Indiana Planned Parenthood clinics stop offering abortions despite pause in ban

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Planned Parenthood announced Tuesday that its Indiana clinics have stopped providing abortions, even though the state’s near-total ban on the procedure still remains on hold.

Rebecca Gibron, CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawaii, Alaska, Indiana, Kentucky, said during a news conference that the not-for-profit’s 11 health centers in Indiana will remain open.

Clinic staff will continue to provide “a long list of essential health care services,” including emergency contraception, birth control, sexually transmitted infection testing and treatment, pregnancy consultation, cancer screenings, and wellness visits. Gibron also said the clinics will help patients access abortions in other states and provide gender-affirming hormone care for people over 18.

“Today is a dark day for millions of Hoosiers and others who rely on Indiana Planned Parenthood for abortion care. … Until today, Indiana was the region’s pivotal state for preserving abortion access for people in the region. Our appointments were booked out for months. But now, extremists are taking away abortion care in Indiana,” Gibron said.

“But I’m here to tell Hoosiers—Planned Parenthood will always be here for you when you need us,” she continued. “We are not going anywhere,” Parenthood of Indiana will not be intimidated and bullied and we will not be silenced.”

Planned Parenthood is licensed to offer abortion services at four Indiana clinics located in Indianapolis, Bloomington, Lafayette and Merrillville.

Planned Parenthood abortions end, although the procedure remains legal

Despite hesitancy among health care providers—and confusion over whether Indiana’s near-total abortion ban would go back into effect Tuesday—the law will not be enforceable until the state Supreme Court certifies its June ruling.

Indiana Supreme Court justices tossed out a wide-ranging preliminary injunction in late June when they largely upheld the state’s abortion ban on constitutional liberty grounds.

But until the high court certifies its decision, an injunction remains in place—blocking the new law from taking effect.

The Indiana Supreme Court said Tuesday that briefs will be filed and the court will review. There is no timeline for any decisions from the court. For now, that leaves in place the state’s previous abortion law, which allows abortions up to 20 weeks.

Even so, abortion care providers on Tuesday emphasized the chilling effect of the impending ban.

“There is no greater honor than helping someone regain control of their life. That is exactly what we do when we provide abortion care,” said Dr. Katie McHugh, an obstetrician-gynecologist and abortion provider in Indianapolis. “Today in Indiana, hundreds of thousands of people will be refused the care that they need and deserve. We will tell them that they have to leave the state … and they will have to travel hundreds of miles to reclaim ownership of their own bodies and futures. Or perhaps they will be so confused by the legal landscape, they will give up and not even try.”

McHugh added that, historically, when abortion care is not available or accessible, “people become desperate.”

She said “that is exactly what we have seen already in Indiana over the last year,” since the passage of Senate Enrolled Act 1.

“We have seen patients attempt to end pregnancies through dangerous means when they felt there were no other options,” McHugh said. “We’ve seen assault survivors struggle to meet the deadlines imposed by the state to terminate a pregnancy. We’ve helped so many for whom this is not the right time to expand their family. And these are just the stories of the people who find us. Imagine all the people who never make their way to care.”

After the Republican-dominated Indiana General Assembly advanced the abortion-restricting measure during a heated, two-week special session in August 2022, fewer Hoosiers sought abortions in-state from Planned Parenthood even as the number of out-of-state clients surged. The organization said 25% of its non-Hoosier clients are from Kentucky, which has a near-total ban in place.

The Planned Parenthood location that has performed the most abortions in Indiana in recent years—Indianapolis’ Georgetown clinic—has not offered abortion procedures for seven months. All other services have continued.

An uncertain timeline

In their latest court filing Monday in a legal challenge against the abortion ban, Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana requested a rehearing, pushing back the date of certification even farther.

In doing so, they asked the Indiana Supreme Court to allow the earlier preliminary injunction to remain in effect while the trial court resolves the matter.

It’s not clear how long that judicial process could take to play out, however.

For now, Gibron said Planned Parenthood’s “patient navigator team” will help guide patients through the process of getting abortion care out of state—which she said is aided by “abortion funds”—and providing follow-up care once patients return to Indiana.

“Planned Parenthood of Indiana will not back down. We will be courageous in the courts and courageous in the clinics. Planned Parenthood will not be silenced. We will turn up the volume, making sure everyone has access to medically accurate information about how to get abortion care in other states,” she said.

“Our patients are our North Star. The people we provide care for are the people that we keep in our heads with every decision that we make,” Gibron continued. “Every person in every circumstance deserves access to health care when and where they need it.”

There are two other abortion clinics licensed in the state that are not affiliated with Planned Parenthood. Both are in Indianapolis. ICC is seeking an update on services for these clinics.

The Indiana Capital Chronicle is an independent, not-for-profit news organization that covers state government, policy and elections.

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6 thoughts on “Indiana Planned Parenthood clinics stop offering abortions despite pause in ban

  1. “But now, extremists are taking away abortion care in Indiana,” Gibron said.”

    It used to be murder was extreme, but now your an extremist if you support life!

    1. You’re also an extremist if you support forcing a woman to continue to carry a non-viable pregnancy and risk death or never being able to have another child because you are pro-forced birth, not actually pro-life… but go on feeling that way.

    1. Steve, congressional Republicans who wanted this to be a state issue just 12 months ago are now pushing a nationwide 15 week abortion ban.

      93% of abortions take place before 15 weeks, and the majority of the remaining number are done by women who wanted to have the baby but can’t either the health of the mother or a nonviable child.

      So save that tail wagging the dog nonsense for someone else.

  2. How can they have these abortion appointments booked out for months … and the need for these abortions are so terribly urgent that they are emergencies? Doesn’t seem like anybody is trying to save the life of the mother if they can wait that long.

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