Estimated Travel Time and Spatial Access to Abortion Facilities in the US Before and After the Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Decision

Author:

Rader Benjamin12,Upadhyay Ushma D.3,Sehgal Neil K. R.14,Reis Ben Y.56,Brownstein John S.16,Hswen Yulin78

Affiliation:

1. Computational Epidemiology Lab, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

2. Department of Epidemiology, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts

3. Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco

4. Institute for Applied Computational Science, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts

5. Predictive Medicine Group, Boston Children’s Hospital Computational Health Informatics Program, Boston, Massachusetts

6. Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

7. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco

8. Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute, University of California, San Francisco

Abstract

ImportanceAbortion facility closures resulted in a substantial decrease in access to abortion care in the US.ObjectivesTo investigate the changes in travel time to the nearest abortion facility after the Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organization (referred to hereafter as Dobbs) US Supreme Court decision.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsRepeated cross-sectional spatial analysis of travel time from each census tract in the contiguous US (n = 82 993) to the nearest abortion facility (n = 1134) listed in the Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health database. Census tract boundaries and demographics were defined by the 2020 American Community Survey. The spatial analysis compared access during the pre-Dobbs period (January-December 2021) with the post-Dobbs period (September 2022) for the estimated 63 718 431 females aged 15 to 44 years (reproductive age for this analysis) in the US (excluding Alaska and Hawaii).ExposuresThe Dobbs ruling and subsequent state laws restricting abortion procedures. The pre-Dobbs period measured abortion access to all facilities providing abortions in 2021. Post-Dobbs abortion access was measured by simulating the closure of all facilities in the 15 states with existing total or 6-week abortion bans in effect as of September 30, 2022.Main Outcomes and MeasuresMedian and mean changes in surface travel time (eg, car, public transportation) to an abortion facility in the post-Dobbs period compared with the pre-Dobbs period and the total percentage of females of reproductive age living more than 60 minutes from abortion facilities during the pre- and post-Dobbs periods.ResultsOf 1134 abortion facilities in the US (at least 1 in every state; 8 in Alaska and Hawaii excluded), 749 were considered active during the pre-Dobbs period and 671 were considered active during a simulated post-Dobbs period. Median (IQR) and mean (SD) travel times to pre-Dobbs abortion facilities were estimated to be 10.9 (4.3-32.4) and 27.8 (42.0) minutes. Travel time to abortion facilities in the post-Dobbs period significantly increased (paired sample t test P <.001) to an estimated median (IQR) of 17.0 (4.9-124.5) minutes and a mean (SD) of and 100.4 (161.5) minutes. In the post-Dobbs period, an estimated 33.3% (sensitivity interval, 32.3%-34.8%) of females of reproductive age lived in a census tract more than 60 minutes from an abortion facility compared with 14.6.% (sensitivity interval, 13.0%-16.9%) of females of reproductive age in the pre-Dobbs period.Conclusions and RelevanceIn this repeated cross-sectional spatial analysis, estimated travel time to abortion facilities in the US was significantly greater in the post-Dobbs period after accounting for the closure of abortion facilities in states with total or 6-week abortion bans compared with the pre-Dobbs period, during which all facilities providing abortions in 2021 were considered active.

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

Subject

General Medicine

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