Strengthening the Provision of Abortion and Sexual and Reproductive Health Care Post-Dobbs: An Initiative of the Philadelphia Department of Public Health.

Journal: NEJM Catalyst Innovations In Care Delivery
Published:
Abstract

The U.S. Supreme Court decision on Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health has had a disruptive impact on not only the patients who seek reproductive health care, abortion care providers, and abortion care-adjacent organizations, but has also sparked a need for public health departments to take on new roles to support their communities. In the wake of that 2022 decision, the Philadelphia Department of Public Health launched an ongoing initiative to increase support for the provision of abortion and sexual and reproductive health care. The authors describe the effort, which started with a landscape analysis and qualitative interview analysis to understand the needs and concerns of those comprising the abortion care delivery system in Philadelphia. The authors found that the immediate, short-term needs to support the local abortion care delivery network included funding for patients seeking abortion care, plus communication and education to counter misinformation about the legality of abortion in Pennsylvania. Through the initiative's research efforts, the authors also found that long-term needs included care capacity-building and health systems-strengthening by removing non-evidence-based restrictions on abortion access and care. Another ongoing role for public health systems is to address and avert legislative or regulatory efforts to impose restrictions to Medicaid coverage for abortion services or other impediments that would disrupt the ability or capacity of health care providers to deliver comprehensive reproductive care. Today, public health departments are uniquely suited to address and mitigate the emerging post-Dobbs chilling effect on both patients and clinicians who may fear legal, professional, or personal consequences as they navigate options for appropriate, evidence-based reproductive health care, even in states where abortion remains legal.

Authors
Alice Abernathy, Nadia Haerizadeh Yazdi, Shaiza Sinha, Courtney Schreiber, Aasta Mehta