States / South Carolina
South Carolina
South Carolina enforces a 6-week limit with specific exceptions, compressing the window for lawful in-state care. Maternal mortality is high, and racial disparities are pronounced. The state has not fully expanded Medicaid, and rural regions often lack dedicated obstetric units. Patients frequently face long drives or must coordinate interstate care under tight timelines. Legal restriction and thin infrastructure jointly intensify risk.
13 policy resources
US Abortion Policies & Access - GuttmacherAbortion PolicyUS Gestational Limits & Exceptions - GuttmacherGestational Limits & ExceptionsCriminal Penalties for Physicians in State Abortion Bans - KFFCriminal Penalties (Providers)Post-Dobbs Pregnancy Criminal Cases - Pregnancy JusticeCriminal Penalties (Patients)Office of Population AffairsFamily Planning AccessPregnancy Discrimination and Pregnancy-Related Disability Discrimination - EEOCPregnancy Workplace ProtectionsState Family and Medical Leave Laws - NCSLPaid Parental Leave/ BenefitsNational Database of Childcare PricesChildcare CostsSouth Carolina Healthy ConnectionsMedicaid CoverageBirthing-Friendly Hospitals and Health Systems - CMSBirthing-Friendly HospitalsThe Baby-Friendly Hospital InitiativeBaby-Friendly HospitalsMaternal Mortality in the US - The Commonwealth FundMaternal Mortality Rate (per 100K)South Carolina Department of Public HealthState Health Department
Looking for the cards behind this hub?Real conversations. No judgment.
Shop the Deck →