Greater than 150,000 folks traveled out of state for an abortion final yr, with Texans alone making up roughly a fifth of that quantity, in response to a current report.
That may be a slight drop from the greater than 170,000 individuals who traveled out of state for the process in 2023, in response to the report from the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive well being and rights group.
Greater than 28,000 Texans crossed state strains in 2024 to obtain abortion care, with many touring to states as far-off as New York, Washington, Maryland and Michigan. These Lone Star State residents traveled to a complete of 14 states to obtain the care final yr, with most visiting close by states like New Mexico, Colorado and Kansas, in response to the report.
Abortion has been nearly fully banned in Texas since 2021. Now, the process is simply permitted to avoid wasting the lifetime of a pregnant affected person, with violators topic to life in jail, lack of licensure, or fines of as much as $100,000.
The regulation is complicated and obscure, well being care employees say, inflicting some to forgo offering life-saving abortions.
The report doesn’t present particulars on the logistical, monetary or social obstacles the folks confronted whereas touring to obtain abortions.
“In addition to travel costs, driving or flying across state lines often requires taking time off work, navigating complex logistics and arranging childcare, not to mention paying for the abortion itself,” wrote Isaac Maddow-Zimet, Guttmacher Institute information scientist and lead writer of the examine.
The examine was launched on the third anniversary of the Supreme Court docket’s Dobbs v. Jackson Girls’s Well being Group resolution, which overturned Roe v. Wade and federal protections for abortion entry.
Since then, no less than 12 states have nearly fully banned abortion, and one other 10 have severely restricted entry to it, in response to an evaluation from the well being care coverage nonprofit KFF.