Attempts to ban abortion are 'really suppress women,' advocate says after U.S. Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade

More women from other states expected to seek abortion care in Illinois

CHICAGO (CBS) -- Some women who say their lives were changed forever because of their access to abortion were angry and disappointed at the U.S. Supreme Court ruling overturning Roe v. Wade on Friday.

CBS 2's Sabrina Franza talked to several of those women – one of whom had to travel to another state to get an abortion before Roe was decided nearly 50 years ago.

The struggle to find abortion care is something that woman – Rise up for Abortion Rights volunteer Jessi Davis – thought no one else would have to go through again. But that changed Friday.

"I'm sure that they're extremely scared," Davis said. "This whole attempt to make abortion illegal is really to suppress women; to put clamps on any kind of rights women have gained in this last period."

Davis herself went to extreme lengths to have an abortion in 1970 - before Roe.

"Nineteen years old, forced into the back alleys in California to have an abortion that cannot be where we're going," she said.

She hoped after Roe that no one else would feel that same fear either.

"It's feels scary - you're alone, you're facing a whole life ahead of you, and now you're in a situation where you have a pregnancy that you do not want," Davis said.

For others, not having access is a matter of life and death.

"My friend Lilia took … she thought that being dead was better than carrying on a pregnancy that she didn't want in her life - and she ingested rat poisoning and we found her dead," said Patricia Wallin.

Wallin is from El Salvador. After her friend died, she came to the states to for the freedoms it offers.

"I thought we were protected," she said. "We've been protected 50 years."

Illinois is in the middle of what Planned Parenthood calls an abortion desert - states with restrictions that kick in following the decision Friday.

Illinois is bracing for impact - about triple the number of out of state patients this year compared to the 10,000 the state saw in 2020.

The women who protested Friday are bracing for a long fight.

"They step all over women's rights," Wallin said. "The message that they send the world – it's atrocious." 

Planned Parenthood of Illinois said they anticipate 20,000 to 30,000 extra women will be in the same boat – but coming to our state from neighboring states for abortion care.

For perspective, in 2020, experts say 10,000 women crossed state lines into Illinois for abortion.

Now, it is a matter of figuring out how that is going to work for women who need it, and for those who can't afford to travel.

"Black and brown communities, people living in rural areas, people with low incomes, people with disabilities – all the folks who already face the most barriers to accessing health care, including abortion, will be impacted by today's decision," said Planned Parenthood of Illinois President and Chief Executive Officer Jennifer Welch.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot has said she would look into more funding for health care providers to assist travel and abortion access in the upcoming budget. But some say waiting for the next budget to pass might not be the answer, and might be too late.

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