Why Texas' abortion rates aren't falling as quickly as everyone expected

It's not the first time a barrage of anti-abortion legislation hasn't had the desired effect

In the months since Texas' controversial abortion restrictions began to go into effect, the state's health-care landscape has been transformed.

A new study conducted by researchers at the University of Texas's Policy Evaluation Project found that since state legislators passed HB2 — the raft of restrictions on abortion doctors and facilities made famous last summer by Wendy Davis' marathon filibuster — 19 of Texas's 41 abortion clinics have closed their doors. The closures are thanks to a provision of HB2 that requires abortion providers to receive admitting privileges at local hospitals, a hurdle that has been impossible for many doctors to surmount.

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