Decrease isn’t linear month to month

WND News ServicesBy WND News Services

(Unsplash)

(Unsplash)

(DAILY FETCHED) – According to a new report from the Society of Family Planning, since the Dobbs decision, “compared to the average monthly number of abortions observed in the pre-Dobbs period, there were 32,260 cumulative fewer abortions from July to December [2022].”

Although the decrease isn’t linear month to month, there were fewer abortions every month following the historic ruling.

The report claims the national abortion rate fell from 13.2 per 1,000 women to 12.3 per 1,000 women following the decision.

However, the most dramatic and noble drops occurred in states which already had abortion bans in place, seeing a “total of 43,410 fewer people who had abortions.”

Most abortions are banned in the following states:

Idaho

South Dakota

Wisconsin

Missouri

Kentucky

West Virginia

Tennessee

Arkansas

Oklahoma

Louisiana

Mississippi

Alabama, and Texas.

Abortion is prohibited after about six months of pregnancy in Georgia, while in Arizona and Florida, abortion is not permitted after 15 weeks.

The gestational limit on abortions in Utah is 18 weeks and 20 weeks in North Carolina.

According to Time Magazine, in those 13 states, there was a 96% drop in abortions bwteen July to December compared to those executed in April and May.

Georgia saw the number of abortions drop by 40%.

However, the largest declines were in the following states:

Texas (15,540 fewer abortions

Georgia (10,930) fewer abortions)

Tennessee (6,560 fewer abortions)

Ohio (4,920 fewer abortions)

Arizona (4,650 fewer abortions)

Louisiana (4,250 fewer abortions)

However, there was a spike in killings in states where abortion was permitted, which was observed in the six months after the Dobbs decision:

Florida (7,190)

Illinois (6,840)

North Carolina (4,730)

Colorado (2,580) and Michigan (2,490)

Research associate with the Charlotte Lozier Institute, Tessa Longbons, told the Daily Caller that the figures prove that pro-life laws are “saving lives.”

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