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Proponents of Hyde state that it is supported by 57% of the American public and opposed by 36%, as of 2016. [19] Critics say the Hyde Amendment disproportionately affects low-income women, women of color, younger women, and immigrants, as an estimated 42% of abortion recipients live below the poverty line. [20]
A November 13–15 CNN–Opinion Research Corporation poll found that 60% of the respondents oppose public funding of abortion. When asked whether private and employer-sponsored insurance plans should cover any costs of abortion or whether women should have to pay the entire cost themselves, a 51–45% majority said women should have to pay the ...
Abortion funds rarely provide funding for the entire procedure. [1] Some funds will combine resources with other funds to increase the grant or loan total. [1] Most abortion funds serve a particular region or metropolitan area. [1] Some abortion funds are related to a specific clinic, with funds available only for patients of that clinic.
Attorney and construction executive Adam Benna is challenging incumbent state Rep. Demi Busatta Cabrera, R-Coral Gables, to represent a swath of central and south Miami-Dade County in the Florida ...
At least 21 states use public funds to support anti-abortion clinics, which have grown into a billion-dollar industry
According to The Pro-Choice Public Education Project, the US provides more funding towards abstinence-only sex education programs rather than comprehensive sex education programs. From 1996 through 2007, the US Congress committed over $1.5 billion to abstinence-only programs. When funding is not provided towards comprehensive sex education ...
A critical fight over funding, abortion and Medicaid is now headed for the Supreme Court. Supreme Court Wades Into South Carolina Fight Over Abortion, Funding to Planned Parenthood Skip to main ...
In some states, these numbers can be tremendously different, for example in Missouri, a state very hostile to abortion rights, the abortion rate by state of occurrence dropped from 4 in 1000 women aged 15–44 for 2017 to 0.1 for 2020, because 57% of abortion recipients went out of state in 2017, while 99% did so in 2020. [319]