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Sterilization rates among women rose after supreme court abortion ruling

Written by | 18 Sep 2024 | Legislative and Regulatory

Surgical sterilization rates among women increased in the United States after a 2022 Supreme Court ruling (Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health) overturned the constitutional right to abortion, found researchers at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. The study was published Sept. 11 in JAMA.

Surgical sterilization—tying, cutting, or removing the fallopian tubes—is a highly effective but essentially irreversible method of preventing pregnancy.

Before the Supreme Court decision, the rate of surgical sterilization in the United States had declined from a peak in the mid-1970s as effective reversible contraceptive methods became more accessible.

The study looked at the use of surgical sterilization before and after the Dobbs decision among roughly 4.8 million women in 36 states and Washington, D.C.

In the first month after the ruling, sterilization rates in all states included in the study increased from stable rates in the prior year and a half.

In the six months after the ruling, surgical sterilizations continued to rise by 3% per month in states where abortion was banned after Dobbs. A similar but not statistically significant trend was seen in states that limited access to abortion after Dobbs; no further increase was seen in states that protected abortion access.

“Our study suggests that the Dobbs ruling and subsequent state laws banning or limiting access to abortion may affect a woman’s choice of contraception,” says Xiao Xu, a health outcomes researcher who led the study. “The findings also warrant attention because tubal sterilization is an irreversible method of contraception.”

More information 

The study, “Tubal Sterilization Rates by State Abortion Laws after the Dobbs Decision,” was published Sept. 11 in JAMA.

All authors: Xiao Xu (Columbia), Ling Chen (Columbia), Vrunda B. Desai (Yale), Cary P. Gross (Yale), Craig Evan Pollack (Johns Hopkins), Peter E. Schwartz (Yale), and Jason D. Wright (Columbia).

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