This is America: Experts say abortion bans will impact people of color the most

The leaked Supreme Court draft opinion published by Politico on Monday erupted a firestorm on one of the nation’s most divisive issues: abortion.

In the draft opinion, Associate Justice Samuel Alito wrote, "We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled." He said Roe was “egregiously wrong from the start,” and called its reasoning “weak.”

Supreme Court opinion drafts are subject to change and are part of the high court's deliberative process. But analysts have maintained since oral arguments last year that it appeared likely the high court would overturn Roe, the landmark 1973 decision. A decision is expected this summer.

Who would be most impacted if the landmark Roe v. Wade is overturned? I’m Nada Hassanein, a USA TODAY reporter covering environmental and health inequities. Welcome to the newsletter "This is America,” focused on race and identity and how they shape our lives. I spoke with experts to find out.

Health professionals and policy analysts say those of color, low-income, rural and other marginalized people will bear the brunt. Those who disproportionately have trouble accessing health care, often people of color, will be most affected, experts say.

But first, race and justice news we're reading:

Barriers before bans, barriers after bans

About half of U.S. states, concentrated in the South, Midwest and Plains, have restrictive abortion laws set to go into effect should the reversal take place.

More: Pregnancy-related deaths of Black people drives increase in 2020, CDC study shows

More than half of the nation’s Black population lives in the South, where women of color, including Hispanic women, make up a significant proportion. The Plains states also have a large Indigenous population. Days ago, the Oklahoma Legislature passed a six-week abortion ban similar to one adopted by Texas last year.

“We know that it's going to impact those who already have barriers to health care, even before an abortion ban,” said women's health and reproductive rights policy expert Fatima Goss Graves, an attorney and president of the National Women’s Law Center. “Those who live in rural areas, women of color, those who have low income.”

If Roe is overturned, people may travel hundreds of miles to get to states where abortions are still allowed. Young and low-income people, who are disproportionately of color, may not be able to afford the cost of travel.

“This will be a giant and larger hurdle placed in front of them,” Graves said. “Most people who seek abortion care already have children. And they may not have time off work, access to child care, the things they need to be able … to leave their community to get constitutionally protected health care.”

Center for American Progress attorney and women’s health policy analyst Elyssa Spitzer noted women of color and LGBTQ people already experience bias and discrimination in health care.

More: Black Maternal Health Week: 'We have to do better,' support, listen to Black moms, experts and loved ones say

“It is very concerning, and very alarming and would devastate access for many millions of women in the United States,” she said. Subjecting women to carry an unintended pregnancy to term "is immensely painful, and arduous and a violation of human rights.”

Citing the Turnaway Study, which found significant harms after abortion denials, Spitzer said carrying a pregnancy to term also can pose financial barriers and barriers to well-being.

“It makes it much more difficult for women to escape poverty, for women to pursue the careers that they want, it imposes a change on a family structure that women might not want to undertake,” she said.

Racial disparities and pregnancy risks

Those hurdles include increased chances of economic hardship and insecurity following birth, staying with a violent partner or raising a child alone, and threats to the well-being and development of children already in the home, the study found.

"Abortion is an issue which disproportionately affects people of color," subjecting them to "totally underappreciated risks of pregnancy," said Diana Greene Foster, the lead study author and a professor at the University of California, San Francisco's Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health.

More: Long drives and limited options: Indigenous women with breast cancer face harsh reality

A study estimating the effects of an abortion ban on maternal death by the University of Colorado, Boulder, found that among Black women, maternal deaths could increase by one-third. Black women are already three times more likely to die of pregnancy-related causes than white women.

The Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine’s Dr. Cynthia Gyamfi-Bannerman, a specialist in maternal-fetal medicine and high-risk pregnancies, said racial disparities in pregnancy outcomes are exacerbated by restrictions to reproductive rights.

“It creates a bias in who is able to get care and who cannot get care,” she said. “There are some medical conditions in which a pregnancy is very, very dangerous to the mother."

More than 80% of callers to Access Reproductive Care-Southeast, which offers financial and logistical support to abortion seekers in the region, were Black, uninsured or on public insurance, and about 77% had one child already, according to a joint study last year by the organization and Emory University. The study analyzed characteristics of 10,000 callers from Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina and Tennessee.

“We must acknowledge that Roe never guaranteed that abortion would be accessible, because for so many people that we work with, the ability to access abortion care has already been pushed out of reach for decades," ARC co-founder and executive director Oriaku Nijoku, who co-authored the study, said at a news conference Tuesday. "This is our daily lived reality."

More: An 'open wound': How nurses of color fight the rampant racism plaguing their field

Dr. Bhavik Kumar, medical director at Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast, is a physician and abortion provider in Texas, where a restrictive abortion law was passed last year, and a total ban is set to go into effect if Roe is overturned.

“Though I’m trying to assist as many patients as possible, I’m still stunned that I’ve been asked to turn my back on the health and well-being of my patients,” Kumar said during a media conference with Njoku and others. “As a family medicine physician, I see this firsthand in my patients’ stories and lived experiences.”

Reach Nada Hassanein at nhassanein@usatoday.com or on Twitter @nhassanein_.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: This is America: Experts say abortion bans affect people of color most