Monthly Abortion Provision Study
US Abortion Data Dashboard
Detailed estimates of clinician-provided abortions in
interval
interval
About the study
The Monthly Abortion Provision Study estimates the number of clinician-provided abortions that take place each month in each US state without a total ban. It collects data on procedural and medication abortions provided at brick-and-mortar health facilities (such as clinics or doctor’s offices), as well as medication abortions provided via telehealth and virtual providers in the United States. Abortions are counted as having been provided in the state in which a patient had a procedure or where pills were dispensed.
In addition to median estimates for each month, we provide a range (uncertainty interval) that describes the precision of the estimates: A bigger range means that the estimate is more uncertain for a specific state and month, while a smaller range indicates that the estimate is more precise.
Outflow: Where patients from travel out of state to get abortions
Change in proportion of abortions that are obtained by patients traveling from out of state...
Policy Analysis
September 2024|Policy analysis
Florida’s Six-Week Ban Led to Substantial Drop in Clinician-Provided Abortions
March 2024|Policy analysis
Despite Bans, Number of Abortions in the United States Increased in 2023
March 2024|Policy analysis
Medication Abortion Accounted for 63% of All US Abortions in 2023—An Increase from 53% in 2020
December 2023|Policy analysis
The High Toll of US Abortion Bans: Nearly One in Five Patients Now Traveling Out of State for Abortion Care
October 2023|Policy analysis
In the First Month After North Carolina’s Latest Abortion Restrictions, Facility-Based Abortions Dropped by 31%
September 2023|Policy analysis
New State Abortion Data Indicate Widespread Travel for Care
What we’re tracking
The Monthly Abortion Provision Study estimates the number of clinician-provided abortions provided in each US state without a total ban for each month since January 2023. It collects data on procedural and medication abortions provided at brick-and-mortar health facilities (such as clinics or doctor’s offices), as well as medication abortions provided via telehealth and virtual providers in the United States. Abortions are counted as having been provided in the state in which a patient had a procedure or where pills were dispensed.
In addition to median estimates for each month, we provide a range (uncertainty interval) that describes the precision of the estimates: A bigger range means that the estimate is more uncertain for a specific state and month, while a smaller range indicates that the estimate is more precise.
To understand shifts in abortion provision over time, the study compares estimates from 2023 to 2020 data from our most recent Abortion Provider Census, which gathers comprehensive data on US national and state-level abortion incidence and care.
How we collect the data
The Monthly Abortion Provision Study leverages an innovative methodology—monthly collection of data from samples of abortion providers— to produce timely estimates of clinician-provided abortions in states without total abortion bans. The primary aim of the study’s design is to meet the need for up-to-date data on the impact of rapidly changing state abortion policies, while minimizing the burden we place on providers. Estimates are generated by a statistical model that combines data collected from monthly samples of providers with historical data on the caseload of every provider in the United States; as more data is collected each month, estimates for past months become more precise.
Acknowledgments
Key staff
The Guttmacher Institute is profoundly grateful to the staff at abortion-providing facilities who supplied data to this study—for their participation in this work, as well as for the care they provide to patients every day. The Institute is also grateful to the fielding team (Mariah Menanno, Lauren Mitchell, Aisiri Murulidhar, Cici Osias and Samira Sackietey), who work tirelessly to collect and check the data on which this study relies.
The Monthly Abortion Provision Study is supported by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health, under award numbers R61HD112921 and R33HD112921. The content is the sole responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.