Roe Vs Wade Essay

929 Words4 Pages

Over 22,800 women die every year from unsafe abortions. Shockingly, the US Constitution doesn’t explicitly protect reproductive rights. Up until June of 2022, the US Supreme Court ruled in Roe v. Wade, which prohibited the state from controlling a person’s right to terminate a pregnancy during the first trimester, served to protect access to abortion across the United States. On June 24, 2022, Roe v. Wade was overturned and returned the legal authority to legislate abortion to state lawmakers. Although abortion is viewed as inhumane to pro-life believers, upwards of 700 women die from birth related complications each year in America alone. Abortion should be made legal in all states of the United States as a woman should have a right to her …show more content…

Even before Roe v. Wade was overruled, systemic racism, persistent white supremacy, and coercive reproductive health regulations restricted access to abortion in many communities. Before 2022, one's ability to obtain an abortion relied on their race, where they lived, their salary, and whether they had access to health insurance. 1 in 3 American women are now denied access to abortion after Roe v. Wade was overturned. An article summarizing the history and debate on abortion points out, “Without access to accurate information, people have resorted to dangerous methods to prevent pregnancy or induce an abortion” (Reproductive Rights). This displays that criminalizing abortion won’t refrain people from attempting to have one. These alternative abortion methods can be extremely detrimental to a woman’s health and possibly fatal. Outlawing abortion completely failed to eliminate it; instead, the bans turned a safe health care practice into one with great legal risks. Women across the United States are getting their reproductive rights revoked by lawmakers. According to Planned Parenthood, “In 1972, the year before Roe v. Wade, the rate of maternal mortality in the United States was 34 deaths for every 100,000 births. In 1973, after Roe v. Wade was passed, the rate declined by 50%” (Roe v. Wade Overturned). Not only are abortions part of a woman’s basic reproductive rights, access …show more content…

An article of the history of pro-life movements explains, “Many view abortion as inhumane and a violation to the unborn baby’s right to life” (Holland). While abortion is the process of terminating a pregnancy, therefore ending an unborn child’s life, a majority of women who have abortions don’t have the resources or capacity to care for another human being. Some pregnancies are a result of rape, incest, or compromises the mother’s health. One might argue that adoption is always an option; however, the American adoption system held 114,000 unadopted children in