19th June 2025

At least 210 pregnant individuals confronted felony prices for “conduct related” with being pregnant within the first 12 months after the U.S. Supreme Court docket overturned Roe v. Wade—the best quantity documented in a single 12 months, in line with a brand new report by Being pregnant Justice, a nonprofit devoted to defending pregnant individuals’s rights.

The report, launched on Tuesday, coated prosecutions initiated from June 24, 2022 to June 23, 2023, however researchers plan to doc all prices of being pregnant criminalization within the nation within the years because the choice in Dobbs v. Jackson Ladies’s Well being Group in June 2022. The report defines being pregnant criminalization as occurring “when the state wields a felony legislation to render acts related to a being pregnant, being pregnant loss, beginning, and/or related healthcare the topic of felony prosecution.” Being pregnant criminalization can embrace abortion criminalization, however is just not restricted to it. Nearly all of the pregnancy-related prices documented within the report, as an example, alleged substance use throughout being pregnant.

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Within the report, researchers referred to as being pregnant criminalization “nothing new.” Being pregnant Justice and different teams have recorded greater than 1,800 circumstances of pregnancy-related prices from 1973 to 2022, in line with the report. However researchers attribute the acceleration in being pregnant criminalization within the first 12 months after the Dobbs choice to the rise of “fetal personhood” legal guidelines, which grant authorized rights to an embryo or fetus. The report discovered that pregnancy-related prosecutions have been highest in Alabama, adopted by Oklahoma and South Carolina—states which have abortion bans or restrictions.

TIME mentioned the report’s findings and what they imply with Being pregnant Justice President Lourdes Rivera.

This interview has been condensed and edited for readability.

Are you able to discuss in regards to the sorts of pregnancy-related prices your workforce uncovered? Nearly all of the fees have been alleged substance use—why is that important?

That’s been an ongoing sample because the battle on medication within the 80s and 90s—that’s been the entry level to assist create this concept that there are moms who’re harming their infants. The way in which individuals get caught up is that they go to their docs to get entry to care. So simply think about: somebody has a substance use dysfunction, they grow to be pregnant, they go to the physician to get assist, and as an alternative  they get reported to the household policing system and to legislation enforcement.

Learn Extra: How Ronald Reagan Helped Abortion Take Over the Republican Agenda

Opioid disorder-related deaths have emerged as [a leading] contributor to maternal mortality, and you don’t tackle that by driving individuals away from well being care, which is what criminalization does. All the key medical associations and public-health associations oppose criminalizing pregnant individuals and criminalizing substance use throughout being pregnant as a result of it drives individuals away from well being care, which is precisely what they want.

What would you say is a very powerful takeaway from the report?

The overarching important discovering is the 210 circumstances that have been uncovered, which is the best variety of felony circumstances documented in any single 12 months. The opposite key discovering is that there have been 22 circumstances of individuals being criminalized for being pregnant loss, a broadly shared expertise. Submit-Dobbs, being pregnant loss is handled as a extremely suspicious occasion.

We have been anticipating to seek out, provided that it was post-Dobbs, that particular abortion criminalization legal guidelines can be used to prosecute individuals. And we really, apart from one, didn’t discover any circumstances up to now the place a selected abortion legislation was getting used to criminalize pregnant individuals. 

The report mentions that 4 circumstances included allegations regarding abortion, however that the people weren’t prosecuted on an abortion crime cost. Are you able to discuss in regards to the significance of that?

There’s been a whole lot of give attention to the direct assaults on abortion, and we’ve seen backlash to that from the American public. What’s been taking place is that pregnant girls are being surveilled and investigated and prosecuted—not underneath particular abortion legal guidelines, as a result of I believe that will be politically unpopular, however reasonably, they’re utilizing this mechanism and this structure that has been constructed over time that’s been extra underneath the radar.

What’s driving that is this actually excessive ideology [of fetal personhood] that was once on the perimeter of the anti-abortion motion, however has now occupied the middle and has been embedded in state felony and civil legislation—like, for instance, within the Alabama IVF choice, the place a frozen embryo is now thought-about a toddler for functions of wrongful demise.

This infrastructure and structure is obtainable for prosecutors and legislation enforcement to make use of and so they don’t should depend on a selected abortion felony legislation. 

We’ve to grasp that pregnant persons are being criminalized already. And should you’re solely in search of the abortion legislation, then you definately’re lacking a extremely essential piece of the large image.

The report discovered that almost all of people that have been dealing with pregnancy-related prices within the 12 months post-Dobbs have been white and low-income. Oftentimes specialists level out that threats to reproductive well being disproportionately impression individuals of colour.

Each issues proceed to be true. If we have a look at how fetal personhood received a foothold—the way it went from the fringey margins and have become extra like a central technique—it was within the 80s and 90s, after we have been within the midst of the battle on medication, the place Black and brown communities have been being focused. And this gave abortion opponents a possibility to create this entire fantasy of fetuses as separate victims of Black and brown girls’s conduct round the usage of substances.

In order that mechanism was constructed, and now because the drug disaster has shifted to opioids and methamphetamines—which can also be a disaster that’s disproportionately skilled by poor white communities and other people in rural areas—you then see the identical framework being utilized over there.

We’re nonetheless seeing Black, brown, and Indigenous girls being focused. The opposite caveat is that our information depends on the courtroom information, and courtroom information are notoriously under-counting Black and brown and multi-ethnic individuals.

In 121 of the 210 circumstances, the data that led to prices was obtained or disclosed in a medical setting. Does that increase considerations for you that individuals might concern disclosing medical info to their docs or in search of medical care in any respect?

Completely, it is a enormous concern, and that it’s actually counterproductive. Anybody who goes to the physician believes that in the event that they share info with their physician, it’s going to be to the good thing about their very own well being care. However should you’re a pregnant individual, it’s like you don’t have any confidentiality in your medical info. You get handled very in another way due to your being pregnant standing in well being care settings, so it is a evident hole in affected person privateness safety legal guidelines.

Generally this reporting occurs due to bias inside these well being care settings, and generally it’s as a result of [of] hospital coverage, and generally it’s due to state legislation. All of that’s simply actually misdirected and opposite to the positions of main medical associations and public well being associations.

What can the federal government do to deal with the problems that the report uncovered?

A couple of issues. It is dependent upon the administration, however the Division of Justice and the Workplace [for] Civil Rights within the Division of Well being and Human Providers can examine whether or not or not that is race and/or intercourse discrimination.

We additionally simply should strengthen HIPAA legal guidelines to guard affected person confidentiality in these circumstances. And we additionally want to induce states to undertake legal guidelines that require patient-informed consent earlier than they are often drug examined in any respect, or to have their newborns drug examined. They shouldn’t be punished in the event that they refuse to present that consent. There’s a lot overtesting that occurs with none precise medical want, and there are false positives—I imply, all types of issues occur, proper? And that simply begins this entire cascade of state involvement in your life that would lead to a household dropping their kids or having the pregnant individual or the postpartum individual be criminalized.

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