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Does the Indiana Constitution protect the right to abortion? That’s the fundamental question being asked in state court as health care providers seek to halt the state’s near-total abortion ban.
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The patchwork nature of abortion laws across the country has made the procedure harder for pregnant people to get — and for health care providers to give.
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With Indiana’s abortion ban now in effect, local organizers say the focus of their efforts has shifted.
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Indiana’s near-total abortion ban won’t be halted by a temporary restraining order.
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Democratic state legislative candidates say the only way to repeal Indiana’s near-total abortion ban is by electing Democrats to the Statehouse.
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In many ways, pregnant people, hospitals, and OB-GYNs will immediately experience the effects of Indiana's new abortion restrictions. The timeline for economic repercussions is less clear after the law goes into effect Sept. 15.
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The state’s near-total abortion ban took effect at midnight Thursday. It outlaws most of the thousands of abortions that typically occur in the state each year.
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Whole Woman's Health — South Bend's only abortion clinic — will stay open to provide abortion related care such as pregnancy tests, ultrasounds, contraception, counseling and follow-up care despite Indiana's near-total abortion ban.
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Indiana lawmakers passed a near-total abortion ban on Aug. 5, which Gov. Eric Holcomb signed into law quickly after. The ACLU and several abortion care providers are challenging the new law in court, but unless it is halted, the ban will take effect Sept. 15.
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Indiana’s abortion law is set to go into effect Thursday Sept. 15. While it bans abortion in almost all cases, it does not include explicit language discussing contraceptives or the morning-after pill, Plan B.