menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

4 Years After “Dobbs,” How Do We Count the Dead?

6 0
24.06.2026

Forgot Your Password?

New to The Nation? Subscribe

Print subscriber? Activate your online access

.nation-small__b{fill:#fff;}

4 Years After Dobbs, How Do We Count the Dead?

4 Years After “Dobbs,” How Do We Count the Dead?

In the post-Roe world, we know that abortion bans don’t stop safe abortions, but they do kill people.

Abortion rights supporters rally to mark the first anniversary of the Supreme Court ruling in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case, which overtuned the right to abortion, on June 24, 2023.

Four years after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade with its ruling in Dobbs, there’s an image I can’t get out of my head. Porsha Ngumezi was living in Texas when she suffered a miscarriage in 2023. Texas punishes medical providers who violate the state’s abortion ban with up to 99 years in prison. After Ngumezi showed up to the hospital bleeding and miscarrying at 11 weeks pregnant, ProPublica reported, doctors delayed providing a simple procedure to remove fetal tissue, and so she bled to death.  

For months afterward, Porsha’s 3-year-old son would chase after women who looked like her on the street, shouting, “That’s Mommy!” That’s the detail I can’t forget. I can’t stop imagining that little boy chasing after strangers on the street.

Behind each death caused by an abortion ban is a loss of such immeasurable magnitude. So when we try to understand how many people have died from such bans since Dobbs, we can’t lose sight of the inestimable tragedy each death represents. Further complicating matter is that it’s very difficult for researchers to tell conclusively just how many deaths abortion bans have caused. One of the most comprehensive attempts, led by researchers from Johns Hopkins and UCLA, suggests that the number of such deaths by the end of 2023 might be 68. It’s a number that feels unfathomable, yet smaller than expected.

Also by Amy Littlefield

Inside the Conference Where Conservative Women Let Loose June 11, 2026

Inside the Conference Where Conservative Women Let Loose

How the Abortion Rights Activists Found Their Radical Imagination March 9, 2026

How the Abortion Rights Activists Found Their Radical Imagination

What the Pro-Choice Movement Can Learn From Those Who Overturned “Roe” February 10, 2026

What the Pro-Choice Movement Can Learn From Those Who Overturned “Roe”

When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, many in the reproductive-rights movement assumed that women would die in large numbers. Pregnancy was already more dangerous in the United States than in other developed countries. When more than a dozen states quickly banned abortion, it seemed likely many more people would be forced into pregnancy and some of them would die. Having covered pregnant women’s near-death experiences in Catholic hospitals prior to Dobbs, I also anticipated that more people would die in one particular circumstance: when they were miscarrying and doctors refused to end their pregnancy if the fetus still had a heartbeat. Research has revealed that, indeed, states that banned abortion saw an additional 22,180 births, an increase that was particularly high among those who have difficulty accessing abortion, including people of color and those on Medicaid. Additional reports show that at least a dozen women did die when lifesaving care was denied or delayed. But it’s been extremely hard to calculate just how many people have died because of Dobbs.

One reason for the ambiguity is the impact of the Covid pandemic, which killed a huge number of pregnant people—by some estimates, maternal deaths increased by nearly 60 percent between 2019 and 2021—making it hard to establish a baseline to which to compare post-Dobbs numbers. (It’s been especially hard because states that banned abortion also had some of the highest rates of Covid deaths.) In addition, even in a country with maternal mortality as unjustifiably high as ours, such deaths are still rare; in 2023, there were 662 maternal deaths and 1,979 deaths in the broader category of “pregnancy-associated” mortality. Such small sample sizes make it hard for researchers to reach solid conclusions, especially when they’re looking for changes in rural states with small populations. Nor does all the data researchers use to count these deaths appear to be accurate; Alabama, for example, reported fewer than 10 maternal deaths over a six-month period after it banned abortion, an inconceivably sharp departure from its previous track record, which was among the country’s worst. There’s also the........

© The Nation