laws on abortion are a great example of unnecessary laws that have little effect other than the unintended consequences these laws create. This is just the thing that libertarian preach against.
you are too stupid to develop a theory of mind of our opponents. It's a well known problem with libshits
a lot of pro-lifers are put off by the extremism baked into some of these policies
My wife and I live in New Mexico and have always been pro-life. New Mexico has commercialized abortion and now considers it an industrial development project, investing millions of tax dollars to make sure the maximum number of abortions possible are performed here, so you'd think this unabashed promotion of abortion up to the moment of delivery would further galvanize our views.
Well, enter Texas's radical anti-abortion laws. Folks, these people are bat-shit crazy. If you give a ride to New Mexico to a woman who gets an abortion here, you can be found civilly liable for $10,000, and anyone who wants to sue you for this automatically has standing. I guess those freedom-loving Republicans in Texas have their limits too. Turns out that Democrats aren't the only ones who want to micromanage the social fabric to reflect their precise values, with no concern to anyone else.
I still believe abortion is morally wrong, but so are a lot of things that are legal. Personal freedom still matters.