-- Shares Facebook Twitter Reddit Email For nearly 50 years in the United States, the U.S. Supreme Court asserted that the U.

S. Constitution protected the right to access abortion under Roe v. Wade.

But on June 24, 2022, the Dobbs decision changed that and allowed states to make their own laws about who can have access to abortion care, and under what circumstances. Since then, 14 states have banned abortion, and six states have introduced a gestational limit between six to 12 weeks, according to KFF . As Salon has reported, the consequences are harrowing.

Medical school graduates are avoiding states with abortion bans exacerbating the maternal healthcare crisis. Pregnant women are being forced to cross state lines to terminate nonviable pregnancies . This week, Amnesty International USA released a report detailing how the aftermath of Dobbs is a “human rights crisis.

” Related "The walls are closing in": States under strain as Iowa abortion ban goes into effect “These types of bans and policies can impact a variety of human rights,” Jasmeet Sidhu, a senior researcher with Amnesty International USA, told Salon in a phone interview. “Including the right to life, the right to access healthcare, the right to privacy in some situations where abortion is being criminalized, and the right to be free from torture and other degrading treatment,” The report centered on the stories of patients and medical providers. From interviewing people in states with the strictest laws .